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Manitoba

Winnipegger heartbroken after touring devastation in West Bank

Ramsey Zeidreturned toWinnipeg on Saturday morning, but his thoughts remained with the destruction he witnessed in the Middle East earlier in the week.

Ramsey Zeid takes part in pro-Palestinian rally after 6-day journey to Middle East

A man stands in a pile of rubble.
Winnipegger Ramsey Zeid stands in rubble in Jenin, a city in the northern part of the West Bank earlier this week. Zeid, who is president of the Canadian Palestinian Association of Manitoba, just returned from a six-day journey to the Middle East. (Canadian Palestinian Association of Manitoba/Facebook)

Ramsey Zeidreturned toWinnipeg on Saturday morning, but his thoughts remained with the devastation he witnessed in the Middle East earlier in the week.

Zeid, who is president of the Canadian Palestinian Association of Manitoba, went on a six-day trip to Jordan and the West Bankwith other members of the Coalition of Canadian Palestinian Organizations and five Canadian MPs.

Although exhausted from his whirlwind week overseas, he said he washeartbrokenby the destruction he saw that wasinflicted by Israeli military forces, especially in thenorthern West Bank city of Jenin.

"They ripped up roads. They blew up homes. They blew up water tanks on top of houses,"Zeidsaid Saturday at the start of a pro-Palestinianrally thatstartedin the parking lot at CF Polo Park.

"We saw a lot of heartbreaking things, some really overwhelming things stuff that we kind of expected but not to that extent."

People gather around burial plots.
Children look around, standing in between numerous graves, while a person sits by a plot in Jenin, a city in the northern part of the West Bank in January 2024. (Canadian Palestinian Association of Manitoba/Facebook)

In addition to Jeninand the refugee camp there, Zeid also visited Ramallahand East Jerusalem, as well as other refugee camps inHebron and Jarosh, which are all located in the West Bank.

He saidtheattackson Palestinian-occupied territoriesof the West Bank were very apparent andsaddening.

"It's one thing to see it on social media and one thing to read about it. When you see it first-hand, up close and personal, it's different," he said.

Traffic comes to a standstill during a rally.
A pro-Palestinian rally briefly blocked traffic at the intersection of Main Street and Broadway Avenue in Winnipeg on Saturday. (Gavin Axelrod/CBC)

Zeid said the rally, which made its way to the intersection of Main Street and Broadway, beforemoving southeast to the intersection at St. Mary's Road and Bishop Grandin Boulevard, was critical as a way to speak up for Palestinians in the war-torn areas.

"The Palestinian people in the West Bank and Gaza don't have a voice, and we need to be their voice. So we're going to step up our fight here in Canada," he said.

'I've been traumatized,' Palestinian supporter says

The health ministry in Gaza estimates that more than 24,000 Palestinians have been killed since the militant group Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7, killing approximately 1,200 people.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has identified three goals for Israel's military operation in Gaza.

"The elimination of Hamas,the return of all our hostages and the guarantee that Gaza will never again pose a threat to Israel," he said Saturday in a news conference.

Israel claims they have killed in excess of9,000 Hamas operatives and fighters,a figure which includes roughly 1,800 militants who crossed into Israel as part of the Oct. 7attacks.

AneetaRehman has been following the situation in the Middle East since October. She was part ofSaturday's pro-Palestinian rally and said it's been difficult for her to read and hear about the atrocities.

"I've been traumatized. I've been actually crying a lot,"she said.

A woman shows support with a flag.
Aneeta Rehman attended the pro-Palestinian rally in Winnipeg on Saturday. Rehman says she's been traumatized by what she's heard and read about in Gaza and the West Bank. (Randall McKenzie/CBC)

Born in Pakistan, Rehmansaid the fighting and dying in Gaza and the West Bank has negatively affected her trust in humanity.

"It has impacted me in the sense that I don't trust in western civilization, human rights andpeople who preach that they are not racist," she said.

Pushing for peace

Andrew Loewen also took part in the rally. He was there representing Labour for Palestine Winnipeg, the local chapter of a trans-national organization of labour activists working in solidarity with Palestinian trade unions and Palestinian people.

A man holds up a sign.
Andrew Loewen represented Labour for Palestine Winnipeg at Saturday's rally. (Randall McKenzie/CBC)

Loewen is advocating for liberation for Palestinians, and he'd like to see an immediate ceasefire, as well as self-determination for Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank.

He called what's happening in Gaza a genocide.

"We're here to walk hand in hand, shoulder to shoulder with anyone who wants peace and justice," Loewen said.

Peace is also what Zeid would like to see, but he said that will only happen if government bodies are pressured into making changes for the betterment of Palestinians.

"Our governments have to be held accountable. They're the ones that need to be pushed," he said.

A building that was bombed.
The inside of a building that was bombed in Jenin, a city in the northern part of the West Bank in January 2024. (Canadian Palestinian Association of Manitoba/Facebook)

Zeid remains hopeful, but he said hope isn't what he saw on his trip.

"The people, you can see it in their eyes," he said. "They're waiting for the day that it's the end for them. They know it's coming, they just don't know when."

With files from Gavin Axelrod