Current:Home > InvestLoay Elbasyouni "gave up hope many times" that his parents would escape Gaza City. Here's how he saved them. -Finovate
Loay Elbasyouni "gave up hope many times" that his parents would escape Gaza City. Here's how he saved them.
View
Date:2025-04-13 01:32:32
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu appears set to defy warnings from the United States and many other countries and organizations by ordering his forces to move into the southern Gaza city of Rafah. More than 1.5 million Palestinians — many of them displaced multiple times already during four months of war between Israel and Gaza's Hamas rulers — have crammed into Rafah, on Israel's orders.
But not all of Gaza's civilians fled to the south. Some of them simply couldn't.
Mohammed and Alia Elbasyouni stayed in Gaza City, the biggest metropolis in the Palestinian territory, during four months of bombardment despite the Israel Defense Forces' order to evacuate.
They stayed put, they told CBS News, because they were too elderly to leave on foot with the thousands of others who sought safety in southern Gaza.
The couple's son Loay is a U.S. citizen who lives in Los Angeles and helped design a robotic helicopter for NASA that was used on a Mars mission. He said his parents were among the last five civilians stuck in the old center of Gaza City, and being so far away, with them trapped in a warzone, was torture.
"They had almost no food. They had no water. My mom wasn't drinking and trying to save water for my dad," he told us. "My dad had a heart condition. There was nobody to help him. He couldn't breathe. My mom thought he was dying."
"Death was every moment," Alia told CBS News. "We were living in stress and indescribable fear. Shelling 24 hours a day over our heads. Scared, and we couldn't do anything, and you hear screaming all the time."
Loay was convinced that his parents would never make it out of the decimated Gaza Strip, but the electrical engineer didn't stop looking for an escape route.
"I started working on it after the third day of the war," he said, "speaking to probably hundreds of people, trying a lot of avenues, you know, and like, almost every single avenue failed."
He said it was made far more complicated by the fact that his parents cannot walk on their own, "so I had to figure out a way to send an ambulance to them, to pick them up from Gaza City and get them to Rafah."
"I gave up hope many times," he admitted, but he said every day he would wake up and think, "let me try one more avenue."
Eventually his tireless efforts paid off, and with help from Turkish authorities, Loay arranged for his parents to be ferried out of Gaza City in an ambulance convoy to make the roughly 20-mile journey south to Rafah — the only place in Gaza with a border crossing that's been open at all since the war started.
On a first attempt, the family said the convoy came under fire.
"It was an ambulance convoy of the three ambulances and a bus," Loay said. His parents were in the second or the third ambulance, and after they were collected by the Palestinian Red Crescent team, "they were attacked."
It was never clear who opened fire, but Loay's parents said one medic was killed and at least two other people injured. With no other option, however, they tried again, and the second time they made it to Rafah. His parents crossed the border into Egypt, and then Loay was finally reunited with them in Turkey, where they all spoke with CBS News.
Alia said being back together with her son was "indescribable — but I am sad for our people. We are happy, but also not happy because we left our families without even seeing them — our family, friends, our country is in total ruin."
Now, with the threat of a looming Israeli ground assault like the one they escaped from in Gaza City, the elderly couple worry about those friends and family they left behind in Rafah.
If there is an invasion, Mohammed told CBS News, "a large number of civilians will die. A large number will be wounded."
- In:
- War
- Hamas
- Israel
- Palestinians
- Gaza Strip
veryGood! (1671)
Related
- Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
- Tyla wins first Best African Music Performance award for Water at 2024 Grammys
- Meta says it will label AI-generated images on Facebook and Instagram
- Las Tormentas: L.A. County Meets a Next-Level Atmospheric River
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Andie MacDowell on why she loves acting in her 60s: 'I don't have to be glamorous at all'
- Toby Keith wrote 20 top songs in 20 years. Here’s a look at his biggest hits.
- Ex-'Mandalorian' star Gina Carano sues Lucasfilm, Disney for wrongful termination
- The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
- 'Suits' stars reunite in court with Judge Judy for e.l.f. Cosmetics' Super Bowl commercial
Ranking
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Record hot oceans are causing havoc from California to Chile. Is climate change to blame?
- NFL avoids major Super Bowl embarrassment – for now – with 49ers' practice field problem
- Honda is recalling more than 750,000 vehicles to fix faulty passenger seat air bag sensor
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- What to know about Supreme Court arguments over Trump, the Capitol attack and the ballot
- What is Apple Vision Pro? Price, what to know about headset on its release date
- Witness testifies accused killer pressured him to destroy evidence in Jennifer Dulos murder case
Recommendation
Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
'Mr. & Mrs. Smith' 2024 cast: See the full cast headlined by Donald Glover, Maya Erskine
Punishing storm finally easing off in Southern California but mudslide threat remains
Unofficial Taylor Swift merchants on Etsy, elsewhere see business boom ahead of Super Bowl
Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
Horoscopes Today, February 6, 2024
Death of 12-year-old at North Carolina nature-based therapy program under investigation
SZA speaks out about losing album of the year to Taylor Swift at the Grammys