Muscat Daily

Displaced Gazan grandma knits worn-out wool to warm up grandkids

- Gaza City, Palestine - Anadolu Agency

Near the Egyptian border, displaced Palestinia­n Shahinaz Bakr is busy with knitting a wool hat for one of her granddaugh­ters in their tent set up under the open sky in Rafah city in the southern Gaza Strip.

Bakr, who was displaced from the Sheikh Radwan neighbourh­ood north of Gaza City to Rafah, obtained wool threads by tearing apart her family’s worn-out wool sweaters.

The grandma is also approached by other displaced people in the camp to acquire some of her woollen products as they cannot find clothes for their children or cannot buy them due to the ongoing war and high prices.

Speaking to Anadolu, Bakr said: “Working on a wool crochet hook is one of my favourite hobbies that turned out very useful nowadays in light of the displaceme­nt.”

“I get wool from worn-out jackets or damaged and torn clothes that neighbours throw away,” the grandma said.

She pointed out that the displaced people in the camp also asked her to knit some woollen pieces to protect their children from the extreme cold exacerbati­ng their suffering.

On her displaceme­nt journey from Gaza City to the south, the Palestinia­n woman said that her family used to live in the Sheikh Radwan neighbourh­ood before the outbreak of war between Israel and Palestinia­ns on October 7.

“With the beginning of the war, the army began targeting the area with violent airstrikes,” she said, adding that the army warned them to evacuate towards the south.

She recounted that her displaced family headed to the south on foot using Al-bahr Street, amid a state of panic and fear that affected children and adults alike.

Lack of basic necessitie­s of life

The displaced people in the camps in the city of Rafah lack even the minimum necessitie­s of life, as they were forced to leave their homes without taking any clothes or life necessitie­s. Most of the displaced people there also find it difficult to buy essentials or new clothes due to the war, lack of money, and the unpreceden­ted rise in prices of those available in the markets.

Since the outbreak of the devastatin­g war on the Gaza Strip on October 7, Israel has been preventing the entry of goods into the enclave by tightly closing the Gaza Strip’s crossings.

However, on November 24,

Israel allowed small amounts of humanitari­an aid to enter the Gaza Strip through the Rafah crossing, as part of a week-long humanitari­an pause between the resistance factions in Gaza and Israel, which was reached through a QatariEgyp­tian-american mediation.

The Gaza Strip received about 600 trucks daily for health and humanitari­an needs before Israel waged its deadly war on October 7. However, the number decreased to about 100 trucks per day at the best conditions.

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