How Text Messages Helped Survivors Navigate War in Gaza


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Surviving​ War in‍ Gaza,⁢ One Text Message at a Time

Every morning, Ahmed Mansour, a Palestinian⁣ filmmaker‌ in the U.S., texts‍ his family in Gaza to check if they are ⁢still alive. Israel’s‌ siege on the territory has caused widespread communication blackouts, ‍making ⁢it difficult for him to ​reach his parents ⁣and siblings.

“Free, free, free Palestine!” “Cease-fire now!” “Every morning, I write on the ‍group, ⁣‘Please, are you all​ OK?’ This is the ⁣fourth day I’m trying to reach Mom. You know, I come from a relatively small family. Father. ‌Mother. ⁣Muhammad. Reema. Reham. Mahmoud.‌ Rula. Ruwaa. Shaimaa. My childhood memories. I smell the food that my ‍aunts and neighbors were cooking. And when the summer comes and ⁣the breeze of the beach. But now? ⁣Every day since ‍Oct. 7, my ⁢body ⁤is here, but my heart is connected to each one of my family.‌ So far they are alive, but they are not OK. Shushu is the youngest girl, and I am the‌ youngest boy. I ⁢kind of ​helped raising her. We’d always play together, and we were kind of the‍ spoiled in ‍the family. So Shushu and​ I and my mother were always inseparable. There is ⁢not a single safe ‍place in Gaza. Whenever I read that ‌they bomb a house ⁤in‍ Nuseirat or‌ bomb a house in Maghazi or in Zawayda or Deir ⁤al ‍Balah​ or Rafah, I immediately ⁣think, Is it my ⁢sister’s⁢ house? Is it my parents’ house? I never thought that​ this chat group is the most important thing in ⁣my life. It breaks the news if ‌my family ⁤is alive or not. ‌I keep trying and⁢ praying. Trying and pray.”

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2023-11-19 05:00:38
Link from www.nytimes.com
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