logo
Gaza's Children Trapped Between Hunger, Bombs, and Silence

Gaza's Children Trapped Between Hunger, Bombs, and Silence

DaysofPal — In a land soaked in blood and confined by siege, childhood has become a sentence punished with death. Gaza's children are haunted by three specters: hunger, bombing, and fear. Here, they do not choose how they die—death chooses them. Some perish from malnutrition, others are buried beneath rubble, while the rest live in anxious anticipation of the next terror, the next missed meal, or the next explosion.
Another bloodstained morning was added to Gaza's memory. UNICEF reported that nine children from the Al-Najjar family were killed in an Israeli airstrike that obliterated their home in Khan Younis, southern Gaza. The only surviving child was critically injured, pulled from the rubble after hours of struggling beneath the debris, fighting both physical pain and terror.
'To die in your sleep, in your mother's arms—not as a fighter, but simply as a Palestinian child—that's what happened to the Al-Najjar children,' said a paramedic who helped recover their bodies.
Edward Begbeder, UNICEF's Regional Director for the Middle East and North Africa, described the strike as 'a horror beyond imagination,' adding that targeting children in such a manner could constitute a crime of genocide.
Since October 2023, over 50,000 children in Gaza have been killed or wounded. Following the collapse of the truce in March, 1,309 more children have died. Aid groups now warn that the collapse of the healthcare and humanitarian systems has left survivors to face constant threats of hunger and disease.
Inside overcrowded shelters, new chapters of suffering unfold. In one such center in western Gaza City, Asim Salah (37) lies beside his three-year-old daughter. 'Her weight drops every day,' he says. 'She suffers from severe malnutrition. I am helpless—no food, no medicine, not even clean water. Watching her waste away is like burying her slowly.'
In another makeshift shelter, Abdullah Al-Rifi (35) lives with his wife and children after an airstrike destroyed their home. 'My six-year-old looks like a ghost with [pale face, sunken eyes, weak body. We can't even find basic food. I can't give him a meal he once took for granted.'
Mohamed Hassouna (45), a father of six, lost his home and now lives in a shelter in western Gaza. 'My youngest, just four, is always sick. No milk. No medicine. Hunger and fear have consumed them. They flinch at every sound. Even sleep is a luxury.'
UNICEF's statistics are grim. Over one million children have been besieged for more than two months, without adequate food or water. Supplementary food is depleted. Only enough formula remains for 400 infants, while more than 10,000 require it. Families are forced to mix formula with contaminated water, leading to infections that are often fatal.
Water and sanitation systems are collapsing. The main desalination plant has been shut down, resulting in an 85% reduction in the water supply. Per capita drinking water has dropped from 16 liters to under six, with fears it could fall to four. Disease outbreaks are becoming increasingly likely.
Nutrition treatment centers have shuttered. Of the 21 that once cared for at least 350 children, none remain functional. UNICEF warns that famine is imminent, and the situation has 'utterly collapsed.'
But the horror is not just in the numbers—it's in the silence. 'The children of Gaza need more than food and water,' said a UNICEF spokesperson. 'They need safety. They need justice.'
UNICEF calls on the international community to act immediately, not with cautious condemnations, but with urgent, decisive measures.
In Gaza, children are not living their childhoods. They are surviving a war. Some are under rubble. Others are wasting away from hunger. Fear grips them every night. Their eyes scan the skies, waiting for the next missile, the next stolen meal, the next goodbye.
If the world remains silent, it becomes complicit. Gaza's children cry not just for bread, but for a future.
Shortlink for this post: https://daysofpalestine.ps/?p=63385

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Disguised aid: Israel's distribution system in Gaza masks a campaign of genocide
Disguised aid: Israel's distribution system in Gaza masks a campaign of genocide

Days of Palestine

time6 hours ago

  • Days of Palestine

Disguised aid: Israel's distribution system in Gaza masks a campaign of genocide

DaysofPal – The world continues to wait for the enforcement of international justice while Israel's genocide in Gaza rages into its eighth month. Since October 7, 2023, Israel has intensified its assault, introducing new types of weaponry, including incendiary munitions, in a campaign of terror, starvation, and indiscriminate killing. Despite repeated rulings by the International Criminal Court, enforcement remains absent. Meanwhile, Gaza endures relentless violence and an engineered famine. More than 600 days into this war, Israel has weaponized food aid, militarizing distribution and punishing those who seek to survive. On Tuesday, hospitals across Gaza, including Al-Shifa, Al-Aqsa, and Nasser, reported at least 42 Palestinian deaths by Israeli fire in various parts of the Strip, including 27 killed in a massacre targeting aid seekers in Rafah. According to Al-Shifa hospital, two Palestinians were killed and others wounded in an Israeli airstrike on Jabalia in northern Gaza. Al-Aqsa hospital reported receiving the bodies of three Palestinians and several wounded after an Israeli bombing struck two tents sheltering displaced civilians in Deir al-Balah. These incidents coincided with another deadly attack in western Rafah, where 24 Palestinians were killed and over 200 injured while waiting for food assistance. This event is yet another deliberate targeting of desperate civilians. The motivation behind seeking aid was not opportunistic; it was survival. Entire families, displaced and starving, ventured out from makeshift tents among the rubble in search of flour or canned food, responding to announcements of Israeli-supervised aid in so-called 'safe' zones. But what followed was chaos and carnage. Witnesses described scenes of panic as people were shot and injured. With ambulances unable to reach the site, victims were transported using animal-drawn carts. In testimonies gathered by Anadolu Agency, wounded survivors and their families recounted the harrowing experience of being caught between hunger and gunfire. Israeli drones and tanks opened fire even in designated aid areas, leaving behind bloodied bodies and searing memories. Since May 27, Israel has implemented a controversial new aid distribution scheme through the 'Humanitarian Gaza Foundation,' backed by Israeli and American interests but rejected by the United Nations. The Israeli military designated four distribution points: three in southern Gaza and one in the Netzarim corridor dividing the north and south. This system, run without oversight from the UN or international relief agencies, has been widely condemned as a tactic to forcibly displace Palestinians from northern Gaza. Aid is limited and only available in buffer zones, while the military shoots at crowds of starving civilians. Since the mechanism began, at least 99 Palestinians have been killed and hundreds injured near these aid points, according to Anadolu's monitoring of Palestinian sources. 'We just wanted food': Voices from the survivors 'We went to get food, and my brother was shot.' Yazan Musleh, whose 13-year-old brother Yazid was wounded, said, 'We were sitting in our tent. When we heard about the food, we ran toward the distribution center. My father had us sit in an area they said was safe, but it wasn't.' He added, 'They started shooting randomly. My brother waved at the drone not to shoot, but the bullet entered his stomach and tore his insides out.' 'We managed to get him help using a donkey cart. We came back with nothing but his injury. We just wanted something to stop our hunger.' 'We went based on Israeli instructions.' Khaled Al-Lahham, who was also injured, said, 'They told us it was a safe humanitarian zone. Suddenly, bullets rained down. I was hit; others were hit; many died. We only wanted food. We haven't eaten in a week.' 'When we got there, they surrounded us from every direction: tanks, drones, helicopters. I went for food for my children. I came back with a bullet in my back.' Another survivor, Mohammed Al-Basyouni, said he left at dawn from between Rafah and Khan Younis, determined to bring food for his ailing father. 'My mother begged me not to go, but I insisted. We needed food. As soon as I arrived, shooting began. I was hit in the back. They took me in a tuk-tuk. I had surgery and survived. Others didn't.' He concluded, 'We knew we might die, but we had no choice. Hunger is deadly. We want this war and siege to end. We want this nightmare to stop.' The Gaza Government Media Office said that this distribution mechanism was a 'tool of genocide' and a means of forced displacement. UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk echoed this, warning that the Israeli aid strategy 'threatens lives and violates international standards.' Türk stated that 'the deadly attacks on desperate civilians trying to obtain minimal food aid in Gaza are unacceptable' and reminded that 'attacks targeting civilians constitute grave breaches of international law and war crimes.' As of Tuesday morning, the number of Palestinians killed at aid centers rose to 102 in just eight days. UN Secretary-General António Guterres called for an 'immediate, independent investigation' into the killings, expressing deep horror and stating that 'it is unacceptable for Palestinians to risk their lives for food.' He emphasized Israel's clear obligations under international law to allow and facilitate humanitarian aid and called for 'the urgent restoration of unimpeded humanitarian access.' The Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor accused Israel of weaponizing humanitarian aid as part of a 'genocidal apparatus' and said that the system is being used to 'forcibly transfer' the population of Gaza. The organization noted that Israel has kept aid crossings closed for over 90 days, driving Gaza's 2.2 million people toward famine. The residents of the Gaza Strip are suffering from a rising famine due to the ongoing Israeli siege, which has lasted for nearly three months. This has pushed one in five Palestinians to the brink of actual starvation, according to UN reports. The latest data from the 'Integrated Food Security Phase Classification' indicates that approximately 1.95 million people, or 93% of the Strip's population, are facing a severe food shortage, reflecting the scale of the humanitarian catastrophe. Northern Gaza, in particular, is experiencing even more extreme levels of hunger amidst chaos at aid distribution points, which reflects the growing desperation among the population. The UN body reported that the continuation of the Israeli siege will likely lead to waves of mass displacement, both internal and external, which is what the Israeli occupation desires. Shortlink for this post:

UNICEF: Israel Kills, Injures 50,000 Children in Gaza During its Genocide
UNICEF: Israel Kills, Injures 50,000 Children in Gaza During its Genocide

Days of Palestine

time12 hours ago

  • Days of Palestine

UNICEF: Israel Kills, Injures 50,000 Children in Gaza During its Genocide

DayofPal– The United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) has issued a searing condemnation of the ongoing war in Gaza, decrying the devastating toll it has taken on children. Labeling the human cost as 'unconscionable,' UNICEF reported that 1,309 children have been killed and 3,738 injured since March 18, the day a brief ceasefire collapsed. The agency further noted that, since the onset of the wat in October 2023, more than 50,000 children have been killed or wounded in Gaza. The latest atrocities underscore the humanitarian catastrophe unfolding in the besieged enclave. On Friday, Israeli airstrikes struck Khan Younis, decimating the Al-Najjar family. According to witnesses and video evidence, burnt and dismembered children were pulled from the rubble. Of ten siblings under the age of 12, only one survived. He remains in critical condition. In a separate incident, a school in Gaza City was engulfed in flames following an Israeli bombing, killing at least 31 people, including 18 children. 'These children – lives that should never be reduced to numbers – are now part of a long, harrowing list of unimaginable horrors,' said UNICEF in a statement that detailed the scale of the crisis. The agency cited a litany of grave violations: the mass killing of children, starvation, forced displacement, and the systematic destruction of Gaza's essential infrastructure, including schools, hospitals, water systems, and residential buildings. 'How many more dead girls and boys will it take?' the organization asked. 'What level of horror must be livestreamed before the international community acts?' Reiterating its urgent call for an immediate ceasefire, UNICEF demanded the protection of civilians, the lifting of the blockade on Gaza, and full humanitarian access to the affected population. 'The children of Gaza need protection,' the statement concluded. 'They need food, water, and medicine. They need a ceasefire. But more than anything, they need immediate, collective action to stop this once and for all.' Shortlink for this post:

Pro-Israel Evangelical Leader Appointed New GHF Chief in Gaza
Pro-Israel Evangelical Leader Appointed New GHF Chief in Gaza

Days of Palestine

time12 hours ago

  • Days of Palestine

Pro-Israel Evangelical Leader Appointed New GHF Chief in Gaza

DayofPal– The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), a controversial US-backed aid initiative operating in the besieged Gaza Strip, has named Johnnie Moore, a prominent US evangelical figure and staunch supporter of Israel, as its new executive chairman. The appointment comes amid intensifying scrutiny over the organization's role in distributing aid and its ties to Israeli military operations in Gaza. Moore, who has previously lauded President Donald Trump's plan to expel Palestinians from Gaza and transform the enclave into the 'Riviera of the Middle East,' takes over from Jake Wood. Wood resigned last month, citing the impossibility of implementing a private aid distribution plan 'while also strictly adhering to the humanitarian principles of humanity, neutrality, impartiality and independence.' The announcement comes as deadly Israeli attacks continue near GHF aid distribution sites. According to Gaza's Government Media Office, Israeli forces have killed at least 102 Palestinians and wounded 490 others since the launch of the new US-backed aid mechanism on May 27. The Office described the attacks as 'a horrific, intentionally repeated crime,' accusing Israel of using the aid sites to lure starving civilians into deadly ambushes. 'The so-called 'aid' distribution centres, which are located in exposed and dangerous red zones under the control of the occupation army, have turned into mass bloodbaths, luring starving civilians to them as a result of the crippling famine and the tightening siege,' the Office said in a statement. 'They are then deliberately and coldly shot, in a scene that epitomises the malice of the project and exposes its true objectives.' Moore denied reports of Israeli attacks at GHF distribution sites. 'We urge extreme caution against sharing unverified information from sources that have repeatedly issued demonstrably false reports. False reporting of violence at our sites has a chilling effect on the local population,' he claimed. The latest incident occurred early Tuesday morning in the Al-Alam area of Rafah, where 27 Palestinians waiting for food were killed and 90 others wounded by Israeli fire. Drone footage, eyewitness videos, and testimonies from medical teams confirmed that Israeli forces opened fire directly on civilians, many of whom suffered gunshot wounds to the head or chest. Moore's leadership of GHF has sparked additional backlash due to his previous comments endorsing Trump's controversial plan for Gaza. 'President Trump always sees war through the eyes of its human cost, & he thinks creatively – never bound by conventional wisdom. He stops wars & makes peace,' Moore wrote on X in February. 'The USA will take full responsibility for future of Gaza, giving everyone hope & a future.' Moore's biography describes him as a 'noted evangelical friend' of Israel and a close associate of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. He reportedly played a significant role in brokering the Abraham Accords, the normalization agreements between Israel and several Arab states. The GHF was established as an alternative to UN-managed aid routes, following Israel's closure of Gaza's main crossings in early March. Human rights groups have condemned the closure as a form of collective punishment. An Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) report warned last month that nearly a quarter of Gaza's population faces catastrophic hunger. The GHF has been criticized for distributing limited supplies in dangerous areas and for requiring Palestinians to walk long distances under threat of Israeli fire. The UN and other humanitarian organizations have distanced themselves from the group, citing violations of fundamental humanitarian principles. Doctors Without Borders (MSF) condemned the new aid mechanism as 'dehumanizing, dangerous and severely ineffective.' 'Today's events have shown once again that this new system of aid delivery is dehumanising, dangerous and severely ineffective,' said Claire Manera, MSF's emergency coordinator, in a Sunday statement. 'It has resulted in deaths and injuries of civilians that could have been prevented. Humanitarian aid must be provided only by humanitarian organisations who have the competence and determination to do it safely and effectively.' Two senior GHF officials, including Jake Wood and chief operating officer David Burke, have resigned since the foundation began operations last week. Wood specifically cited the organization's inability to uphold the principles of 'humanity, neutrality, impartiality, and independence.' Despite growing criticism, Moore remains defiant in his leadership of the GHF. His appointment signals a continued alignment of the foundation with US and Israeli political agendas, even as the humanitarian crisis in Gaza deepens. Shortlink for this post:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store