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Published 11 December 2006 :Http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/world-news/article2065119.ece
By Jan McGirk
It doesn’t take an air strike, or a telephoned warning that
Israeli bombers are on the way, to terrify the war-weary children of Gaza.
Heightened surveillance is enough to cause nightmares. Lasers glow red in the
night like the eyes of wild beasts.
An enemy spy drone hovers high overhead
to eavesdrop and snap photos. Heaps of fresh rubble cast weird shadows. And
sonic booms trigger dread whenever F-16 fighter jets fly low.
In Gaza’s grim
conditions, mothers find it hard to tell if their offspring are crying out of
fright, pain or misery. But when normally bickering children fall silent, it’s
the first sign of mental scars from constant fear. “Dozens of children in every
school show clear signs of trauma,” said Hosam Sheikh Youssef, a social worker
leading a workshop for onal counsellors in Rafah.
The Welfare
Association, one of three charities supported by The Independent’s 2006
Christmas Appeal, runs community psychosocial outreach programmes that help
Palestinian families to cope with the relentless conflict in the Gaza Strip.
They are not allowed to flee to safety in exile because the Israelis usually
seal the borders, and social collapse is a genuine risk.
“You can tell the
children who need help,” said Mawahib Ali Muhdi, a teacher attending the Rafah
training course. “Some jump at the slightest noise, whether it’s a helicopter
lifting off or a dropped knife. Others become slow learners. They tune out and
lose focus, as if they do not want to feel anymore. And if these children ever
sense that their teachers are even a little afraid, they start to scream.”
Gentle intervention begins with toys and games in the library after school,
or by engaging in directed role play. Vivid memories of explosions, severed
heads and mangled body parts are difficult to shake. Eventually, aggression and
pent up violence can be released through computer games or team sports.
No
child can remain unaffected by the mayhem of the Gaza Strip. At last count,
Israeli guns had killed 88 Gazan children and wounded another 343 since
mid-June, about one quarter of the total casualties of the Israeli offensives.
Women accounted for at least 29 of the civilian deaths and 108 injuries. The
densely packed enclave is, in effect, the world’s largest prison.
Art
therapy sessions at after school clubs in Gaza often run out of red crayons
because there is so much blood depicted in the scribbled scenes of daily life
under siege..
“Children between age six and 12 are the most vulnerable to
phobias,” explains Maha el-Shawwa, who coordinates all Welfare Association
programmes in Gaza. “Littler ones just cling to their mothers or grandmothers,
but school-age children start wetting their beds or fearing the dark..”
Social workers and psychologists are finding that some age-old techniques
cannot be bettered. In Deir El Balah refugee camp’s Rehabilitation Society a
line of energetic boys, aged 10 to 12, have mastered the Dabkeh, a joyous
Palestinian folk-dance of solidarity. W hen the music cranks up, they stomp,
jump and kick, precisely in unison, until the audience goes ecstatic. “This
dance troupe is the envy of every child here,” Maha el-Shawwa beamed.
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