As a mother, it is my responsibility to provide for my children’s daily and basic needs such as food, clothing, and diapers. But right now, since the start of the war, these essentials are not available.
I feel helpless.
I don’t have diapers for my four-month-old baby, and I cannot wash his clothes. The food available consists mainly of canned goods; there is no fresh food that allows me to cook nutritious meals for my family. There is no electricity or cooking gas either.
I am glad that I am still breastfeeding my baby, but I don’t know where we will be able to get baby food or clean water to prepare food for him when he is a little bit older.
We have no source of income now, and the prices for food and diapers in the market are skyrocketing. The market close to us is always overcrowded, and baby clothes are not available.
We left with light clothes in October and have no winter clothes to keep us warm in the wet and cold months.
We share a small house in Rafah with 25 people. We are lucky that we do not have to live in a tent or on the streets, like so many others. We lie on the floor and don’t have any space or privacy, but at least we are protected from the cold and rain.
Most people around us are sick with diarrhea, are coughing, and have a cold. I could not vaccinate my baby yet, and I fear for his health and immune system, especially given how overcrowded our house is and how impossible it is to adhere to even basic hygiene standards such as washing hands without clean water and soap.
Diseases and epidemics are spreading everywhere.
‘I have to put on a smile. But what I really want is to cry.’
I always have to present the most calm and controlled face in front of my children so that I can maintain their mental well-being. I want to prevent them from feeling fear or developing psychological issues that could affect their personalities in the post-war period. I don’t want their future to be impacted by what is happening now.
I try to constantly invent new games to play with them. I talk to my three-year-old about fun topics and tell her stories. I want them to forget about the war and experience as happy a childhood as possible. My four-month-old is always laughing and cooing. He is too young to understand what is going on.