In pictures: Displaced Palestinian couple holds wedding in Gaza tent
A newlywed Palestinian couple, Shaima’ Qazeat and Mahmud Akhiziq, tied the knot surrounded by barbed wire at a camp for displaced Palestinians in Deir Al-Balah, in the central Gaza Strip last week. The newlyweds are celebrating their reunion amid the ongoing Israeli atrocities in Palestine.
The pictures from the couple's wedding have been making rounds on social media, with their loved ones coming together for the union. The photos were first shared by the Palestinian photojournalist, Majdi Fathi, on Instagram.
Last month, the news of another Palestinian couple tying the knot in Rafah made headlines. Palestinian groom Mohammed al-Ghandour wanted to give his bride a beautiful wedding but after war began in Gaza they had to flee their homes and the couple finally got married in January in the tent city where they now live.
Ghandour led his wife Shahad by the hand towards the tent decorated with some coloured lights and a mirror with a gold-coloured frame as a few relatives escorted them, clapping in time. Inside the tent Shahad, wearing a white dress and veil with traditional red embroidery, lifted her hand and Ghandour put a ring on it.
The couple are from Gaza City in the north of the tiny enclave where some of the worst of Israel's heavy bombardment and the fighting between it and Hamas have taken place since the war began on October 7. The homes of both Ghandour's family and Shahad's family were destroyed in Israeli airstrikes, they said, and they lost cousins and other family members in the bombardment.
"My happiness is maybe at 3% but will get myself ready for my wife. I want to make her happy," said Ghandour. Instead of the big party that Ghandour had wanted, he and Shahad had a small group of relatives who like them had managed to leave Gaza City and flee to Rafah, at the far southern end of the strip next to Egypt.
Both families had already spent lots of money on the wedding before the war began. Shahad had spent more than $2,000 on clothes, they said. "My dream was to give Shahad the best wedding, the most beautiful in the world," said her mother, Umm Yahia Khalifa. "We prepared her wedding things and she was happy. But it is all gone in the shelling. Every time she remembers she starts to cry," she said.
As the small wedding party began to clap and dance, people around them went about their daily chores among the lines of tents stretched across the sand, seeking food or hanging laundry. A small girl in a pink and white dress smiled broadly as the clapping began and joined a group of other children dancing as the sun set behind the high border fence topped with barbed wire.
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