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Israel at war: Gazan cancer patients can't return home

Tania Krämer
November 22, 2023

Since the escalation of the Israel-Hamas conflict, Palestinian cancer patients from Gaza have been stranded in a hospital in East Jerusalem. Their way back home to Gaza is blocked.

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Entrance of the Indonesian Hospital in Gaza, with black smoke rising in the background
Many hospitals in Gaza cannot treat patients anymore. The Indonesian Hospital (seen here) in northern Gaza ran out of fuel and electricity in mid-November.Image: Anas al-Shareef/REUTERS

A few plastic chairs arranged in a circle serve as a meeting point for a group of Palestinian cancer patients at the Augusta Victoria Hospital in East Jerusalem. They left Gaza for medical treatment a few days before October 7, when Hamas-led militants from the strip launched a devastating terror attack on southern Israel.

Now, they are not just fighting cancer but also the feeling of guilt at not being able to return and be with their families while the conflict rages in Gaza.

"We understood that they are extremely anxious and nervous, and that we need to do more than just provide a place to stay, and food. They need to talk about what is going on, what they are going through," said one of the social workers at the hospital, who didn't want to be identified by name.

"Many feel guilty because here they have electricity, water, food and everything, and sometimes they hear from their children [in Gaza] that they are hungry. This is really killing them."

The facade of the Augusta Victoria Hospital on a sunny day
The Augusta Victoria Hospital in East Jerusalem offers special treatment for cancer patients from GazaImage: Tania Kraemer/DW

Cancer patients had to leave kids behind

About 100 Palestinian patients and their relatives are stranded at Augusta Victoria Hospital. Located on a hill overlooking Jerusalem's Old City, the hospital was named after the wife of German Emperor Wilhelm II who visited the city in 1898. It is run by the Lutheran World Federation and provides specialized cancer treatment, such as radiation therapy, which is not available in Gaza or in the occupied West Bank. The patients are currently lodged in hotels and guesthouses nearby.

Abu Jamal, who didn't want to be identified by his real name, was only supposed to stay for a few days, then return to Gaza on October 8. He came with his wife, leaving their seven children with relatives.

"They don't always want to tell me how things really are in order to protect me, but I am worried sick about them," he said

Abu Jamal is from Rimal, an affluent neighborhood in the center of Gaza City that has reportedly been heavily damaged. When the Israeli military dropped leaflets at the beginning of the war telling residents in the north to go south, his family complied.

"My family went to the south, but they didn't feel safe there either. They came back, but there is nothing there anymore, no bakeries, no safety, just nothing."

Gaza City neighborhood in ruins with people standing in the street looking at destroyed buildings
Residents walk through the Rimal neighborhood in Gaza City on October 10, after Israeli airstrikes.Image: Mohammed Abed/AFP/Getty Images

Gaza: 'nothing left to go back to'

Another patient, who is in his seventies and didn't want to share his name, could barely speak without crying. "Sometimes," he said, "I can't reach my family for two or three days. They are all dispersed in different places."

He said he dreaded hearing bad news when he calls them. Just a few days ago, he was told that one of his daughters and her husband had been killed by an Israeli airstrike.

"There is nothing left of the house, they told me. There is nothing left to go back to."

In the children's ward, Um Ahmed sat next to her granddaughter Samar, a toddler, who was hooked up to a drip for chemotherapy. The child, who is too young to understand what is going on back home, was smiling bravely.

Her parents live in the Al-Shati (Beach) refugee camp in Gaza City, an area near the sea in northern Gaza,where there has been heavy fighting. They were not allowed to travel to Jerusalem, so her grandmother came instead.

"She misses her mum," said Um Ahmed.

Gaza blockade making cancer treatments difficult

It has always been difficult for Palestinian patients at Augusta Victoria Hospital to get out of Gaza, as Israel and Egypt have tightly controlled the movement of people in and out of the Hamas-ruled territory for the past 16 years.

Patients needing specialized treatment unavailable in Gaza used to be granted treatment in Israel. But they had to apply for a permit from the Israeli authorities to leave through the Erez crossing, the sole pedestrian passage with Israel. Some were referred to the occupied West Bank, which includes East Jerusalem, others to hospitals in Israel. It was a lengthy bureaucratic process. Permits, if granted, were given to the patient and one accompanying relative.

Now, their path home is entirely blocked: Israel has kept both its border crossings — the Kerem Shalom crossing for goods and the Erez crossing for pedestrians — shuttered since October 7. It is unclear if and when they will reopen.

Cars and an ambulance at the Erez crossing
The Erez crossing seen from the Palestinian side after an airstrike. The crossing was reportedly heavily damaged by Hamas-led militants breaching the border on October 7. Image: Bashar Taleb/AFP/Getty Images

At least three patients from Gaza have died. Their relatives were deported back to Gaza by the Israeli authorities, just like several thousand Gazan workers who happened to be in Israel on October 7.

The situation is of great concern to medical staff. They are not just worried about their patients stranded in East Jerusalem, but also about those in Gaza who won't be able to come for treatment in future.

"Our patients are chronically ill. They need continuous, long-term care," said Dr. Fadi Atrash, chief executive officer of Augusta Victoria Hospital.

At least 39 patients from Gaza have missed their radiation therapy sessions at the hospital since October 7 because they were unable to travel. Another 180 have been forced to forgo chemotherapy.

"We don't even know if they are dead or alive," said Atrash, adding that no treatment "bluntly and directly… means death, because this is cancer. If you don't start treating it in time and in the proper way, the risks of dying from cancer are great."

Majority of Gaza hospitals had to close

At least 25 of Gaza's 36 hospitals are no longer operational according to the latest World Health Organization (WHO) report. Heavy fighting around hospitals and the shortage of supplies, electricity and water have rendered many health facilities unable to provide assistance to the injured, let alone patients with chronic diseases.

Medical staff at Augusta Victoria Hospital are staying in touch with their counterparts in Gaza, mainly at the Turkish Hospital in northern Gaza, which used to treat cancer patients.

"Sometimes we try not to call because we don't want to hear the news of another colleague [being] killed," said Atrash. "And simply because we know they are working in a very difficult situation, with no supplies, no electricity, no water, not enough food to cope with this high number of casualties. But also because we are losing our colleagues and this is very heartbreaking."

Abu Jamal said that the patients, despite the risk and their own health struggles, would rather go back sooner than later.

"We are really thankful how we are being taken care of over here," he said. "But I want to go back. I want to be back with my family."

Edited by: Carla Bleiker 

Gaza cancer clinic forced to close