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Palestinian Prisoners Released After Detention
Deir al-Balah - Gaza - PalestineInterview: Mohamed Majed
Palestinian Prisoners Released After Detention
If you refused to eat the bread or attempted a hunger strike, they would force you to eat excrement

Mahmoud Basim Mahmoud Ahmed

“The Israeli military forced us to lie face down and then set dogs on us. They also used electric shocks. From 4:00 AM until midnight, we had to keep our hands tied above our heads. If you turned to the right or left, they would unleash the dogs on you. They gave us two pieces of bread a day. After eating the bread, you were forced to lie on your stomach for 24 hours. If you refused to eat the bread or attempted a hunger strike, they would force you to eat excrement.

The Israeli soldiers would take some prisoners, whom they suspected of having ties to resistance fighters, to the 12th floor of the building for torture, then drag them back down to the ground floor, torturing them all the way down. What we endured and witnessed during those two months felt like 12 years.”

Said Abu Watfa

“Israeli soldiers detained a group of young Palestinians at the border crossing, tying them to a wall for four hours. They stripped them of their clothes, applied electric shocks to their sensitive areas, and broke their teeth. They didn’t even give them any medication afterward.

I was detained at the Karm Abu Salem Border Crossing. During that time, I was subjected to various forms of psychological and physical torture. At night, when we needed to go to the bathroom, they would tell us to ‘bark.’ We had to bark like dogs to be allowed to go. They forced us to do it. They also made us curse our government, our close relatives, my sister, and my wife. If you didn’t bark or curse your family, you couldn’t go to the bathroom.”

Mu’in Muhammad Abd al-Satir Muhammad

“I was detained at the Jabalia Refugee Camp and held as a prisoner in an Israeli jail for nearly four months. We went through such hard times. It’s impossible to describe the details… For instance, at night, they would release dogs on us. We endured so much torture. We’ve never seen anything like it.”

Marwan Masad Sha’ar

“I’m 20 years old. I was detained by Israeli soldiers while distributing aid and was held captive for 31 days. My only crime was helping those in need. We were subjected to all kinds of torture—electric shocks, beatings, and humiliation. After we were released, some people asked, ‘What were the living conditions like in the Israeli prison?’ But we weren’t living there at all. How can I describe ‘living conditions’ while there were none?”

Khalid Abu al-Karim

“I was detained during a raid on the Shuja’iyya neighborhood and released after 35 days. My hands and feet were shackled throughout my detention. It’s impossible to describe what that feels like. On top of that, I was subjected to all kinds of physical and psychological torture. I can only tell you this much…”

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July 7, 2024, Gaza City-Gaza (AA - Abed Rahim Khatib)
Today’s lesson: Death. An UNRWA school building was targeted by Israeli forces, resulting in loss of life. Education, healthcare, humanitarian aid— Israel systematically targets all aspects of civilian infrastructure. UNRWA, established to aid displaced Palestinians, now finds itself caught in the tightening circle of massacre. In this school, the final lesson is death, learned simultaneously by children, youth, and adults, as they experience the pain together. A lesson that will never be forgotten, etched in both minds and hearts.
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July 16, 2024, Gaza City-Gaza (AA - Ali Jadallah)
Children belong in school, but schools in Gaza have been closed for a long time. The buildings that should be places of learning have become shelters for Gazans whose homes have been bombed. Though the grieving child doesn’t want to leave his mother’s side, those around him try to take him to the hospital. The horror of the pain is written clearly on the woman’s face.
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July 5, 2024, Deir al-Balah - Gaza (AA - Ashraf Amra)
Humanity united. The injured brought to hospitals in Gaza are being treated through the efforts of both Palestinian and international volunteer healthcare workers. A male and female healthcare worker, stethoscopes draped around their necks, stand side by side. It’s clear they’ve come as part of a civilian initiative. What they are witnessing may be the hardest scenes of their lives. They are not only treating wounds but also bearing witness.
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May 27, 2024, Rafah-Gaza (AA - Ali Jadallah)
The final stop. A child stands alone on the ashes of the bombed tents. No one is beside him. Perhaps he has lost everyone dear to him. With the last refuge -the tents- destroyed, there is nowhere left to go but the grave. The crowd gathered around him reveals the loneliest place on earth: the pain in our hearts.