Advocates Hold Vigil for Health Care Workers in Gaza

Tonight’s rainy weather didn’t dissuade protesters from gathering in remembrance of those who fell on the line of duty to bombs raining on Gaza’s hospitals.

About sixty protesters gathered at the Royal Jubilee Hospital in Victoria, in remembrance of health care workers who fell in the line of duty in Gaza and in support of those who keep fighting against all odds while exposed to the Israel Defence Forces’ raining bombs and hails of bullets.

My cell phone camera is godawful at night. Sorry, this event deserves better than these mediocre pictures of mine. Have a look at Mike Graeme’s reel instead, capturing footage I didn’t even bother trying to:

While the organisers invited participants to bring candles, the weather didn’t cooperate, such that strong winds prevented the attendance from making it a candlelight vigil as intended.

LED candles had to suffice. The display was pretty anyway.

If only this were the worst doctors in Gaza had to complain about. In contrast, they are reduced to performing surgery on patients without anesthetics and treating wounds without supplies or even clean water, using cell phones as flashlights—while being shelled day and night. To speak nothing of the difficulties of delivering babies without proper obstetrics, magnifying the incidence of stillbirths and infections.

I’m sure those on the front lines have a strong opinion on the topic.

Speakers then took turns enumerating a litany of health care workers who fell on the line of duty since October—hundreds of them. The outrage online is such that it gave rise to a hash tag: #notatarget.

“340 Healthcare workers killed by Israeli attacks on Palestine 7th Oct—19th Dec 2023.” The toll keeps increasing daily.
One of hundreds martyred by the IDF. #notatarget indeed.

Another such action has been announced for next Friday, although it may not be at the same location. Keep an eye on Instagram for announcements.

Two groups held banners at intersections in front of waiting cars during red lights. While it’s a cool tactic, the lights don’t last long enough at that specific location for it to be effective, unlike at Mayfair Mall.

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