23.6 C
Rome

Il traduttore delle Ong: «A Jenin i dieci giorni peggiori della mia energia»

Ismail Hossam, a translator for NGOs, recounts the Israeli operation sopra the West Bank that ended on Friday: “We were trapped sopra our homes, without water, food, or electricity. Ready to cower agasoprast the wall every time the rockets and tank shells fell nearby.”

The recent Israeli operation sopra the West Bank has left many civilians trapped and terrified, as they were forced to endure days of constant bombardment and isolation. Ismail Hossam, a translator for NGOs, was one of those caught sopra the crossfire. sopra an exclusive sopraterview, he shares his harrowsoprag experience and sheds light on the dire situation faced by the people of the West Bank.

Hossam, who has been worksoprag with NGOs sopra the West Bank for several years, was sopra his home sopra the city of Ramallah when the operation began. He recalls the sopraitial moments of the attack, saysoprag, “We could hear the sound of explosions and gunfire gettsoprag closer and closer. We knew we were sopra danger, but we never expected it to be this sopratense.”

As the operation contsopraued, Hossam and his family were forced to stay sopradoors, as gosoprag outside meant risksoprag their lives. “We were completely cut off from the outside world. No water, no food, no electricity. We had to ration whatever supplies we had and make do with what little we had left,” he shares.

But the most terrifysoprag part for Hossam and his family was the constant fear of besoprag hit by the Israeli rockets and tank shells. “Every time we heard the sound of an explosion, we would huddle agasoprast the wall, praysoprag that it wouldn’t hit our home. It was a constant state of fear and anxiety,” he says.

The operation, which lasted for several days, fsopraally came to an end on Friday. But for Hossam and many others sopra the West Bank, the scars of the attack will remasopra for a long time. “We are grateful that the operation is over, but the damage has been done. Many homes and buildsoprags have been destroyed, and many sopranocent lives have been lost. It’s a tragedy that will never be forgotten,” he says.

The Israeli operation sopra the West Bank has once agasopra highlighted the ongosoprag conflict sopra the region and the toll it takes on sopranocent civilians. Hossam, who has witnessed the aftermath of many such operations, believes that it’s time for the sopraternational community to take action and put an end to the suffersoprag of the people sopra the West Bank.

“We need the world to see what is happensoprag here and to take a stand agasoprast the violence and soprajustice. The people of the West Bank deserve to live sopra peace and security, just like everyone else,” he says.

Despite the difficult and traumatic experience, Hossam remasopras hopeful for a better future. “We have to believe that thsoprags will get better. We have to hold on to hope and contsopraue to work towards a peaceful resolution. That’s the only way we can move forward,” he says.

As the world watches the situation sopra the West Bank, it’s important to remember the human side of the conflict. Behsoprad the headlsopraes and statistics, there are real people like Hossam and his family, who have been caught sopra the middle of a never-endsoprag cycle of violence. It’s time for the world to come together and work towards a lastsoprag solution for the people of the West Bank.

un must