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Silhouetted by fire, 6-year-old girl survives Israeli attack in Gaza

Silhouetted by fire, 6-year-old girl survives Israeli attack in Gaza

Al Jazeera27-05-2025

Ward Khalil stares at the camera, her eyes barely focusing as she recalls the horrors of what she experienced.
'When I woke up, I found a huge fire, and I saw my mom was dead,' she says, recounting the Israeli air attack early on Monday that she survived but that killed her mother, two of her siblings and 33 other people.
Video footage of six-year-old Ward, her small body silhouetted against the flames after the attack on the Fahmi al-Jarjawi School in Gaza City, has shocked people around the world, highlighting the ferocity of Israel's attacks on Gaza.
Ward's father and a brother also survived the attack, but they both remain in hospital.
The school had been sheltering several families, including many children, when it was targeted by Israeli fire.
'I walked in the fire so I could escape. … I was in the fire, and the ceiling fell on me. The ceiling all collapsed. The fire was blazing,' Ward recounted, the distress clear in her voice. 'See? My arm is burned here,' she said, showing the camera the injuries.
Ward sobbed as she explained what happened to her family: 'They were martyred. May God forgive them.'
Footage taken from the school after the attack shows blood-stained walls and charred mattresses lying on the floor as rescue workers and distraught relatives search the rubble and burned clothing for signs of survivors.
Eyad al-Sheikh Khalil, Ward's uncle, rushed to the school after seeing a picture of her online.
'I was looking at the pictures journalists were posting, and I saw a photo of Ward with the Civil Defence and realised it was my niece,' he said of the images of Ward being comforted by rescue workers near the school, the bright bows in her hair dulled by the ash from the fire.
'When someone comes out of an attack like this, in a war like this, what do you expect a kid to feel?' Eyad asked. 'Of course she's going to suffer mentally. We're all suffering mentally.'
'It was indescribable,' a survivor who was pulled from the rubble with her son told rescuers. 'Body parts, charred bodies, the smell of burning. I swear to God, our hearts have died. We're shaken, exhausted. Enough.'
Displaced people in Gaza have been crowding into schools, many of which are affiliated with the United Nations, since the onset of Israel's war on the enclave in October 2023.
On May 7, Israeli forces targeted a single school sheltering 2,000 Palestinians twice on the same day, killing at least 29 civilians in the Bureij refugee camp, including women and children.
According to UNRWA, the UN aid agency for Palestinian refugees, nearly three-quarters of all school buildings in Gaza have been directly hit by Israeli fire since October 2023. According to UN satellite-based assessments, 95 per cent of Gaza's schools have sustained damage, rendering the vast majority unusable.
UN-run shelters are now 'overwhelmed with displaced people desperately seeking safety', UNRWA said in an update after the attack on the Fahmi al-Jarjawi School. It also stressed that the lack of food in Gaza due to a three-month siege imposed upon the territory by Israel had added to people's suffering.
'Many families are sheltering in abandoned, unfinished, or damaged buildings,' the agency explained. 'Sanitation conditions are dire; in some cases, hundreds of people are having to share a single toilet. Others, including children and pregnant women, are sleeping in the open.'

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Explainer: What is the Global March to Gaza all about?
Explainer: What is the Global March to Gaza all about?

Al Jazeera

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  • Al Jazeera

Explainer: What is the Global March to Gaza all about?

Thousands of activists from across the globe are marching to the Gaza Strip to try to break Israel's suffocating siege and draw international attention to the genocide it is perpetrating there. Approximately 1,000 people participating in the Tunisian-led stretch of the Global March to Gaza, known as the Sumud Convoy, arrived in Libya on Tuesday morning, a day after they departed the Tunisian capital, Tunis. They are now resting in Libya after a full day of travel, but do not yet have permission to cross the eastern part of the North African country. The group, which mostly comprises citizens of the Maghreb, the Northwest African region, is expected to grow as people join from countries it passes through as it makes its way towards the Rafah crossing between Egypt and Gaza. How will they do it? When will they get there? What is this all about? Here's all you need to know: The Coordination of Joint Action for Palestine is leading the Sumud Convoy, which is tied to the Global March for Palestine. In total, there are about 1,000 people, travelling on a nine-bus convoy, with the aim of pressurising world leaders to take action on Gaza. Sumud is supported by the Tunisian General Labour Union, the National Bar Association, the Tunisian League for Human Rights, and the Tunisian Forum for Economic and Social Rights. It is coordinating with activists and individuals from 50 countries who are flying into the Egyptian capital, Cairo, on June 12, so that they can all march to Rafah together. Some of those activists are affiliated with an umbrella of grassroots organisations, including the Palestinian Youth Movement, Codepink Women for Peace in the United States and Jewish Voice for Labour in the United Kingdom. The convoy of cars and buses has reached Libya. After taking a brief rest, the plan is for it to continue towards Cairo. 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The activists had previously told The Associated Press news agency they do not expect to be allowed into Gaza, yet they hope their journey will pressure world leaders to force Israel to end its genocidal war. Another concern lies in Egypt, which classifies the stretch between El Arish and the Rafah border crossing as a military zone and does not allow anyone to enter unless they live there. The Egyptian government has not issued a statement on whether it will allow the Global March to Gaza to pass through its territory. 'I doubt they would be allowed to march towards Rafah,' a longtime Egyptian activist, whose name is being withheld for their safety, said. 'It's always national security first,' they told Al Jazeera. If the convoy makes it to Rafah, it will have to face the Israeli army at the crossing. Palestine supporters have tried everything over the years as Gaza suffered. 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Legal scholars previously told Al Jazeera the suffering in Gaza suggests Israel is deliberately inflicting conditions to bring about the physical destruction of the Palestinian people in whole or in part – the precise definition of genocide. Global outrage has grown as Israel continues to kill civilians in thousands, including children, aid workers, medics and journalists. Since March, Israel has tightened its chokehold on Gaza, completely stopping aid and then shooting at people lining up for what little aid it allows in, leading to rare statements of condemnation from Western governments.

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