Sherin Alsabbagh, originally from Gaza, lives in Ballaghaderreen, Co Roscommon, where she works as an English tutor and translator. A Palestinian and Irish citizen, she has lived in Ireland for 15 years, and has spent the past year watching in horror from afar as the deadly Israeli invasion of Gaza continues.
She has family there, including her mother Najwa (74). The Department of Foreign Affairs informed Sherin in February that her mother had been approved for entry to Ireland, subject to Israel agreeing to let her leave Gaza. Sherin’s brother, his wife, and their four children, who live with Najwa, were refused visas. Sherin has signed an undertaking to accommodate Najwa at her Ballaghaderreen home. However, with Gaza border crossings closed and Israeli attacks ongoing, her mother cannot get out.
The plan was that she would leave through the Rafah crossing into Egypt and somebody from the Irish Embassy in Cairo would meet her there, give her the visa, and put her on a plane to come here,” explains Sherin. In May, the Israeli authorities finally agreed to allow Najwa leave. However, by then the Rafah border crossing had been closed.
I visited Sherin in October to take photos and record some video that would accompany an interview by my colleague Justine McCarthy. While I was there Sherin tried to call her mother in northern Gaza a number of times. Wifi and phone access is limited so it took many attempts to get through. When we did, Najwa spoke of her life. “The air strikes and the bombardment are everywhere. They don’t discriminate. They bomb without warning,” she said. The line went dead and Sherin tried again, reconnecting after 10 minutes. “I am terrified I will be killed. They have cut off all the aid. No food is allowed to get into the northern part of Gaza. We suffer from the lack of food,” she said.
Sherin has prepared a bedroom for her mother in Ballaghaderreen, but Najwa remains trapped in Gaza, and the room remains empty.
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