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.
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Alma, 12: “"The war is hard and long, but we try to live.”
Alma, 12 years old, loves to write. With school closed, she creates her own homework, writing about life in the family's half-destroyed home in Deir al-Balah in central Gaza. "The war is hard and long, but we try to live," she says.
Alma is one of the Gaza residents interviewed by the Israeli liberal Zionist newspaper Haaretz for a report published July 21.
"I've been helping my mother at home – fetching water, lighting a fire,” she told them. “I've also been helping her with my brother Wissam, who's 4. I've been singing him lullabies before he goes to sleep. I've been telling him stories from what I remember from school."
Life in her damaged home is better than in the tents the family lived in when they had to flee to other parts of Gaza. "Life in the tent is hard because of the sand, the mosquitoes, the flies.
"At night it's hard to sleep because you hear people in other tents. Also, all of us were in one tent. In the winter the rain leaks in, so my parents and I took turns holding the tarps so that water wouldn't leak in."
Her life now is a far cry from the one she had before the war. "I miss my friends. I'd like to meet with them like we used to; I want to know that they're all right," Alma says.
She misses her friends, who are scattered through Gaza. She tries to keep up using her mother’s phone. One friend lost her father and mother. Another friend was wounded.
She’s scared of the Israeli bombs, but tries not to show it. "I've been talking to my sister, who's two years younger than me, about what we wish we could eat. She wants chocolate cake, while I'd like waffles with maple syrup and vanilla ice cream.”
More at Haaretz
Ibrahim, 48, father of four: “My children have no future.”
"I go through some very hard moments as a father," Ibrahim says about his children. "One that left a mark on me was when I was hugging them during shelling, not knowing if we would come out alive. I've been facing a daily dilemma: whether to send one of the children to get water while I'm trying to get food."
"I'm an educated man, and what's most painful is that I now know for sure that my children have no future," Ibrahim says.
Ibrahim is one of the Gaza residents profiled by Haaretz on July 21. They conducted all their interviews by phone and video call.
More at Haaretz
Mohammed al-Darbi, 11: “We’re eating sand instead of bread.”
Elevn-year-old Mohammed al-Darbi is one of the children struggling to survive in Gaza that the Israeli newspaper Haaretz spotlighted in a report published. Haaretz said he appeared in a video recorded around July 1 on al-Rashid Street in Gaza City.
Al-Darbi appears near an aid delivery center. "There is no flour in Gaza City," he says. "Every day they tell us that there are aid trucks; we go there and come back with nothing.
"There is no food, have pity on us. We're eating sand instead of bread."
Haaretz said Al-Darbi is one of the countless children crowding around when the aid center is opened.
More at Haaretz
Khaled and her son Ahmed: had to burn schoolbooks to light a cooking fire
The first time Khaled and her family were displaced, her son Ahmed asked whether he should take his schoolbooks with him. “I said there was no need because we'd be back in a few days," Khulud says, almost choking. "But he insisted on taking them and his schoolbag. He said: 'I want to go on reading.'"
Last winter the family was forced to burn the books; it was the only way to start a fire to cook food. "There were no twigs; we used torn clothes, but that wasn't enough," Khulud says. "I remember taking Ahmed's Arabic-language schoolbook and explaining to him that we had no choice. He cried and so did I."
The story of Khaled, 37, and Ahmed, 11, is told in an article published by Haaretz, an Israeli liberal Zionist newspaper, on July 21.
More at Haaretz
Abdallah Abu Samra, 1948 refugee, is homeless again
Abdallah Abu Samra was 10 years old when his family was forced out of the Palestinian village of Iraq Suwaydan where they farmed 100 acres. The village was about 15 miles north of what is now the Gaza Strip. Eventually, the family reunited in Gaza and lived in a beautiful five-story building.
But when the bombs started falling and the walls started shaking as Israeli retaliated for the October 7 Hamas attack, the family, now with about 20 members, had to evacuate again. Some died in attacks. Many raised enough money through GoFundMe drives to pay the $5,000 it cost to cross into Egypt.
Samra is still in Gaza, scraping by with money sent by his relatives in Egypt, and hoping someday that if he can’t ever return to the family farm that is now in Israel, at least maybe he will pitch a tent next to the ruins of his northern Gaza home.
More at The New York Times
Shamm Qudeih, 2, a starving child recovering in Italy
Two-year-old Shamm Qudeih looked like she was near death from starvation when Associated Press freelance journalist Mariam Dagga photographed her at Nasser Hospital on August 9. She was skin and bones, wincing as her mother held her.
A few days later, Shamm was evacuated to Italy. In a photo published September 6, she looks like she’s recovering, although still very thin. Samma suffers from a genetic metabolic illness that interferes with her body’s ability to absorb nutrients. She needed a high-carbohydrate diet, which she is getting in the Italian hospital.
Shamm weighed nine pounds when she arrived in Italy. Now she weighs 12 pounds, still only half of the median weight for a child her age.
Samma’s 10-year-old sister, Judi, and her mother, Islam, were evacuated to Italy with Shamm. Judi also arrived severely undernourished and now is gaining weight. Her father is still in Gaza.
Meanwhile Dagga, the photographer, was killed by an Israeli tank at Nasser Hospital on August 25 along with four other journalists.
More at Associated Press
Yazin, 12, one of 20,000 Gaza orphans
Yazin, 12, and his sister, Yazmin, 8, used to live in a house. But that changed after the Israeli attacks on Gaza that followed the October 7 Hamas attack.
“We were sitting after the evening prayer. My sister and I were playing on the phone. Suddenly the lights went out. I felt the house lift up. and then fall back down on us,” Yazin said.
“I saw the roof had collapsed. it was one cm above my headI pulled my sister out. We started to yell, ‘Shout if you are alive!’ But no one answered.
Both of his parents and his brother were killed.
Now he lives in a tent near the sea with his grandfather, aunt, and two cousins. But his grandfather has terminal cancer, so Yazin feels it’s up to him to take care of the family.
Channel 4, a British public broadcasting service, posted a short documentary about Yazmin 10 months ago. Food was scarce, but there wasn’t yet a famine.
Yazin’s sister, Yazmin, was going to school two hours a day. Yazin was spending his days getting water and food and dealing with other family duties. But in the evening, he found half an hour to fly a kite. “I feel the freedom. I want to fly instead of the kite,” he said.
Noor, 9, child of deaf parents
A United Nations News report September 5 described the plight of people with disabilities in Gaza. They include the deaf parents of a nine-year-old girl named Noor. Noor’s parents must rely on their child to survive Israeli tank shelling and other attacks. She has learned new signing vocabulary for the language of war, including tanks, armed quadcopters, shrapnel and aircraft.
The report also cites the example of Abdulrahman Al-Gharbawi, a 27-year-old graphic designer with cerebral palsy and a lower limb disability. His family has been displaced nine times. Each time, his mother carries his wheelchair while his father and brother carry him.
More at UN News
Hani Mahmoud, Al Jazeera correspondent
Hani Mahmoud is an English language correspondent for Al Jazeera in Gaza.
In a recently posted episode of the podcast series The Take, Mahmoud talks about what it’s like covering the war on the ground with bombs falling and electricity repeatedly cut.
At the end of the day, he says, although there’s danger on the roads, he takes the risk to go home to his family.
“It’s worth it so I can see my mom, I can see my dad, I can be with my family,” he says. “You never know, it might be the last time. That’s always on our head. Every step you’re taking, it might be the last one. We’ve seen examples just in the past 30 minutes, a journalist who just finished field work was killed right after that.”
More at YouTube
Nurse Bilal Abo-Saada and psychologist Amira Al-Farra, Doctors Without Borders staff, try to cope with constant displacements
Doctors Without Borders has posted a short video of reports from Bilal Abo-Saada, a nurse and Amira Al-Farra, a psychologist, about their repeated displacements during the war.
Al-Farra tells about one time when a person started running down the street in the middle of the night screaming, “Evacuate!” He had just received a phone call from the Israeli army saying they were about to start bombing and everyone must get out of the area immediately. But it was not clear where to go.
Abo-Saada says he has evacuated 11 times during the war. He has an old father who has trouble moving. Now, they are homeless.
Al-Farra thinks, for her, it’s almost eight evacuations. When you leave your home, she says, you leave many memories behind.
AboSaada is trying to save his memories despite so many displacements. “I have a hard drive,” he says, and he takes it out to show it. “It contains all my data, all my documents, all the memories with my friends, with the places we miss at the moment, they are on it. When I am alone, I open these videos and go back to my past and remember how I used to live. It keeps me going in life. It gives me positive energy.”
More at Doctors Without Borders and YouTube
Jihad Mansour, ambulance officer, and Kamal Ahmad, ambulance driver
The British Red Cross has posted a two-minute video from the Palestine Red Crescent Society about two of their ambulance crew members, ambulance officer Jihad Mansour and driver Kamal Ahmad. The two men describe frantic efforts to save lives, losing friends and co-workers, and not knowing what is happening to their own families while they work.
More at British Red Cross or YouTube
Basel Kafinah 28, former falafel maker, trying to feed his family
Basel Kafinah, 28, ran a falafel stand at the a-Nuseirat refugee camp in Gaza before the war. But had to stop because he couldn’t get cooking oil or gas and his ingredients became too expensive.
Instead, he started selling cleaning supplies. Sometimes he buys and sells small quantities of food.
When prices kept rising out, he finally decided to go to a distribution center four kilometers away. But there were thousands of people there, and Israeli soldiers shot at them. He came home empty handed. The same thing happened on his second attempt. But there’s no alternative so he keeps trying. Sometimes he succeeds, sometimes he doesn’t.
“We’re constantly shot at, and there are thugs and thieves everywhere,” he said. “There’s danger all around us. If I get hurt, there will be no one to help me – especially at the aid distribution centers, which are crowded and have no ambulances nearby.
“Every time I leave for a distribution center, I see on my family’s faces how scared they are, as if it’s the last time they’ll ever see me. Going to an aid center feels like walking to my death. When I come home, it feels like God has given me my life back.”
Kafinah told his story to a researcher for B’Tselem, an Israeli human rights organization, on July 1.
More at B’Tselem
Hadi ‘Abed Rabu, 40, shot trying to get food
Hadi Abed Rabu, a 40-year-old husband and father of two, spoke with researchers from B’Tselem, an Israeli human rights organization, on July 20 and August 5. He described his attempts to get food for his wife and two young daughters. One of his trips was to a Gaza Humanitarian Foundation distribution site in the southern part of the Gaza strip. Another was to a crossing in the north.
On both trips, Rabu says Israeli troops shot at the crowds, killing many people around him. He also describes people fighting over food. On his trip to the northern crossing, Rabu was shot in the leg.
More at B’Tselem
Reem, 13, daughter of Abu Walid, an example of the exploding number of malnourished children
Abu Walid was walking back home with his 13-year-old daughter Reem after visiting his brother's house when she began to complain of fatigue. Step after step, her voice grew weaker until she suddenly collapsed on the road, unconscious for hours.
Terrified, the father of six carried her to the nearest hospital. Doctors ran tests, and the results came back clear: Reem had no illness. Instead, Abu Walid was told what he had feared but never imagined would touch his daughter so soon: She was suffering from malnutrition.
Reem and her brother Karim now struggle with constant fatigue and weakness, their growth stunted by a lack of proper food.
Their story is told in a recent article in Haaretz, a liberal Israeli newspaper. “Doctors say cases of malnutrition have surged in recent months, with more and more children arriving dehydrated, underweight and too weak to carry out daily activities, like fetching water, bringing food from charity kitchens and NGOs, or even playing with other kids,” the article says.
The article says such cases are now common, and hospitals, with not enough doctors and medicine, can’t cope. "Every day, we are forced to choose who receives treatment and who must wait," one pharmacist who volunteers in Al-Aqsa Hospital in Deir al-Balah told Haaretz. "This is not medicine. This is survival."
More at Haaretz
Khalid, physical therapist and dad
Khalid, 36, is a physical therapist practicing in northern Gaza and raising five children.
Khalid’s family is one of four that kept video diaries during the first year of the Gaza war for use in a BBC documentary, “One year of war in Gaza: Life, Death, and Hope.”
When the Israeli army orders everyone to relocate to the south, Khalid refuses to go. But he and his family are soon engulfed by the war. No doctors are available, so Khalid sews up wounds — without painkillers since there are none of those, either.
The house next door is destroyed. His children are terrified. They start playing games pretending they are rescuing bomb victims: “He’s bleeding everywhere! Call an ambulance!”
“I washed her so we can operate on her,” says a child, playing with a doll. These are games children should not be playing says Khalid.
“Every night before we go to sleep, we say goodbye to our children in case we don’t wake up, or they don’t,” he says.
Food is cut off and his children chew on weeds. His clinic is demolished — all but two stationary bikes — but Khalid says he will rebuild.
More at BBC
Texas surgeon Mohammed Adeel Khaleel, in Gaza on his third volunteer stint
Not long after Texas surgeon Mohammed Adeel Khaleel arrived at a Gaza City hospital in early August, a 17-year-old was brought in with gunshot wounds to both legs and one hand, sustained when he went to collect food at an aid site.
In the emergency room, Khaleel said he noted the ribs protruding from the teen’s emaciated torso, an indication of severe malnutrition. When doctors at Al-Ahli Hospital stabilized the patient, he raised his heavily bandaged hand and pointed to his empty mouth, Khaleel said.
Khaleel, a spinal surgeon, is on his third volunteer stint in Gaza.
“The level of hunger is really what’s heartbreaking,” he said. “You know, we saw malnutrition before, back in November, already starting to happen. But now the level is just, it’s beyond imagination.”
More at Associated Press
Amaal al-Bayouk, 7, her weight dropped from nearly 50 pounds to 22
Amaal al-Bayouk, 7, used to weigh just under 50 pounds, her mother, Asmaa, said. But the war displaced her family at least five times, and Asmaa couldn’t find nutritious food for her daughter. By early July, her weight had slipped to just 22 pounds. Photos her mother shared with The Washington Post showed the skin on her chest stretched taut over her ribs, and her arms and legs barely more than bone.
Amaal spent weeks in Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis last month and the hospital was able to help regain some weight. But since her release, she has struggled to digest whatever food her mother is able to procure, Asmaa said Friday. Doctors told the mother “they no longer can help and have no treatment,” she said. “Sometimes I hear her praying to God: ‘Please, God, don’t let me die until I eat chicken and fish.’”
More at Washington Post
Alaa Haddad, fighting for food in Gaza City
Alaa Haddad, 29, says he goes entire days without eating. When he does eat — often by braving the life-threatening risks of trying to grab food from aid trucks, he said — it is mostly rice, lentils or bread. Vegetables are rare. He said he could remember the last time he ate fruit: eight months ago.
It is hard to endure the feeling of constant hunger. “Every day is a battle with hunger,” he said. “I often don’t have energy.”
Haddad said the frenzied, often violent contests for aid frequently forced him to choose: sacrifice his humanity for food, or keep it and starve.
“You become an animal in search of food,” he said. “When I go home, I think to myself, ‘What did I just do?’”
More at New York Times
Ibrahim Abdel Nabi, shot while trying to get food, he made his own prosthetic leg
Ibrahim Abdel Nabi was one of the many Palestinians who headed to a distribution site run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation last May in the hope of getting food for his family. Instead, he was shot with an explosive bullet.
“I was bleeding for about an hour and a half, and no one came to help me,” he said. “They were all trying to find food for their children.”
Eventually, a group of people did cme to his rescue and took him to the nearby Red Cross hospital.
“I stayed there for about a month and a half, undergoing about 12 operations. I became malnourished and lost a lot of blood. Infection spread, and more of my leg had to be amputated.”
But his family still needs food, so when he recovered enough, he made a simple prosthesis for his leg from materials he found so he could go back to trying to provide for them. His rough prosthesis hurts and causes inflammation, but it’s the best he can do.
More at United Nations News
Omar al-Midana, businessman and accountant, ordered to evacuate but his family can’t move
Omar al-Midana, a 30-year-old father of two girls, Basma and Ghazal, fled with his family from Gaza City's Shujaiyeh neighborhood to the western part of the city last spring. Now, the Israeli army has ordered them to evacuate south.
But for al-Midana, leaving is no longer possible. His 65-year-old mother was diagnosed with lung cancer just three months ago, and his five-year-old daughter Basma is suffering from malnutrition. So al-Midana plans to raise a white flag as he waits with his family to face whatever comes next.
Before the war, al-Midana had $50,000 in savings. That money is gone, spent on medicine, displacement, rent, food and canned goods. To survive, al-Midana says, he needs around 100 dollars daily. "My mother's treatment is 150–200 dollars every week. Food costs 150 dollars a week. Where do I get it from?"
Once a business manager and an accountant, his life-long achievements were leveled to the ground along with his family home in Shujaiyeh. "I studied, I graduated, I worked, I became a manager. I built a house. I wasn't with any political group, not involved in anything."
“The army tells us to evacuate – where to? Where do we go? What's happening to us is death."
More at Haaretz (liberal Israeli newspaper)