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Palestinian father hails ‘miracle’ daughters who were pulled from rubble in Gaza


ANKARA, Turkey — Mira Nijim, 9, was still in a wheelchair. Her left leg — mangled in the airstrike that killed her brother, sister and mother — was held in a cast buttressed by metal joints and rods. But in a pastry shop in Ankara, Turkey’s capital, this week, Mira; her surviving sister, Miral, 14; and their father, Mahdi, managed some smiles.

It was a miracle they are alive, Mahdi, 42, told NBC News. “They are the only survivors.” 

On Oct. 26, an Israeli airstrike brought down the apartment building where they were staying with relatives in Khan Younis, Gaza’s second largest city. Dozens of people were killed, Mahdi said, including his wife, Mayada, 41; their daughter Maria, 12; and their 5-year-old son Ahmed.

More than two months after their deaths, Mahdi is still accounting for their losses: their presence, of course, and the life they were building together, as well as their memories, their dreams and their wishes, Mahdi said. “Everything is gone.”

Palestinian family in Turkey Richard Engel
Mahdi Nijim, 42, with his daughters Mira, 9, and Miral, 14, earlier this week. Nico Hameon / NBC News
Palestinian family in Turkey Richard Engel
Mahdi Nijim in Ankara, Turkey, on Monday, as he remembered his wife, daughter and son, who died in an airstrike in October.Nico Hameon / NBC News

Mahdi had left the apartment just before the strike to collect food aid at a nearby school, no more than a three-minute walk away, he said, when he saw a bomb falling from the sky. By the time he arrived at the apartment — where he and his family had been staying after they evacuated their home in Beit Hanoun, in northern Gaza — it was reduced to rubble, a scene of chaos and confusion that made it hard to believe his family had survived. 

In the interminable hours that followed, Mahdi remembers wishing he had died with them. 

But his daughter Miral was pulled from the rubble and an NBC News crew filmed her rescue. She was dazed, covered in dust and had blood streaming down her face.

She asked if her father was alive. The medic replied he was, but he didn’t really know. 

“They bombed us while we were baking bread and we were about to eat,” Miral told NBC News. She described a disjointed series of impossible sensations: the floor dropping out beneath her, like an “elevator going down,” she said. “Then the whole house fell on me.”

“I couldn’t move or lift up the rocks,” Miral said. “The house’s pillar fell on me, and it was big. I couldn’t move it.” She was conscious, she said, and remembered thinking “they would never be able to pull me out because they don’t have any tools.” She couldn’t work out how long it took — Was it days? Was it hours? — before she was rescued. 

Miral suffered fractures to her clavicle and skull. 

Her sister Mira recalled she was talking to another girl who suddenly disappeared as the house collapsed and they were subsumed by the rubble. “I was screaming, saying ambulance, ambulance, until the ambulance arrived,” Mira said.  

After the strike, Mahdi wandered in a daze, eventually making his way to Nasser Hospital, where he found Mira. Her legs, he said, were “almost distorted.” She had an open wound and two fractures in her leg. 

A Palestinian man carries a child casualty at the site of Israeli strikes on houses, in Khan Younis
A rescuer carrying Mira from the Israeli strike on Oct. 26. Mohammed Salem / Reuters file

Two days after she was admitted, doctors installed a metal plate into her lower-left leg. Five days later, Mahdi said, the flesh was mottled around the stitches on her leg, and she had developed a bone infection. 

“We know that bone infection is brutal. Infection is hard to cure,” he said. “Her legs looked very horrific.”

While they were in the hospital, Mahdi said his older brother Mahmoud, 51, overheard a Turkish delegation looking for injured children to evacuate from Gaza for medical treatment, starting a series of events that ultimately led them to Ankara, Turkey. 

Palestinian family in Turkey Richard Engel
Mira in Ankara on Monday. Her father hopes she can fulfill her mother’s dream for her to become a doctor.Nico Hameon / NBC News

In early December, Mahdi said he got a call from his nephew in Sweden who told him his name was on a list of people allowed to leave the enclave. He couldn’t believe it. “I asked him, ‘What list?’ I did not do anything.”

After his nephew messaged him a picture of the list, Mahdi made the short journey by ambulance to the Rafah border crossing in southern Gaza with Miral and Mira. About 2,100 sick and injured people have left Gaza through the Rafah crossing, Khaled Zayed, head of the Egyptian Red Crescent in North Sinai, told NBC News, making Mira and Miral part of a very small group. 

Without his nephew’s intervention Mahdi said he wouldn’t have gone to the crossing because “I wasn’t aware of it.”   

When the Turkish representative came to check the names, Mira was registered to travel, but Miral was not,…



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