鈥業sraelis turned Palestine into hell鈥�: Sri Lankan evacuees fear for family in Gaza

Sri Lankan national Fathima Rikaza and her Palestinian children, who were evacuated from Gaza in November, visit Palestine鈥檚 embassy in Colombo on Jan. 2, 2024. (AN Photo)
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  • Fathima Rikaza and her children were evacuated from Gaza in November
  • Her husband鈥檚 family has lost 50 members since the beginning of Israel鈥檚 onslaught

When Fathima Rikaza left Gaza in November, it was to bring her children to safety and wait to return to her Palestinian husband鈥檚 homeland. She can only pray now that they will see their father again.
Rikaza married Abdul Lateef 14 years ago, when he came to Sri Lanka to study English. After living eight years in her native Colombo, they moved with their children to Gaza to visit his family.
Her husband had a fruit shop and they decided to stay.
鈥淚 opted to settle down,鈥� she told Arab News. 鈥淟ife was good.鈥�
Then, in October, daily Israeli airstrikes deprived them of any sense of safety and peace.
鈥淚sraelis turned Palestine into hell for us. We have practically lost everything,鈥� she said.
鈥淓very minute anything could happen. We have kept an emergency backpack ready. It contained two dresses and a praying mat. And even at night we slept fully dressed, to run away anytime.鈥�
A month later, she and her four children were among the few thousand people with foreign passports who were evacuated from Gaza.
Rikaza鈥檚 husband stayed behind with his ailing mother and disabled sister.
鈥淢y husband鈥檚 family lost 50 people. We did not know what would happen in the next minute,鈥� she said.
鈥淚t became difficult to stay there, so my husband asked me to go to the Rafah border and contact our Sri Lankan embassy, and they helped us.鈥�
They now live in Colombo with her sister.
In Sri Lanka, her children can at least sleep, and she will be able to fulfill the promise she gave her husband that she would send them back to school.
Israel鈥檚 relentless bombardment of Gaza for the past three months has destroyed not only 70 percent of its homes, but also most of the enclave鈥檚 educational, healthcare, water, and electrical infrastructure.
At least 22,600 people have been killed by the assault and nearly 60,000 wounded. Most are women and children.
Rikaza is thinking about them all the time.
鈥淚 pray for the Palestinians,鈥� she said.
鈥淭hey are loving, always ready to help. They made me feel at home. Even in those difficult times, they cared more to save me and my children than to protect their own life.鈥�
She talks to her husband about twice a week, worrying in between if the phone will ring.
鈥淲e would have led a happier life with my husband ... We are all happy to hear his voice when we get a call from him,鈥� she said.
鈥淗ad it not been for the children, I would have gone back to be with my husband and die with him.鈥�