Canadians with loved ones in Gaza, Israel watch with heartbreak as violence unfolds - Action News
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Canadians with loved ones in Gaza, Israel watch with heartbreak as violence unfolds

As another day of violence unfolds inGaza and Israel, many with loved ones in the region watch with anxiety and heartbreak, unable to look away as the threat of a ground war looms.

As airstrikes, rocket-fire continue, anxiety deepens for family and friends from afar

Smoke and flames rise during Israeli air strikes, as cross-border violence between the Israeli military and Palestinian militants continues in Gaza City, May 14, 2021. (Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters)

As another day of violence unfolds inGaza and Israel, many with loved ones in the region are watching with anxiety and heartbreak, unable to look away as the threat of a ground war looms.

The end of Ramadan, which was supposed to have been a time of celebration marked byEid festivities, became a sombre day for Sabrine Azraq's family in Toronto their hearts heavy asimage after image of destructionemerged from the region.

"There isvery little to celebrate when we know what is happening. There's a heavy cloud over us," Azraq told CBC News. "People are very afraid of what is to come."

With hermother's entire family in the West Bank, Azraqand her relatives have been unable to avoidtheir phones and televisions.

"We're trying to watch live as many videos as possible to see what is going on. We are heartbroken," she said.

Israel on Friday unleashed a heavy barrage of artillery fire and airstrikes, asthe threat of a ground invasion in Gaza grew. The aim, said Israeli military spokespersonLt.-Col. Jonathan Conricus, is"to strike military targets and to minimize collateral damage and civilian casualties."

Sabrine Azraq, shown with her father in front of the Al-Aqsa Mosque, says she and her relatives in Toronto have been unable to avoid their phones and televisions since the latest violence broke out. Her mother's entire family lives in the West Bank. (CBC)

Palestinian militants in Gaza, meanwhile, have fired some 1,800rockets toward Israel in this latest round of conflict that began whenIsraeli settlers triedto displace dozens of Palestinian families in the Sheikh Jarrahneighbourhood ofEast JerusalemandIsraeli security forces descendedon Palestinian worshippers at the Al-Aqsa mosque compound last Friday.

The fighting has so far killed 119 Palestinians, including 31 children. Seven Israelis have also been killed,including a six-year-old boy and a soldier.

A message of common humanity

It's an all-too-familiar pattern for Rabbi Joshua Corberat Beit Rayim Synagogue and School in Richmond Hill, Ont., who has family members and many friends in Israel.

"They can't sleep, they worry for their children, they get red alert messages on their phone.... So some of them are afraid to take a shower because they only have 90 seconds to get to a shelter," Corber told CBC News.

Watching the events from afar, he said: "It's a mixture of sadness and exasperation."

When speaking to his congregation, Corber said,he's been trying to emphasize a message of common humanity.

Rabbi Joshua Corber of Beit Rayim Synagogue and School in Richmond Hill, Ont., says watching the events from afar brings 'a mixture of sadness and exasperation.' (CBC)

"What I've told my community is that I'm holding space in my heart for suffering and the grief that's being experienced in Israel," he said. "And I've been asserting to my congregation that while critique of Israel is necessary ... critique of Israel in and of itself is not tantamount to antisemitism."

"One can feel empathy and compassion for the grief and the suffering for Palestinians, and that does not diminish our love and support for our friends in Israel."

'Overwhelming' sentiment for division to end

Lia Tarachansky, an Israeli-Canadian journalist and documentary filmmaker, grew up in Israel and spent most of her professional life there. She has spent the last several days watching the news and texting non-stop with family and friends in the region, some Israeli, some Palestinian.

"How is this not stopping? ... How is it still going on? That rage, that fear that this is being done in our nameI think that that's the feeling," Tarachansky told CBC News. "That's what I'm hearing over the phone.

"I know from talking to family and friends ... that it feels like the walls are caving in," she said.

Lia Tarachansky, an Israeli-Canadian journalist and documentary filmmaker, grew up in Israel and spent most of her professional life there. 'It's incredible to see how people are able to maintain their humanity in the middle of this insanity,' she says. (CBC)

It's a feeling Tarachansky says is drivennot only byIsrael's actions in Gazaor the rocket-fire from Hamashitting various parts of Israel,butalso bythe racist sentimentsamong some inIsrael, which she sayssome politicians have allowed tofester to the point that they've gained legitimacy.

Ugly clashes havebrokenout among Jewish and Arab Israelisin particular in the central city of Lod despite a state of emergency and nighttime curfew. In nearbyBat Yam on Wednesday,Jewish nationalists attacked an Arab motorist, dragged him from his car and beat him, leaving him unconscious and seriously injured.

But often missing from the media's portrayal of the situation, Tarachansky says, is an "overwhelming"sentiment in Israel coming not just fromactivists and those in solidarity with Palestinians, but from ordinary people such asnurses,academics and even some police to see an end to the division and violence.

'I refuse to be an enemy'

"It's incredible to see how people are able to maintain their humanity in the middle of this insanity," Tarachansky said.

"And to say, 'No, I refuse to be an enemy. I refuse to go into the little box that someone else has created for me and stay there.' I do see that there are people on the other side, and I'm going to do everything in my power so that our children don't have to sit in bomb shelters and don't have to fear the sky."

The Canadian government has called for an "immediate de-escalation of tensions and an end to the violence."The "indiscriminate" barrage of rocket attacks by Hamas is "absolutely unacceptable," it said.

The statement also says Canada is "deeply disturbed" by the violence in Jerusalem, including in and around the Al-Aqsamosque, and "gravely concerned" by the expansion of settlements, demolitions and evictions in Sheikh Jarrah and Silwan.

Sabrine Azraq says she's also frustrated that Canadians only seem to pay attention when scenes of violence erupt in the region, adding thatnot enough is done to push forpeace when those images aren't filling screens.

She and Tarachanskysay they want to see Canada stop the sale ofarms to Israel a demand made by New Democratic Party Leader Jagmeet Singh on Wednesday amid the escalating violence.

"You can't support peace on both sides when you're arming and trainingand supporting and financing one side of the conflict," Tarachansky said.

For his part, Rabbi Corbersays as someone who has lived in Israel, he believes it's vital for Canadians to remember the goodness in both the Israeli and Palestinian people.

"It's just important to remember that everybody is human."

With files from Philip Lee-Shanok, Ali Raza and The Associated Press