Gaza’s youth are haunted by trauma amid uncertainty over ceasefire; over 80 percent suffer severe symptoms, psychologists warn.For many in Gaza, Israel’s genocidal war could never really end. Even if the fragile United States-brokered ceasefire were successful in halting deadly attacks on the besieged enclave, which it so far has not, loud booms would still echo in the minds of those Palestinians who survived more than two years of brutal conflict.Fifteen-year-old Abed al-Aziz Abu Hawishal has seen scenes no teenager should ever witness. “We were taking refuge in a house in Gaza City when the Israeli military stormed in,” he told Al Jazeera. “They dragged me close to a tank, and one of the soldiers pointed his gun at my head.”Recommended Stories list of 3 itemsend of listThe memories of a “massacre” he witnessed near his home have left him withdrawn, haunted by thoughts he can’t escape. “Bodies were flying over our house. I saw a woman without a head, and I even stepped on bodies as I ran, terrified for my life,” he said.The psychological trauma triggered a response in his body, causing high blood pressure, chronic diarrhoea, and, most recently, kidney failure. Abed al-Aziz Abu Hawishal, 15, said he witnessed a ‘massacre’ near his home in Gaza City [Screen grab/Al Jazeera]Similarly, the psychological trauma has left visible marks on eight-year-old Lana al-Sharif. Other residents of the displacement camp in Khan Younis call her “the elderly child” as her once dark and shiny mop of hair is now tinged with grey.Her father, Khalil al-Shareef, said Lana survived an Israeli air strike that collapsed the roof of their home. She develo …
