Jenin and Tulkarem, occupied West Financial institution – Omaima Faraj bows her head in silence for a second – she’s drained, however the work doesn’t cease.
She arrives at a school-turned-shelter close to Tulkarem the place her first affected person, an aged displaced girl who greets her tenderly, is ready for her to measure her glucose and blood stress. Then she strikes to the subsequent classroom, the subsequent affected person, strolling down an open passage drenched in late-February sunshine.
Faraj, 25, has been volunteering to assist residents devastated by the Israeli raids for weeks. She is likely one of the younger Palestinians working to deal with the emergency Israel is creating throughout the occupied West Financial institution because it raids refugee camps and displaces 1000’s.
Dashing into hazard
When Israel’s military occupation and displacement of the camp started in what the Israelis have known as operation “Iron Wall”, on January 21, Faraj rushed into the camp as a substitute of working away from the violence.
She stayed there along with her fellow volunteers for greater than 12 important days, when the assaults have been at their fiercest and other people have been nonetheless making an attempt to organise to flee the camp.
They centered on delivering assist to folks in want – the injured, the aged, and other people with restricted mobility. No person may get to a hospital as a result of the Israeli troopers wouldn’t allow them to.
Israeli troopers harassed the volunteers, Faraj recounts, describing how they might threaten her and her colleagues, telling them to go away and by no means return or they’d be shot.
One incident notably haunts her, of an aged man who was trapped in his home for 4 days.
The crew saved making an attempt to achieve him, however Israeli troopers blocked their path. Lastly, the Worldwide Committee of the Pink Cross intervened, coordinating with the Israelis to permit secure passage for the volunteers.
Once they reached the person, he was in dire straits – missing meals, water and hygiene for 4 days, however they have been lastly capable of evacuate him.
As they have been leaving, they have been goaded, warned to not return – or threat being shot.
Backpack medics
“We didn’t have an emergency plan for this,” says Alaa Srouji, director of the Al-Awda Middle in Tulkarem.

Al-Awda and the Lajee Middle of Aida Camp in Bethlehem are coaching volunteers to doc the expulsions of individuals and camp circumstances to allow them to assess the help wanted.
The volunteers are about 15 largely feminine nurses and medics who got here collectively when the Israeli raids started, to supply medical assist and distribute necessities to the 1000’s who have been harmed.
Their younger faces present the toll of practically two months of working nonstop with folks displaced by the Israeli assault on the Nur Shams and Tulkarem camps.
They’re struggling to fill an enormous hole left when Israel banned the United Nations Palestinian refugee company (UNRWA) from serving to folks within the occupied West Financial institution.
These volunteers don’t have headquarters, they spend all day strolling round to serve folks with nothing greater than their backpacks and dedication.
They go to one of many 11 short-term, hurriedly arrange shelters or wherever their sufferers have managed to discover a place to dwell.
They convey medical and psychological assist and in addition garments, meals, and different requirements to those that have misplaced all the things to Israel’s raiding troopers.

Of their backpacks are gauze, transportable glucose displays, gloves, bandages, tourniquets, guide blood stress displays, notebooks and pens.
“Our function as a area people is so necessary,” says Alaa.
The volunteers should additionally assist one another emotionally, holding group periods to deal with the toll of working inside their devastated communities.
A lot of them are from the camp, so they’re additionally displaced, focused, and have seen their neighbourhoods levelled by Israeli bulldozers.
Faraj is not any totally different. Like many Palestinians, she is marked by loss and violence after her 18-year-old brother was killed by an Israeli drone in January 2024.
The camp is a no-go zone. Some displaced residents take the danger of returning to their properties to attempt to retrieve a few of their belongings.
They navigate rubble-filled streets, the stench of rotting meals left behind in now-abandoned homes, and sewers torn open by bulldozers, whereas Israeli troopers patrol and drones hover overhead, looking for motion contained in the camp.
Laughing, crying, screaming the trauma
An hour’s drive from Tulkarem is Jenin, and 10 minutes from Jenin is a village known as Kafr Dan the place an uncommon sound filters within the air – kids’s laughter.

About 20 kids roam across the backyard of a big home. They’re gathered right into a tough circle by trainers who encourage them to talk – loudly – to let loose their concern and anger.
The exercise is organised by the Freedom Theater of Jenin, which got here to Kafr Dan to supply this second of respite for displaced kids to easily be, a minimum of for a second.
They began up inside Jenin camp as an area the place kids and youth may take part in cultural actions however have been blocked by the Israeli military from being there.
So, “We convey the theatre to the kids,” says Shatha Jarrar, one of many three exercise coordinators.
The youngsters are inspired to be as loud as they like, to scream out the concern and anger they maintain inside after the violence they have been exposed to.
A sport involving a small ball balanced on a spoon is subsequent, making the kids snigger once more and their watching moms smile, pleased to see their kids pleased.
Sitting by the aspect is a smiling Um Muhammed, 67, who has introduced a few of the kids to hitch the actions.
They’re not her kids, although, as she has provided shelter in her home to a household of seven who’ve not too long ago been displaced from Jenin.

Um Muhammed was displaced in 2002, in the course of the second Intifada, her dwelling within the Jenin refugee camp destroyed by Israeli forces again when her three kids have been small.
They’re older now, she says, her eyes darting round as she recollects the trauma of displacement. They’ve bought kids of their very own, and he or she is a grandmother.
Um Muhammed is aware of all too properly the fear of Israeli tanks rolling in and explosions echoing. That’s why, now, she insists on serving to folks going by way of the identical factor.
Shatha, 26, and her two co-organisers begin placing their tools away, stowing it in backpacks. Actions are finished for at present.
Shatha grew to become conscious of the Freedom Theater when she attended a programme there as a baby and later determined to dedicate her time to the theatre’s legacy.
“Theatre is a special world and a lifestyle. My work with kids is a part of this world. The youngsters are our tomorrow,” she says.
Close to her is a mom – who prefers to withhold her identify – who was watching her kids.

She, her husband and two kids lived by way of the dystopian sight of Israeli drone quadcopters blaring orders to evacuate. Then got here the Apache helicopters hovering within the sky, drone assaults, and a fleet of armoured automobiles invading, accompanied by closely armed Israeli troopers.
Her eyes widen and her speech quickens, the recollections contemporary as she tells her story.
Lastly, as they left, they needed to stand whereas Israeli troopers scanned their faces and arrested a few of the males making an attempt to go away.
Once they first left, she had held out hope that they might be allowed again in just a few days.
However the actuality of their displacement is slowly settling in.