Extract from The Guardian
Australian immigration and asylum
Deal brings refugee community some relief and hopes of seeing family again – but, after 15 months of war, many ‘cannot celebrate’
Fri 17 Jan 2025 01.00 AEDT
Despite the changes a ceasefire could bring to Gaza after more than a year of bombardment, Karam Alakklouk is still concerned.
“We have very mixed feelings about the deal, because we have so many bad experiences from previous ceasefire deals, where the violence increases before they come into effect.
“Until it formally begins, these couple of days will be very heavy on our souls – each moment will be counted as a year. We just want to sleep through these couple of days and wake up and there is officially a ceasefire.”
A ceasefire deal between Hamas and Israel was announced this week, aiming to bring a pause to the war in Gaza, and designed to end the brutal 15-month conflict that began after Hamas’s attacks on Israel on 7 October 2023.
The deal, announced by Qatar’s prime minister, has three phases, including a prisoner and hostage swap and is intended as a stepping stone towards ending a conflict that has resulted in the deaths of more than 46,000 Palestinians in the enclave.
Alakklouk worked as a civil engineer in Gaza before arriving in Australia last year and says he worked on many reconstructions of the territory after previous Israeli incursions.
“But this feels different,” he said. “We have never seen this level of aggression and violence before and reconstruction will be extremely difficult with the likely restrictions on resources coming into Gaza.”
He said refugees in Australia had approached the news with some trepidation, particularly because of how this next phase will affect their grieving.
“Ultimately, it is too late,” he said. “Our lives have been saved but now we must grieve this unimaginable pain.
“Previously, we were solely focused on survival, on the survival of our families. But now, the real struggle will begin. The struggle to accept and to heal and to cry.”
He said there was not a sense of celebration in the community but rather a slight sense of relief, at the hope loved ones were no longer living in constant fear of death.
“That no more lives could be lost each day, each hour, I think most people would feel relieved at that. I did not sleep last night in anticipation, spending it crying and imagining all the people I want to see again.”
He said upon the announcement of the deal, his wife wondered aloud if they could only visit Gaza again, if only for a few hours.
“Our connection with Gaza is beyond words and imagination. We are connected to each centimetre of land. But now there is nothing there – no streets, no houses.
“I love Australia and don’t want to leave here but I do want to see my family again one day, to hold them again and to cherish every moment, because that is what this experience has taught us.”
Rami Tarazi is a former managing director of an NGO in Gaza, and came to Australia during this latest war. He says any step towards ending the violence is a positive step.
“I still have family there, my mother and father-in-law, my extended family, uncles and aunties, all still in Gaza. We need peace more than anything.
“The people of Gaza only need safety, to be able to return to our normal lives and not to face death on every corner.
“We cannot celebrate, after so many people died in Gaza. We are just happy to have this moment, to have some hope.
“There is now so much to do, Gaza is starting from zero now. There is no infrastructure, no electricity, no roads, no water, nothing. I wouldn’t know what to return to if I ever went back for a visit. It is permanently changed.”
The Australia Palestine Advocacy Network welcomed the ceasefire deal, which it called “long-overdue”.
APAN’s president, Nasser Mashni, added that the deal was “not justice” but a “fleeting reprieve.”
“A ceasefire is not justice – it is a fleeting reprieve that will never undo the profound pain caused by Israel’s genocide, nor will it, alone, prevent the next wave of bloodshed. Justice means liberation.
“The resilience of Palestinians is not just a story of survival but a call to the world to end its complicity.”