Wounded in Israeli strike, US woman wants Americans to 'support Gaza'

Deborah Darwel, a long-time resident of Gaza, was rescued from under the debris following an Israeli air strike targeting her apartment in Deir al Balah. Her first comments: "I don't want Israel to take Palestine".

Deborah Drawul, a 62-year-old American citizen, talks about her experience of being trapped under rubble after an Israeli attack in Deir al Balah, Gaza on March 13, 2024 / Photo: AA
AA

Deborah Drawul, a 62-year-old American citizen, talks about her experience of being trapped under rubble after an Israeli attack in Deir al Balah, Gaza on March 13, 2024 / Photo: AA

American resident Deborah Darwel, who has made besieged Gaza her home and was wounded in a recent Israeli strike, has called for global support for Palestinians, especially from Arabs and Americas, saying what is happening in the besieged enclave is "not fair."

Darwel urged all Americans to stand in solidarity with Gaza, emphasising the immediate need for an end to the ongoing injustices in the region.

"I am here because I don't want Israel to take all of Gaza and Palestine," she said after being rescued with wounds covering her body following an Israeli air strike that targeted her apartment in Deir al Balah in central Gaza.

Palestinian Civil Defense teams rescued Darwel on Tuesday after her apartment was destroyed, according to witnesses who spoke to Anadolu Agency.

Darwel, 62, who has been living in Gaza for years, after being pulled from the rubble and transferred to the Al Aqsa Martyrs Hospital, told Anadolu in a statement: "Israel bombed my apartment ... and I thought I would die just because I could not breathe and I could not move."

She said she screamed in extreme pain as large chunks of rubble fell on her back and legs.

Her reason for staying in Gaza and not traveling with the rest of the American community: "Every time I try to say that if I go abroad, I'll be like a bird chirping alone," she said, indicating that she does not want to survive alone.

"I truly believe that everyone should be treated equally. You cannot leave the country you believe the Palestinians have a right to," she said. "I will never leave because if Israel is going to take all of Gaza or all of Palestine, they want everyone to leave, so I stayed because I don't want them to take Palestine.

Darwel said she now feels like a foreigner in Gaza.

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Gripping graphics shed light on Palestinians' struggle for freedom

The US evacuated hundreds of its nationals from the Gaza during the first two months of the current Israeli war on the enclave through the Rafah border crossing with Egypt.

The Americans worked with international and relief institutions in Gaza or were married to Palestinians and lived in the coastal territory.

Several Palestinians holding American citizenship were wounded in October in raids that targeted Gaza City at the beginning of the war.

On the brink of starvation

Since October 7, Israel has been waging a devastating war on Gaza, leaving tens of thousands of civilian casualties, mostly children and women, as well as an unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe and massive infrastructure destruction, leading Tel Aviv to appear before the International Court of Justice on charges of "genocide."

As a result of the war and Israeli restrictions, residents, especially in Gaza and northern Gaza governorates, are on the brink of starvation, amid severe shortages in food, water, medicine, and fuel, with 2 million Palestinians displaced from the enclave for 17 years.

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