Palestinian mother gave birth to 4 children together in Gaza

Millions of Palestinians have been displaced in the Gaza Strip by Israeli attacks. In this situation, a Palestinian mother gave birth to 4 children together in Gaza. His name is Iman al-Masri. Among the children born are two girls and two boys. However, one of them had to be hospitalized.

Palestinian mother gave birth to 4 children together in Gaza
 Palestinian mother gave birth to 4 children together in Gaza


Al Jazeera reported this information in a report on Thursday (December 28).


According to reports, mother Iman al-Masri was exhausted after giving birth to four children at a hospital in southern Gaza, far from her home in the north of the war-torn Palestinian territory.


The Palestinian mother fled her home in Beit Hanoun on foot with her three other children for safety in mid-October amid the Israel-Hamas war. At that time they walked five kilometers (three miles) to Jabalia refugee camp. However, they were looking for some means of transportation to get from there to Deir al-Balah, further south. Because Iman was six months pregnant and this distance was too long for her.


The 28-year-old displaced Palestinian mother gave birth to four children, daughters Tia and Lynn and sons Yasir and Mohammed, via C-section on December 18. But, Iman is quickly asked to leave the hospital with the newborns to make room for other war patients. However, she had to leave the hospital without baby Mohammad. Because he was in a very fragile state. Now the couple, along with Tia, Lin and Yasir, are sheltering in a small schoolroom in Deir al-Balah with about 50 members of their extended family.


"Mohammed weighed just one kilogram (2.2 pounds)," mother Iman al-Masri said of the baby boy left at a hospital in the Nuseirat refugee camp. He cannot live (here).'


Lying on a foam mattress in a schoolroom-turned shelter, Iman recounts her suffering since the start of the conflict. "When I left home, I only had some summer clothes for the kids," she said. I thought the war would last a week or two and after that we would go home.'


But after more than 11 weeks of conflict, his hopes of returning home have been dashed.

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