Every day, we feature one story of a person or family surviving in Gaza and one about someone killed there recently, based on media reports.

Follow us on Bluesky.

The Dead Alain Jehlen The Dead Alain Jehlen

Suleiman al-Obeid, soccer star, killed waiting for food aid

Suleiman al-Obeid, 41, a star soccer player with the Palestinian national team, was killed August 6 in an Israeli attack on aid seekers near an aid distribution center in southern Gaza, according to the Palestinian football association.

He leaves behind a wife and five children.

The European soccer teams association UEFA posted a photo and a tribute to him on X: “Farewell to Suleiman al-Obeid, the 'Palestinian Pelé'. A talent who gave hope to countless children, even in the darkest of times.”

Liverpool soccer player Mohamed Salah, who is from Egypt, posted, “Can you tell us how he died, where, and why?

More at Al Jazeera

Read More
The Dead Alain Jehlen The Dead Alain Jehlen

Ahmed Alhasant, 41, diabetic, died of malnutrition

Ahmed Alhasant, 41, died on July 22. According to his brother, Yehia Alhasant, he "passed away peacefully" at his home in the city of Deir al-Balah in central Gaza.

Ahmed was particularly vulnerable to food deprivation than because he was diabetic.

“Day after day, he was getting more and more poorly," said his brother. He said Ahmed started to become unwell after Israel imposed a blockade of aid into Gaza in March. Since May, Israel has been allowing some aid into the territory, but aid groups say it is nowhere near enough.

For three months, Ahmed ate only bits of bread and occasionally canned food, Yehia said. His weight plummeted from nearly 180 pounds to less than 80, and his health rapidly deteriorated. "His speech was slurred and sometimes we could hardly understand him," Yehia said.

The family took him to a hospital, but according to Ahmed’s cousin Refaat Alhasant, the hospital staff told them, “He needs food, not medicines.”

More at BBC

Read More
The Dead Alain Jehlen The Dead Alain Jehlen

Sela Mahmoud, 8, killed in Israeli shelling of a camp for displaced persons

Her last words to her mother were: "I want to eat a whole bowl of lentils until I'm full."

On Monday night, July 21, Alaa Shehada set off trying to get food for her family at the Zikim aid point in northern Gaza, a couple of kilometers from the camp for displaced persons where she was staying with her four children.

She brought her 13-year-old daughter with her and left her three other children behind.

About 1:45am, Alaa says she heard shelling in the distance and immediately feared the worst. “I felt the strike in my heart,” she said. “My intuition as a mother told me this strike reached my kids.”

When she managed to reach one of her daughters by phone, she learned that eight-year-old Sela Mahmoud had been killed. "My heart was broken," says Alaa.

Her other two children at the camp were seriously injured and are in al-Shifa Hospital.

More at BBC

Read More
The Dead Alain Jehlen The Dead Alain Jehlen

Abdullah Jendeia, aged 19, went to get food and didn’t come back

Abdullah Omar Jendeia, 19, was killed on Sunday, July 20, when he went out to find food, according to his sister Nadreen.

"He was impatient to go and fetch some food that day," she said. "I told him, 'Just eat the few lentils we have left,' but he refused."

She said Abdullah left the house about 4pm to walk more than 3.1 miles north to an aid truck that comes weekly, hoping to come back with flour to feed the family. He was with two of his brothers and some in-laws.

At about 11 that night, one of the brothers, Mahmoud, called Nadreen to tell her that while they were waiting by the aid truck Israeli soldiers had suddenly opened fire on them.

More at BBC

Read More
The Dead Alain Jehlen The Dead Alain Jehlen

Tariq Abu al-Shaer, 5, dreamed of becoming a pediatrician

Tariq Abu al-Shaer is one of the 18,500 children (under 18) on the list of children killed in Gaza published by the Washington Post.

The Post was able to get photos and descriptions of some of the children from family members. Tariq was one.

Unlike many children, Tariq would ask his mother to help him get ready quickly so he could hurry to school. He owned a bicycle and dreamed of becoming a pediatrician.

Last September, an airstrike killed Tariq, his brother Sannd who was just 70 days old, and his 8-year-old brother Abdul.

More information at Washington Post

Read More
The Dead Alain Jehlen The Dead Alain Jehlen

Abdul Rahim, boy who thanked aid worker for food, then was shot

Last May 28, an aid worker for the US- and Israel-backed aid organization Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) gave a boy some food. The boy thanked him, kissed his hand, and went back to the crowd of people who had come there hoping to get food. Israeli soldiers opened fire on the crowd, killing the boy and others.

The aid worker was Anthony Aguilar, a United States Army veteran. He has circulated photos of the boy. The boy’s mother identified him as her son, Abdul Rahim, with whom she had lost contact after he set off for the food distribution site.

The Israelis say they only fire warning shots and that their purpose is to control the huge crowds at the GHF sites.

More information: Al Jazeera

Read More
The Dead Alain Jehlen The Dead Alain Jehlen

Ayloul Qaud, 7 years old

Ayloul was “the most beautiful child I have ever seen in my life, inside and out,” said her aunt Hiba Muqdad. “We would walk in the street and she would refuse to buy anything, knowing that other children in the street were unable to eat.”

On July 30, 2025, the Washington Post published the names of 18,500 children killed in Gaza. For some, like Ayloul, the Post published photos and stories supplied by their families.

More information at Washington Post

Read More
The Dead Alain Jehlen The Dead Alain Jehlen

Salwa, 4 ½, one of five children who starved to death at Patient’s Friends Hospital for lack of nutrition supplies

Salwa arrived at the hospital with alarmingly low potassium levels. She could barely move her body. But medicine for potassium deficiency has largely run out across Gaza. Salwa did not respond to the low-concentration potassium the hospital was able to give her and died after three days.

The hospital staff is starving, too. Two nurses put themselves on IV drips to keep themselves going. “We are exhausted. We are dead in the shape of the living,” said nutritionist Dr. Rana Soboh.

More information at Associated Press

Read More
The Dead Alain Jehlen The Dead Alain Jehlen

Zainab Abu Halib, 5-month old baby, died weighing less than the day she was born

Zainab Abu Halib weighed two kilograms, about 4.4 pounds, when she died of starvation. At her birth five months ago, she weighed three kilograms.

Her mother, who also has suffered from malnutrition, said she breastfed the girl for only six weeks before trying to feed her formula. But the girl needed special formula because she was allergic to cow’s milk. There was none.

“With my daughter’s death, many will follow,” said the mother. “Their names are on a list that no one looks at. They are just names and numbers. Our children, whom we carried for nine months and then gave birth to, have become just numbers.”

More information: Los Angeles Times

Read More
The Dead Alain Jehlen The Dead Alain Jehlen

Adam Abu Harbid, journalist

The British newspaper The Guardian posted a one-minute video on Friday, July 25, that starts with the funeral of journalist Adam Abu Harbid, killed in an Israeli attack the night before. In the video, Harbid’s sister-in-law says, “Look at us with some mercy. We are not just numbers. Someone is a father who has children, responsibilities, a family waiting for him, a family that wants him next to them at all times.

“We can’t even be counted in numbers anymore because of how many of us are dying. Have some mercy on us.”

More information: The Guardian

Read More
The Dead Alain Jehlen The Dead Alain Jehlen

The family of Aya Hasunah a-Susi

“On Friday, 9 August 2024, my family was wiped out.

“We were in a good mood, even though we could hear bombings, some closer and some far away. My husband helped me finish getting things ready for the meal, and then he said: “I want to sit outside by the tent until the food is ready.” He sat out there with his brother Walid and my maternal uncle Majed.

“The children wanted to play next to their father and I let them. I heard them laughing and playing.

“Suddenly, I heard a huge blast. I was about eight meters away from my husband and kids. I immediately turned around to look at them, but all I saw was black smoke. I screamed and ran to them. I found my daughter Raghad covered in blood, lying on her back.Then I found my husband ‘Abdallah. His clothes were like black coal. Then I saw my son Hamzah. His head was covered in blood.

“They were all dead.”

More information: Voices from Gaza, a website created by the Israeli human rights organization B’Tselem

Read More
The Dead Alain Jehlen The Dead Alain Jehlen

Khader, 19, shot trying to get food

Late one night in June, Mahmoud Qassem lost his 19-year-old son, Khader. The boy was shot trying reach a food distribution center run by the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.

Khader was apparently killed around midnight because Mahmoud talked with his son by phone at 11pm. “He told me he was in a safe place — he had gone to the Netzarim distribution center — and I told him to take care," Qassem told DW from a tent in Gaza City.

 "At 1 a.m., I tried calling him again, but his phone wasn't receiving calls. I started to feel anxious. There was no word the whole time, and I waited until 2 p.m. on Friday. I felt like a fire was burning inside me," said the father.

On Friday, Mahmood went to central Gaza and checked the hospitals until he discovered that Khader had been killed. When the body was eventually recovered, after coordination with the Israeli military, it showed that his son had died from several gunshot wounds.

Qassem said he hadn’t wanted his son to go, but Khaled wanted to help his family.

More information: dw.com (website of Deutsche Welle, international broadcaster funded by the government of Germany)

Read More
The Dead Alain Jehlen The Dead Alain Jehlen

Hisham, 19, shot while trying to get food

Thirty-two Palestinians were killed by Israeli troops on Saturday, July 19, as they tried to get food from the US-sponsored Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.

One of them was Hisham, 19-year-old son of  Monzer Fesifes. "He went to bring food from the failed US, Zionist aid to feed us," said his father.

Sanaa al-Jaberi, a 55-year-old woman, said she saw many dead and wounded as she fled the area.

"We shouted: 'food, food,' but they didn't talk to us. They just opened fire," she said.

More than 1,000 Palestinians have been killed trying to get food, according to the United Nations human rights office.

Israel banned food distribution by the United Nations after accusing Hamas of stealing the aid provided by the United Nations and other international organizations. The government has used that claim as its main rationale for restricting food from entering Gaza.

But the Israeli military never found proof that Hamas systematically stole aid from the U.N., according to a New York Times report published July 26. The Times said its sources were two senior Israeli military officials and two other Israelis involved in the matter.

More information: CBS News and New York Times

Read More
The Dead Alain Jehlen The Dead Alain Jehlen

Nour al-Huda al-Husari, mother

Nour al-Huda al-Husari took her eight-year-old and 12-year-old daughters to the al-Baqa Cafe in Gaza City on Monday, June 30, “to get some fresh air and try to lift their spirits,” according to her husband, Mohammed al-Husari. 

When Israel attacked the cafe, Nour was among more than two dozen patrons who died. Her eight-year-old daughter was thrown through the air by the explosion but was found mostly unharmed. Her 12-year-old daughter, however, suffered life-threatening injuries.  

On July 6, the Israel Defence Forces announced that they had killed Ramzi Ramadan Abd Ali Salah, who they said commanded the Hamas naval force in northern Gaza, and other Hamas militants in the attack on the cafe. 

More information: The Guardian

Read More
The Dead Alain Jehlen The Dead Alain Jehlen

Abdullah, a boy waiting for water

Abdullah was killed in an Israeli air attack that struck children and adults waiting with their jerrycans at a water distribution site in central Gaza on Sunday morning, July 13.

The Israeli Army said the strike was intended to kill an Islamic Jihad terrorist but "as a result of a technical error with the munition,” it fell on the line of people waiting for water dozens of meters away. The strike killed six children and four adults, and injured 16 others.

More information: BBC

Read More
The Dead Nick Jehlen The Dead Nick Jehlen

Dr. Marwan al-Sultan, cardiologist

Dr. Marwan al-Sultan, director of Gaza’s Indonesian hospital and one of only two heart specialists in the territory, died July 2 when the apartment where he and his extended family were living was struck by an Israeli missile. 

His wife, sister, daughter, and son-in-law were also killed. A surviving daughter said the missile precisely targeted the room where Dr. al-Sultan was living. 

The Israel Defense Forces said in a statement, “the IDF struck a key terrorist from the Hamas terrorist organization in the area of Gaza City. The claim that as a result of the strike uninvolved civilians were harmed is being reviewed. The IDF regrets any harm to uninvolved individuals.”

More information: The Guardian

Read More
The Dead Nick Jehlen The Dead Nick Jehlen

Reem Zeidan, wife and mother

Reem Zeiden was shot through the forehead in front of her 20-year-old daughter and her 12-year-old son as she walked toward an aid distribution site before dawn on July 1, hoping to get food to feed her family. She had been rehearsing with her children where they should meet in case shooting caused panic and chaos among the crowds of hungry Gazans approaching the distribution site. Her last words, according to her son: “‘If we get separated, where will we meet again?’”

“We went there out of desperation. Hunger is what forced my mother to go. She had been going every day for a full week, walking six hours to get there and coming back with nothing,” said her daughter, Mirvat. 

Two days before Reem was killed, Israeli troops opened fire on the crowds approaching the aid distribution site. “I told my mother it was a sign from God not to go again and that convinced her,” Mirvat said. “But she would quickly change her mind when my little sister Razan, who is only five years old, cried to her that she was hungry.”

More information: The Guardian

Read More