The ‘invisible bullet wound’: Gaza’s mental health crisis worsened by funding cuts, aid workers warn

Vital psychosocial support programmes are closing – affecting the most vulnerable children, writes Bel Trew

Monday 01 July 2019 18:59 BST
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A Palestinian boy plays on a makeshift swing outside his house in a southern Gaza Strip refugee camp
A Palestinian boy plays on a makeshift swing outside his house in a southern Gaza Strip refugee camp

What do you do when your child keeps waking up screaming?

This was the question Ghaliah desperately asked her friends when her daughter started to change.

Nour, 11, had stopped speaking properly. She began wetting the bed, was afraid to go to the toilet on her own and clung to her mother “like a shadow”.

Ghaliah Gharabli, 35, a mother of four in Gaza, explains the family was reeling from a series of personal tragedies. Among them was the death of Nour’s brother Mohamed, 15, the breadwinner of the family who had been depressed.

He was shot in the head by Israeli soldiers in May 2018, when he sneaked off to join protests against the US moving its Israeli embassy to the contested city of Jerusalem.

Living in the vulnerable border area of Shajaiya, the Gharabli home was bombed in all of the last three wars between militants in Gaza and Israel. Nour, who was born just months before the 2008 conflict, has lived through each one.

But it was the death of her brother, and the recent rounds of airstrikes and rocketfire, that was the breaking point.

“She stopped speaking properly. If I asked her why she was silent, she would cry,” Ms Gharabli tells The Independent, under a portrait of her dead son.

“She started screaming in her sleep and having these night terrors of soldiers entering the house to kill her. I didn’t recognise my little girl,” she adds.

Aid workers, including officials at the United Nations Palestinian refugee agency (UNRWA), warn of an unprecedented mental health crisis unfurling across Gaza, exacerbated by a surge in violence over the last year and funding cuts to vital psychosocial support programmes.

Nour,11, says she finally feels safe after a psychosocial support programme

The hardest hit are the children, like Nour, who live near the perimeter fence.

But there is some help. The Norwegian Refugee Council runs a three-tiered psychosocial support programme for children – which Nour managed to join. The council estimates that two-thirds of minors living in border areas such as Shajaiya have clear indications of psychosocial distress.

A study they published in March revealed that a staggering 81 per cent of schoolchildren struggle academically due to conflict-related stress.

At Nour’s school, the NRC now runs morning breathing and relaxation sessions to fight the anxiety, panic attacks, anger and violent outbursts that pupils are increasingly suffering from.

“I was afraid I would die before I started the programme,” a transformed Nour says, as she patiently sits next to her mother.

“I was afraid of everything, that there were threats everywhere. But I feel safe now.”

Abu Hussein Madi tells The Independent that psychosocial support has been invaluable for his 11-year-old son Nabeel, who also began shouting in his sleep.

Like Nour, Nabeel’s teenager brother, coincidentally called Mohamed, was also killed during the protests on the border fences.

Nabeel, who had participated with other children that day, saw the moment his brother was killed.

“Psychological support is essential to children,” says Nabeel’s father, explaining that his son needed months of help.

“It was the only way to get my son back.”

But funding cuts are threatening the future of Gaza’s mental health support.

Dr Iyad Zaqout, the head of UNRWA’s mental health and psychosocial support unit in Gaza, says that despite the fact that mental health challenges have increased over the past year, they have had to slash their programmes due to lack of funds.

For the longest time when I tried to take a long breath, I felt like I couldn’t breathe with all that was going on

Ghaliah Gharabli

The US, once the agency’s biggest donor, cut all funding last year, leaving UNRWA with a $400m (£315m) funding deficit.

In order to keep UNRWA schools open and to feed a million people who rely on its food assistance, the agency had to sacrifice the mental health services, which are seen as less essential.

“We were only able to reach 10,000 children in Gaza last year, down from 25,000 in the years previously,” Dr Zaqout tells The Independent from his offices in Gaza City.

They used to have just over 260 full-time counsellors attached to UNRWA schools, but were forced to employ them on a part-time basis. They had to fire an additional 80 assistant counsellors on top of that.

If the agency does not secure additional funds soon, they will have to slash a further 44 counsellors attached to their health centres.

A photo of Mohamed, 15, who was killed by Israeli gunfire during 2018 protests as the US embassy was moved 

Dr Zaqout says the consequence of this is anecdotal evidence of an increase in self-harm, disruptive behaviour among students, and suicide.

“The mental health crisis is at its worst and is getting worse. Maybe the worse is still to come,” he says.

“It is putting children’s lives at risk, children’s futures at risk.”

UNRWA, which supports some 5 million Palestinian refugees in Gaza, the West Bank, Lebanon, Jordan and Syria, held a funding conference this week to urgently raise more money. It secured $110m in pledges, including a £19m injection of cash from the UK, which although encouraging, was significantly short of the organisation’s annual budget of $1.2bn.

Right now, people are so zoned out they do not even check when they cross the road

Dr Jamal Abdel-Atti, Centre for Mind-Body Medicine

Elizabeth Campbell, director of the agency’s Washington office, tells The Independent that they still need more funding.

“Mental health remains precarious – it won’t be restored in the West Bank and cuts remain in place in Gaza,” she adds.

There is little research into the complex mental health concerns in Gaza, and suicide remains a sensitive, stigmatised subject in the deeply conservative society.

Just a few weeks before The Independent entered Gaza, a young woman in a northern neighbourhood died an incident her family described as an accident.

But her friends were convinced she took her own life, telling The Independent she had a troubled history and had posted on social media about having suicidal thoughts.

Dr Jamal Abdel-Atti, whose Centre for Mind-Body Medicine runs programmes for children and families with trauma, says there is an urgent need for initiatives to de-stigmatise suicide.

He says he has observed an increase in suicide attempts since the last war in 2015. But over the last few years, funds to his organisation have been slashed by 70 per cent, as US cuts to Palestinian funding influenced other donors to withdraw, piling pressure on already scant resources.

The financial crisis that the Palestinian Authority is now facing has worsened the situation for local charities.

“Right now, people are so zoned out they do not even check when they cross the road,” he says.

Ghaliah Gharabli, a mother-of four in Gaza, whose daughter was treated for trauma after her son (in the picture behind her) was killed near the border

His point was reiterated by Abdelaziz Thabet, a professor of child and adolescent psychiatry, whose own studies and clinics have not been funded in years.

He warns that the scale of the crisis in Gaza – a predominately young society – could pose a “national security threat to Israel”.

“You are talking about a million youth who are severely traumatised, with no future,” he says.

Nour’s mother likens the mental health crisis to invisible bullet wounds.

“For the longest time when I tried to take a deep breath, I felt like I couldn’t breathe with all that was going on,” she says in tears.

“It’s a massive problem – you just can’t see it as easily as bullet wounds. I saw many mothers that can’t handle their children, pushing them into the streets telling them to go. We need help.”

With additional reporting by Nedal Hamdouna

For confidential support call Samaritans on 116 123. You can also contact the following organisations for confidential support:

www.mind.org.uk

www.beateatingdisorders.org.uk

www.nhs.uk/livewell/mentalhealth

www.mentalhealth.org.uk

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