'We followed the rules, and they still attacked'
Toronto Star|March 16, 2024
Canadian nurse says 28 days in Gaza have changed how she views the war
BEN COHEN
'We followed the rules, and they still attacked'

A man stands in a building of medical charity Doctors Without Borders, which was targeted last month by Israeli tank fire in the al-Mawasi area, in the southern Gaza Strip.

Amy Potter can still see the scarred face of an orphaned, homeless nine-year-old girl who screamed, through a brutal leg realignment procedure, “I want to die. I want to die. Let me die. Let me die.”

Potter, a 48-year-old emergency room nurse from Thunder Bay, came home late last month from a tour of Gaza with Doctors Without Borders (MSF), her head full of nightmares. Memories of children bleeding and breathless in a broken health system.

Potter was in Gaza for four weeks — as long as MSF allows conflict mission rotations to last because of how challenging they are. Her last two deployments were in Yemen in 2018 and Sierra Leone the year before.

Potter felt powerless in Gaza, she said, where there are no longer any fully functional hospitals. She recalls a father tasked due to medical staff shortages with manually pumping an airbag, every six seconds exactly, to force air into the lungs of his dying child.

What happened next she will never know. The child was not expected to survive, and so the cold calculus of emergency medicine forced Potter away.

But always, Potter said, the children of Gaza will remain with her. The kids whose parents she overheard lying to them, telling them they still have a home to go back to, that all their toys are still there, safe.

The children whom she saw digging through refuse and rubble for material to build kites, which they flew against a backdrop of billowing black smoke, under the thunder of gunfire and tank shelling and airstrikes pierced by the whine of 24hour surveillance drones.

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