Gaza: Aid worker diary
Source: Islamic Relief - UK
Hatem Shurrab
Website: http://www.islamic-relief.com
Reuters and AlertNet are not responsible for the content of this article or for any external internet sites. The views expressed are the author's alone.
Gaza - 8th January
While I was writing this diary entry I received news that a Palestinian family had been killed in the northern Jabaliya refugee camp after their house was bombed.
Jabaliya is home to an estimated 125,000 people and is the most densely populated camp in Gaza.
They were a father, mother and son from the Aljaro family. Other members of the family had been injured.
But the news got worse: the father was the brother of my Islamic Relief colleague Alaa.
I tried to reach Alaa to check he was OK and pay my condolences but couldn't get through to him on the phone.
I finally received news that Alaa was OK. But what do I say to him when I see him?
Every day that passes brings more and more bad news and with every passing hour the human misery increases.
One minute we hear news that five people have been killed in a certain neighbourhood, then a few minutes later we receive more news that people have been killed in a different area.
It seems like Gazans are just becoming numbers.
Gazans are not just numbers, Gazans are very kind people who love life and love others.
Orphaned children
Every child that has died enjoyed playing, like other children across the world.
Every child that died had a family that loved them dearly.
Our aid team also learnt today that the fathers of three of the children in our Psychosocial Support program had been killed.
They are now orphans.
Islamic Relief runs a project with Gazan children who have been traumatised by conflict. It is funded by the Catholic Agency for Overseas Development (CAFOD).
Two thousand children are involved in the project, which aims to help youngsters deal with their loss and provide them with support and care.
I wonder what effect this conflict and losing their fathers will have on those three children in the long term.
One thing is for sure, when the bombing ends - and we pray for it to end now - this project will need to be one of our priorities.
Poor shelters
I've met a lot of children over the past 12 days and I can see the fear in their eyes.
The state of the shelters in which people are seeking refuge is dire.
There is no electricity, and no fuel for cooking. Neither is there any kind of heating to keep people warm in these cold winter nights.
The good news is that our relief teams continued with our distribution to three UN shelters, supplying people with hygiene kits and blankets.
We also prepared a list of medicines desperately needed by Gazan hospitals and are now working on trying to purchase the medication inside Gaza and co-ordinate the purchasing of aid from outside Gaza and work out how to get it into Gaza.
[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]











