Alkhatib's family is originally from the Gaza Strip. His grandparents had lived in Hamama and Ramla, but were displaced in the Nakba.[3]
Alkhatib was born in Saudi Arabia, where his father worked as a United Nations physician.[4][5] He and his family returned to Gaza in 2000,[4] and his father began working at the Jabalia refugee camp.[5] As a child, Alkhatib hoped to become a politician or diplomat.[1] At age 11, Alkhatib was caught in an Israeli airstrike, which killed three of his friends and left him with permanent hearing loss in one ear.[1][3]
Alkhatib left Gaza in 2005, at the age of 15,[6] for a one-year-long U.S. Department of State-sponsored cultural exchange program. He spent the year in Pacifica, California, where he learned meditation from his host mom, a Buddhist and retired social worker. He also attended sessions with Living Room Dialogue, a Jewish-Palestinian group based in San Mateo, marking the first time he had spoken to Jews or Israelis.[1]
Alkhatib has had a lifelong interest in aviation and desire to work in the field, especially during the time when Gaza's international airport was operational. After the destruction of the Gaza airport by Israeli air strikes during the Second Intifada, he was convinced of the need "to play a role in restoring aviation services to the people of Gaza".[4] Project Unified Assistance represents the culmination of Alkhatib's interests in aviation, social entrepreneurship, and desire to help the Palestinian population living in Gaza.[9]
Personal life
Alkhatib became a U.S. citizen in 2014, at the age of 24.[1][7]
2017 Ben Gurion Airport incident
In 2017, while attempting to visit his sister and parents in Israel, Alkhatib was deported from Ben Gurion Airport. Although he is a naturalized U.S. citizen and had not traveled to Palestinian territories for over a decade, Israeli authorities claimed that he was a Palestinian with "active citizenship." Later, Alkhatib published details about what took place during the deportation in an op-ed in The Jerusalem Post.[6]
Israel-Hamas war (2023-24)
Alkhatib has said that 30 of his relatives have been killed during the 2023-24 Israel-Hamas war, many of them from Israeli airstrikes.[19]