
'Flesh everywhere': Israeli bombing of Gaza shelter leaves children charred
Families who had sought refuge in the school after being displaced were instead engulfed by fire in the early hours of Monday, desperately trying to reach loved ones trapped in the flames.
"The aftermath of the Israeli strike revealed the charred remains of more than 30 Palestinians, 18 of them children and six women.
Alaa Talal Abu Odah told Middle East Eye that most of those residing in the school, located in the al-Daraj neighbourhood, were asleep at the time of the strikes.
'Those who were awake and moving through the hallways were either burned or thrown by the blast,' recalled the 37-year-old witness, adding that the school-turned-shelter was struck by at least three missiles.
New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch
Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters
'Entire families were wiped out. The classrooms were filled with children and women, people who had fled from Shujaiyya and Beit Hanoun. They came here seeking safety, crowded together, only to be reduced to charred corpses.
'Those still alive clung to the classroom windows, screaming 'Save us, help us!' after catching fire. We couldn't break down the walls to rescue them. My brothers began filling buckets of water and pouring them onto the flames.'
According to Odah, the medical response was incredibly slow, with rescue crews arriving an hour after the bombings.
'The children who were asleep… they slept forever'
- Alaa Talal Abu Odah, eyewitness
"Whoever had burned, had burned. The children who were asleep… they slept forever. They went to sleep hungry, with nothing to eat," she grieved.
Holding a black bag in one hand, Mohammad Shaker al-Masri was picking up the remains of victims strewn around in the wreckage.
"I gathered these body parts from beneath the rubble, and there are still many remains left. My cousin was killed, and we still haven't been able to retrieve his [body]; all we're pulling out are small fragments," he told MEE.
"We haven't found him, we only managed to retrieve his leg and these chunks of flesh, but the rest of his body is still missing."
The 21-year-old was in a tent while his aunt's family lived in a classroom within the school.
Mohammad Shaker al-Masri, 21, pictured holding a black bag containing the remains of victims following an Israeli attack on a school-turned-shelter in Gaza City, on 26 May 2023 (Maha Hussaini/MEE)
He explained that the missiles' impact sealed the doors to the classroom where his relatives stayed.
"They couldn't escape and were burned to death... Everything went black and pitch dark. We were asleep and only woke up to find the fire around us and the rubble above us.
"Flesh and body parts were everywhere," Masri said, noting that several family members, including his cousin's children, were killed in the attack.
"Most of the rest are now in the hospital."
Targeting displaced individuals
Reeling from her own loss during the strikes, Odah said that the attack came without any prior warning or evacuation order.
"The strike came as a betrayal," he said.
"The young men who were awake in the corridors were torn to pieces, killed, including my cousin.
"Why are they bombing the shelters, knowing full well that they'll kill the largest number possible? This is a premeditated crime, and the world remains silent."
Noura Hamdi al-Masri was one of those who had fled Beit Hanoun, following the Israeli army's displacement orders.
The 19-year-old, alongside her family, had remained in the school for the past three months, seeking shelter from escalating Israeli attacks.
However, she would be far from safe, as she found herself trapped underneath the rubble and remains of the school.
"It was a terrifying feeling, the debris were on top of us, and there was fire all around, and we couldn't save ourselves," she recalled.
Massacres amid truce talks
Noura told MEE that half the people in the school lay awake in the late hours of the night as they listened to "hopeful news about a truce and negotiations".
"Then suddenly, missiles started falling on the classrooms, and we lost our families and our children. Half were killed, the other half were injured," she said.
Israel killed my family and destroyed my home. The world just kept scrolling Read More »
Since the war on Gaza began on 7 October 2023, Israeli forces have killed nearly 54,000 Palestinians, according to Palestinian health and government officials.
Expanding military attacks in recent weeks have only furthered the humanitarian crisis in the already vulnerable, besieged enclave.
Odah expressed a sense of hopelessness amongst the population amid continuing ceasefire negotiations.
"We've stopped being optimistic. Whenever you hear that there are negotiations, [we] just know that massacres are coming.
"Ever since we heard yesterday about efforts to resume negotiations, the bombing hasn't stopped, it's everywhere. You don't know where it's coming from. This is annihilation, this is truly genocide."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The National
3 hours ago
- The National
Tears at Gaza graduation ceremony for children without parents to cheer them on
What is usually a joyful milestone for families became a solemn reminder of loss in Gaza as more than 1,000 children orphaned by the war took part in a graduation ceremony with no parents to applaud them. Wearing caps and gowns and clutching photos of their parents, the children took to the stage on Monday in a bittersweet ceremony organised by Al Wafaa Village, a sanctuary for orphans in Khan Younis. This was the first graduating class at the centre since it opened its doors in January. In a video shared on social media by Palestinian journalist Abdallah Al Attar, the children are seen wiping away tears in the absence of the people they longed for most. The children range in age from six to 13 and will start their next academic year at Al Wafaa Village next month. "The children were emotional because they remembered their parents, whom they miss deeply," Mr Al Attar said. "Many of these kids have known loss before even starting school." Wafaa Abu Jalala, a speech and language pathologist, founded the centre to care for children "who lost everything overnight", she previously told The National. The village provides shelter as well as psychological and social support to children who have lost one or both parents in Israel's war on Gaza. Palestinian authorities say more than 5,000 families have only one surviving member after more than 22 months of the conflict. Most of these sole survivors are children, said Ismail Al Thawabteh, director of the Gaza's government media office. The staggering statistic has raised concerns over how the trauma and grief that children in Gaza have faced will affect them in the long run. The UN in June named Israel on its " list of shame" for grave abuse of children, for the second year running. Almost two years of horrific violence in Gaza have left deep emotional wounds on the war's youngest victims, parents and psychologists told The National. With its Smurf-inspired interior and expert-led rehabilitation programme, Al Wafaa Village aims to offer children an escape and refuge from the tragedies of war. "They come in with shattered spirits but here they find hope and life," Ms Abu Jalala said. Mr Al Attar said the organisers of the graduation ceremony believe it sends a message of hope and resilience to Gaza's youth. "These children want to study, they want to live and they want a better future," he said.


Middle East Eye
4 hours ago
- Middle East Eye
How Gaza's aid sites have morphed into Israel's cruellest form of psychological torture
The Zikim, Netzarim and Morag 'aid corridors' have become Israel's psychological laboratories for collective human experimentation. Within this framework, logic collapses, personal values disintegrate, and human beings are reshaped - but only after being psychologically dismantled. An Israeli tank climbs a sandy ridge overlooking a flat open area. Beyond it lies another sandy mound, used by civilians as a last refuge from the relentless, indiscriminate gunfire that only intensifies as the aid lorries begin to move away from the military vehicles. In that moment, the final thread connecting a person to their own sense of self snaps. Natural human responses shut down. The human being becomes something else; something unfamiliar. Crowds surge forward. Some fall, others are killed. No one stops. It is a race against death. The air is filled with dust, so thick you can barely see ahead. The deafening noise of gunfire rises above all else. People run towards the aid lorries, which appear minuscule amid the frenzy surrounding them. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters Those who fall are trampled underfoot or have their skulls crushed by the tyres. If they are fortunate, only their legs are broken. The scene resembles a sped-up video of a vertebrate decomposing, its body reduced to clean bone in an instant. This is how the lorries are swallowed, becoming hollow frames within minutes. These scenes are not just horrifying. They are also a rare and complex field for understanding human behaviour. What is being done to us? What drives us to such a state? And how is it that human beings, under certain conditions, can be stripped of all instinctive defences and absorbed into such chaotic, herd-like conduct? The hunger economy At first glance, hunger alone may seem sufficient to explain the situation. But hunger is often only the initial spark; over time, chaos can become a primary market resource. A new form of labour emerges, with distinct categories of workers. At the top are the professionals, known locally as the 'sugar-and-Nutella' units - the fastest, most efficient and most organised. They seize the best and most valuable items. Follow Middle East Eye's live coverage of the Israel-Palestine war Then come those who have to work to secure their own food, or to sell it to meet other needs. Increasingly, people have begun to recognise the minimal returns of their small businesses in comparison with what can be gained by chasing down aid. More and more people are being drawn in by this phenomenon. Collective trauma - a psychological condition affecting populations exposed to overwhelming and terrifying events such as bombardment, mutilation, bloodshed, starvation and deprivation - under conditions of total helplessness has well-documented effects. Many develop addictive behaviours as coping mechanisms. We are witnessing a reshaping of the individual, of society, of the market, and of the social fabric that binds people together In this context, storming the aid lorries - legitimised by the occupying power as the only option for 'quelling hunger', in line with its security interests - ceases to be merely a desperate act. It becomes a compulsive pattern, a way of seeking traces of oneself in a world ruled by helplessness and futility. Obtaining aid becomes the only means by which individuals can feel their own presence, even if through destructive and chaotic avenues. The food basket, or flour sack, is no longer merely a source of physical nourishment. It becomes a form of psychological gratification that offers reassurance; a way to assert status, social hierarchy and a sense of agency within one's environment. A desire, even a compulsion, to repeat the experience takes hold - again and again - despite the individual already having secured food and a temporary sense of safety. The drive is not soothed. On the contrary, it intensifies. Reward mechanisms Those who gather along aid routes, sometimes dryly referred to as 'Zikim workers', can be roughly divided into two groups: the victorious, who usually succeed in obtaining food, and those who rely on luck, saying things like: 'It's not my skill, it's just God's favour.' As such, there are two distinct emotional patterns related to psychological rewards. Routine feelings of victory are tied to the brain's reward system, where dopamine is released in response to achievement or success. This acts as a further incentive, encouraging the repetition of behaviours and reinforcing them into a routine. Gaza Humanitarian Foundation: Israel's new model for weaponised aid Read More » Feelings of random or intermittent rewards, as with gambling, can lead to even higher levels of dopamine. The brain reacts more intensely to unexpected success. These emotional responses are closely linked with addictive behaviours, whereby a person develops a compulsion to repeat the action, even in the absence of tangible results. The danger lies in how such feelings can erode one's resistance to chaotic situations. In Gaza, people live on the edge of catastrophe. Oppression strikes from every direction. Within this context, individuals often experience the aid corridors as a space for physical and emotional release. This process can involve strenuous exertion, such as walking many kilometres to reach the convoys, along with crowding, jostling and potential physical confrontations. Violence becomes another face of this chaos - a primitive method of reclaiming control; a fleeting but tangible sense of presence in a world otherwise defined by absence and futility. Collective behaviour In socially embedded contexts, such as among extended families, neighbourhood groups, circles of friends, shelters or displacement camps, individuals often find it difficult to resist conforming to the collective. Even when such behaviours come into conflict with personal convictions, they spread like a contagion. In this setting, going to the aid sites becomes normalised, because everyone else is doing the same thing. The other side of this phenomenon involves the fear of missing out - a widely recognised behavioural tendency, particularly visible in financial markets, where a surge in demand is driven by the belief that failing to act now means losing the opportunity forever. This dynamic is heightened on days when fewer people venture out, whether due to psychological fatigue or other factors, and the aid corridors become a golden opportunity for those who do show up. Those who miss out on the experience regret, while stories of individual successes become exaggerated, serving as mobilisation tools and fuelling a flood of people to the aid sites the next day. We are witnessing a reshaping of the individual, of society, of the market, and of the social fabric that binds people together. What remains of meaningful human agency is being dissolved, with Palestinians left to face uncertain fates. In this open-air theatre, Israel is carrying out a systematic policy of dismantling individuals and structures alike, paving the way for a final phase - one of collective submission, of psychological dependence on the oppressor, and of collapsed trust in society itself. This, in turn, paves the way for a new order in which people attach their hopes to whoever appears stronger, more capable, more able to feed them. We will by then have become pliable clay, to be shaped by Israel at will or discarded, left as broken human wreckage under the control of warlords and looters. This is the conclusion to which my personal experiences at Zikim have led me. It is my hope that by writing this, I can draw attention to the catastrophic reality unfolding in Gaza - a reality too often reduced to simplistic and superficial images that keep us from asking deeper questions, or seeking the necessary answers. What can we do? How do we stop this catastrophe? The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.


Sharjah 24
6 hours ago
- Sharjah 24
UAE shows 'Lifeline' water project in Khan Younis to journalists
The tour aimed to monitor the project's implementation and assess how affected families, especially children and the elderly, are benefiting from the new water supply. The new 7.5-kilometre pipeline runs from Emirati desalination plants in Egypt's Rafah to the Al Mawasi area in southern Gaza. It is expected to benefit 600,000 Palestinians, providing each person with 15 litres of fresh water daily. This will help ease the severe water shortage that has affected residents for months. The "Lifeline" project aims to alleviate the suffering of a population grappling with frequent water outages and high temperatures. By providing clean, safe drinking water, the initiative helps safeguard public health and reduces the daily burden on displaced families, who have been without access to a functioning water network for months. The project is an extension of previous UAE efforts to address Gaza's water crisis, which include building desalination plants, providing water tankers, digging wells, and maintaining water networks. The UAE has also implemented other urgent infrastructure projects to ensure sustained humanitarian support and meet the population's basic needs.