A frail elderly woman's joyous return to Gaza, marked by a harrowing journey across the Rafah crossing.
Huda Abu Abed, 75, was overwhelmed with happiness upon re-entering her home in Gaza after being one of the first Palestinians to make it back from Egypt. Her smile could not conceal the trauma etched on her face as she recalled her ordeal - "I was humiliated," she said softly.
The elderly woman's story begins at the Rafah crossing, where she and thousands of other Palestinians waited for hours in freezing temperatures, braving the harsh conditions with little access to food or water. The grueling wait was a mere precursor to what lay ahead as she made her way through the treacherous border checkpoint, the long queues, and the bureaucratic maze.
"I felt like I had been put on trial," Abu Abed recounted, her voice trembling with emotion. "They asked me so many questions - where were you born? Where did your parents die? They didn't trust us even after we showed them our ID cards."
Abu Abed's journey to return home was an arduous one, filled with uncertainty and heartbreak. The grueling wait, coupled with the relentless barrage of questions from Egyptian authorities, took its toll on her physical health.
As she recounted her harrowing experience, Abu Abed spoke of the desperate measures she had taken in order to survive - buying precious little food and water from vendors who were more than willing to take advantage of their desperation. "I was willing to do anything," she said, "even if it meant sacrificing my dignity."
In the end, Abu Abed's perseverance paid off as she made her way back home, a beacon of hope in a long-standing humanitarian crisis that has gripped the Palestinian people for decades. Her story serves as a poignant reminder of the dehumanizing effects of prolonged displacement and the unrelenting determination of those who refuse to be defeated.
Huda Abu Abed, 75, was overwhelmed with happiness upon re-entering her home in Gaza after being one of the first Palestinians to make it back from Egypt. Her smile could not conceal the trauma etched on her face as she recalled her ordeal - "I was humiliated," she said softly.
The elderly woman's story begins at the Rafah crossing, where she and thousands of other Palestinians waited for hours in freezing temperatures, braving the harsh conditions with little access to food or water. The grueling wait was a mere precursor to what lay ahead as she made her way through the treacherous border checkpoint, the long queues, and the bureaucratic maze.
"I felt like I had been put on trial," Abu Abed recounted, her voice trembling with emotion. "They asked me so many questions - where were you born? Where did your parents die? They didn't trust us even after we showed them our ID cards."
Abu Abed's journey to return home was an arduous one, filled with uncertainty and heartbreak. The grueling wait, coupled with the relentless barrage of questions from Egyptian authorities, took its toll on her physical health.
As she recounted her harrowing experience, Abu Abed spoke of the desperate measures she had taken in order to survive - buying precious little food and water from vendors who were more than willing to take advantage of their desperation. "I was willing to do anything," she said, "even if it meant sacrificing my dignity."
In the end, Abu Abed's perseverance paid off as she made her way back home, a beacon of hope in a long-standing humanitarian crisis that has gripped the Palestinian people for decades. Her story serves as a poignant reminder of the dehumanizing effects of prolonged displacement and the unrelenting determination of those who refuse to be defeated.