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News > Palestine

People in Mideast Retain Hopes for Better Year in 2024

  • March in support of Gaza at Martyrs' Square, Beirut, Lebanon, Dec. 31, 2023.

    March in support of Gaza at Martyrs' Square, Beirut, Lebanon, Dec. 31, 2023. | Photo: X/ @EllenJeanAbare

Published 1 January 2024
Opinion

Bethlehem, known as the birthplace of Jesus Christ, was empty with no celebrations for Christmas.

As the world is hugging the new year, people in the Middle East, where conflicts and economic slowdown inflict pains and suffering in some countries and regions in 2023, retain hopes for a more peaceful year and a better life in 2024.

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HOPE OF PEACE

Rami Kandu, like many Palestinians, experienced "the most difficult time" in 2023 because of the deadly conflict that broke out between Hamas and Israel on Oct. 7.

Now, a massive humanitarian disaster has been unfolding in the Gaza Strip where over 21,000 people, mostly civilians, have lost their lives while most of the 2.3 million population in the Palestinian enclave have been displaced, due to the relentless Israeli offensives. Even in the West Bank, people felt the pain of those living in the war-ravaged enclave.

"As you can see, the West Bank city of Bethlehem, known as the birthplace of Jesus Christ, was empty with no celebrations for Christmas and New Year to show sympathy to the Palestinians suffering from Israeli attacks and siege," Kandu said, adding that "everyone wants the conflict to end so that peace can return and the new year will be a good year."

Basil Al-Maqousi, a 45-year-old Palestinian painter, draws a picture every day after he and his family were forced to flee from Gaza City to the southern Gaza Strip city of Rafah.

Al-Maqousi depicted in his paintings the ordeals that people were enduring in the deadly Israel-Hamas clashes and his wish to restore peace in the new year.

The same hope went for Ben Zimroni, an Israeli Jew, who used to teach Hebrew at an Arabic school in Jerusalem before the Gaza escalation. He said that he felt the sufferings of the Palestinians, and hoped to promote mutual understanding between the two peoples in 2024.

REBUILDING AND PROGRESS

The past year was not easy for many Turks, as their country struggled with a deadly earthquake in early 2023 as well as a continued economic slowdown.

Nesrin Kayabasi, a 45-year-old Turkish woman from Hatay, was a survivor of a deadly earthquake that hit southeastern Türkiye and neighboring Syria in February 2023.

She lost her villa, office, cars, and all her belongings in the quake, and all her family are now running a Hatay traditional food shop in the capital Ankara for a living.

"Over 50,000 people died in that terrible earthquake, which I will never forget," she recalled, determining to return to her hometown once the reconstruction work there is complete. "In the new year of 2024, I want to create my own Hatay food brand and return to Hatay to get back the life we had."

Yaser Yazigi, a Syrian resident from Aleppo, also suffered from the earthquake, which damaged his house. What's worse was the U.S. sanctions on his country hindered the importing of some necessary materials needed to repair his house.

"The sanctions imposed by the United States have led us to this terrible situation," said Yazigi, hoping "the embargo on Syria can be lifted and things will get better in 2024."

Ahmad Ghossaini, a resident of Baakline, a Druze town of Mount Lebanon, hoped Lebanon "will rise in a short time starting with the election of a new president and the formation of a capable government to rebuild institutions."

Lebanon remained entrenched in a socioeconomic and financial crisis in 2023, further exacerbated by institutional and political stalemates. The Lebanon-Israel border has also been witnessing heightened tension between Hezbollah and Israeli forces.

"It is not the first time that we faced conflicts and crisis, Lebanese will manage to survive and stand up again," Ghossaini said.

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