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AFP Tries to Touch Up Report on Dimple Surgery in “Concentration Camp” Gaza

Introducing the latest trend in “Concentration camp” Gaza: Dimple surgery!

When Shoruk Shaheen glances in the mirror, she likes what she sees, especially the change in her face after a cosmetic procedure gaining popularity in Gaza: dimple creation surgery.

The resident of the Palestinian enclave — who wore white shoes with a Dior logo and clutched a knock-off Louis Vuitton bag — had the procedure a month ago at a clinic in downtown Gaza City.

“If you have a beautiful smile then you are a beautiful person,” said the 26-year-old communications manager, whose eyes remained fixed on her mirror as she admired the new indentation in her left cheek.

Dimple creation surgery is performed worldwide but has particular appeal in Gaza, thanks to its low cost and relative safety.

Expensive, riskier procedures are problematic in Gaza, a deeply impoverished territory with a weak healthcare system and under an Israeli blockade since 2007, the year Hamas Islamists took power.


Talmas, who has worked abroad, said he believes the procedure is more popular among Gazans than other Arab women in the Middle East.

Gazan women became aware of it from those who had travelled to Egypt and the Gulf, according to doctors.

It costs $30-$45 US per cheek — compared with thousands in some Western clinics.

Shaheen started with just her left cheek, but said she plans to do the other side.

In addition to being cheap, cosmetic dimple creation does not attract the snickers that a procedure like breast implants would trigger in a conservative, Islamist ruled society.

Dimples “are not a problem”, said Shaheen, explaining the procedure does not invite social stigma.

At the Victoria aesthetic centre, which overlooks a Gaza City park with manicured rows of palm trees, doctor Hassan Ali Aljaish told AFP he saw no issue with a procedure that brought “a little happiness” to women living in a society replete with hardships, notably the blockade.

Aljaish, who has been performing cosmetic and reconstructive surgery since 2018, said he typically receives about 30 requests a month for dimple creation.

While he conceded it was a growing trend, he cautioned against the impression that “the people of Gaza get (cosmetic) operations every day.”

Dimple creation and other cosmetic procedures, “may alleviate the suffering” of life in Gaza, “but we must not forget that this (suffering) exists, said Aljaish, whose practice is mostly for Palestinians needing reconstructive surgery after being injured during hostilities between Hamas and Israel.

I have to laugh at the efforts of both the AFP reporter and doctor, who seem to go to great lengths to paint Gaza as impoverished, despite the proliferation of women getting dimple surgery. While there are certainly poor people in Gaza like there are everywhere else, there are also those who are middle class and well-to-do. Poor people do not spend their money on dimple surgery, even if it costs just $100. That is $100 that could have put food in the mouths of family members.

And that is not even mentioning how much the Gazan women “who had travelled to Egypt and the Gulf” must be spending.

Besides, what “concentration camp” or “open-air prison” has doctors surgeries and parks “with manicured rows of palm trees“?

You also to have laugh at the reporter claiming the procedure brings “a little happiness to women living in a society replete with hardships, notably the blockade” – immediately after describing how “a procedure like breast implants would trigger snickers” in the conservative, Islamist ruled society that is Gaza. As if the lack of freedom that women have in Hamas-ruled Gaza is the least of their problems.

Hat tip: Michal

About the author

Picture of David Lange

David Lange

A law school graduate, David Lange transitioned from work in the oil and hi-tech industries into fulltime Israel advocacy. He is a respected commentator and Middle East analyst who has often been cited by the mainstream media
Picture of David Lange

David Lange

A law school graduate, David Lange transitioned from work in the oil and hi-tech industries into fulltime Israel advocacy. He is a respected commentator and Middle East analyst who has often been cited by the mainstream media
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