Adopted orphan brings couple 'paradise' in war-ravaged Gaza
07 Mar 2025
Iman Farahat carries Jannah in Gaza City on Friday. AFP
In their home in war-devastated Gaza City, Iman Farhat and her husband cherish the "paradise" brought by their newly-adopted baby, one of many orphans in the Palestinian territory after more than 15 months of fighting between Israel and Hamas.
Wrapping five-month-old Jannah in a brightly coloured blanket, Farhat gently sang as she rocked her to sleep.
"I chose Jannah just as she was," the new mother said smiling, explaining the couple simply wanted to adopt a young child without preference for gender or physical appearance.
"Her name was Massa, and I officially changed her name from Massa to Jannah," which means "paradise" in Arabic, she added.
Iman Farahat and her husband Rami Arrouki pose with their cat and newly-adopted five-month-old orphaned baby Jannah. AFP
Farhat, 45, and her husband Rami al-Arouqi, 47, adopted the well-behaved and chubby baby in January.
"At first, we had mixed feelings of both joy and fear, because it is a huge responsibility and we had never had a child", said Arouqi, a Palestinian Authority employee.
The couple already owned a cat.
"The idea of adopting a child had crossed our minds, but it was cemented during the war" which "wiped out entire families and left only orphans", he added.
In September, the United Nations children's fund, UNICEF, estimated there were 19,000 children who were unaccompanied or separated from their parents in Gaza, Jonathan Crickx, UNICEF's spokesman for the Palestinian territories, told AFP.
Iman Farahat feeds Jannah at her home in Gaza City. AFP
Data for the number of adoptions in Gaza was not immediately available.
Life 'turned upside down'
Farhat and her husband said that before Jannah's adoption, she was taken care of by the SOS Children's Villages — an international NGO which looks after children in need.
After the NGO's premises in the southern Gaza city of Rafah were destroyed in the war, the organisation had to move to nearby Khan Yunis where "they could not house all the children in buildings, so they set up tents for them," Farhat said.
Her husband Arouqi told AFP that another motive for adopting a child came from the idea that "Palestinians should stand by each other's side."
Iman Farahat looks on as her husband Rami Arrouki carries their newly-adopted orphaned baby Jannah. AFP
"The whole world has abandoned and let us down, so we shouldn't let each other down," he added. Once the pair took Jannah home, "our life was turned upside down in a beautiful and pleasant way," he said. "Her name is Jannah and our world has truly become a paradise."