Among the more than 95,000 Palestinians injured in the war in Gaza are thousands who require specialized care that is unavailable in the Strip, where the health system has been decimated by nearly a year of bombardment and siege. Yet the vast majority of medical evacuations requested have not been approved, according to the World Health Organization.
At the reconstructive surgery hospital Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) runs in Amman, Jordan, our teams are treating the few Gazan children we have managed to transfer for rehabilitation after they were medically evacuated to Egypt—a tiny fragment of the thousands who remain trapped in Gaza.
One of our patients is Abdul Rahman, a 15-year-old boy who was critically injured when an Israeli airstrike targeted him and his friends in northern Gaza while they were out looking for food on February 10. Abdul Rahman nearly lost his leg in the attack. After receiving emergency surgery in Gaza, he was medically evacuated to Egypt and transferred to the MSF hospital in Amman, where he is undergoing comprehensive surgery along with daily physiotherapy and mental health support. Here, Abdul Rahman reflects on his incredible journey of recovery, while many other children like him remain in limbo as they await evacuation.