The program reviewed the negative effects of the children who were born under the siege and lived its diaries, after experiencing 4 air wars and a military incursion while they were not yet 15 years old.

He listened to the "rest story" of the story of the little girl, Hayat, who suffers from psychological disorders as a result of the wars that made her father lose his feet. He also listened to the stories of men who suffer from severe psychological effects due to the war and the bombing of the Gaza Strip. The program also referred to the story of Sabah Abu Halima, who lost her husband and 4 of her sons. During the Israeli aggression on Gaza in 2008.

Psychologist Olfat Al-Masobi confirmed that the approaching times of the wars on the Gaza Strip had serious effects on the mental health of adults and very disastrous for children, she said.

Children's suffering

Meanwhile, Maha Al-Husseini, Director of Strategies for the Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor, revealed that about 91% of Gaza children suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder, which is a frightening percentage, according to her, which means that an entire generation suffers in the besieged Strip.

The child, Hayat Al-Attar, tells of the missiles that cut off her father's feet, and the sound of the bombing that did not leave her memory, and the constant fear of her, especially while she was sleeping.

After the Israeli occupation bombing destroyed the family's house, Hayat resorted to an UNRWA school, to live with her family there.

Hayat's mother talked about the effects that the girl suffers from, such as fear in the dark, the condition of Sarhan at school, and her repeated fear every morning that everyone will die and that the Israeli air force will come to bomb them.

As for the child Abdul Rahman Najm, who witnessed the massacre at Al-Faluja cemetery, he recounts the moments of losing his friends in front of his eyes in the war while they were talking and playing together, considering what happened a dream.

Post Traumatic Stress Disorder

Consultant Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Sami Awaida, said that post-traumatic stress disorder comes after a person experiences an emergency and traumatic experience that is outside the framework of his personal experiences and poses a threat to his life.

He added that the besieged Gaza Strip for 15 years has turned into a large prison containing two million people, half of whom are children, and after every Israeli war, many people die and those around them are affected, revealing that all residents of the Strip suffer in varying forms from post-traumatic stress disorder or some of its symptoms.

In turn, the psychologist Iman Matar explained the stages of mental disorder, which begin to appear a month after the event that the person was exposed to, because the first month is the normal range of sadness or anger, and after the month he experiences the event and feels the same symptoms that he felt during the event.

Sabah Abu Halima, one of the victims of the war on Gaza in 2008, in which she lost 4 of her sons and her husband, said that sadness has not left her since that time, and she could not forget what happened to her, as if it had just happened, and confirmed that she could not sleep for more than 10 minutes to imagine that her children around screaming.

The ambulance officer, Moeen Abu Al-Aish, also described his suffering from the scenes that he sees in front of him, to the extent that he withdraws from people, in addition to his feeling of fear and depression.

For her part, Abeer Harb, who witnessed the Rafah massacre in the recent aggression on the Gaza Strip - and she lost her fiancé in the massacre - spoke of her destruction and the dissipation of her dreams of the life that she was seeking to form with her fiancé, stressing that Gaza does not have the capacity for two people to live with love and safety.