ATHENS: Raghad al-Fara is struggling to rebuild her teenage life in Athens, not least because she now moves around with crutches because of injuries suffered in the Gaza war.
Evacuated from the besieged Palestinian territory in February she now lives in a shelter for refugee women. “I never thought I would survive, let alone set foot on European soil,” the 15-year-old told AFP.
Raghad is one of 10 Gazan minors suffering from “complex” orthopaedic and psychological injuries, according to Heracles Moskoff, secretary general for vulnerable persons at the migration ministry.
Injured during an Israeli bombing, she was evacuated with her mother Shadia and her younger sister Argwan.
The rest of the family - three other children and the father - remain in Gaza.
In total, 26 Palestinians arrived in Athens at the end of February, according to the Greek foreign ministry.
“When we learned that Greece agreed to host us, it was a relief,” said Shadia al-Fara, the teenager´s mother.
Sara Al-Sweirki, 20, who now also lives in Athens, is determined to “not just be a survivor.”
“I want to be a girl my age like others, learn guitar and piano, and study,” stressed the young woman, who left Gaza in September with her mother and brother.
Accepted by the private Deree American College of Greece, al-Sweirki will begin her studies in January.
She chose psychology “to help others overcome their traumas,” she said.
Raghad could use such expertise. Her mother noted that the teenager still has not received psychological support “even though she wet the bed for months” due to the severe shock she experienced.
Raghad was injured in a July 2024 Israeli bombing in the Gaza city of Khan Younis that caused hundreds of casualties.
Her right leg and back were crushed under the rubble of a building.
“For two months, my daughter was on a respirator and for seven months, bedridden, unable to move,” al-Fara recalled painfully.
Upon her arrival in Greece, Raghad was treated by an orthopedist and a physiotherapist at a children´s hospital.