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Famine Grips Gaza People as Israeli Genocide Escalates

Famine Grips Gaza People as Israeli Genocide Escalates

DaysofPal- Under the weight of an unrelenting Israeli blockade and continuous bombardment, the Gaza Strip is experiencing one of the worst humanitarian crises in its modern history. Widespread famine has taken hold, leaving over two million residents battling hunger, thirst, and disease amid a collapsed aid system and devastated infrastructure.
Access to necessities such as food, water, and medicine has nearly vanished. Families are now surviving on a single, nutritionally deficient meal per day, leading to a surge in malnutrition, especially among children and the elderly.
'We don't eat to feel full; we eat just to stay alive,' said Jihan Ahl, a mother of five from the Al-Daraj neighborhood. 'We divide a single loaf of bread between us, and some days we don't even have that. My youngest child is skin and bones. There's no medicine, no milk, not even clean water.'
Ahl described how her family once managed two modest meals a day at the onset of the crisis, but now she sacrifices her share of bread to ease her children's hunger. 'They're crying tears in my heart,' she told Palestine newspaper.
Survival Rations and Soaring Prices
Nadia Bulbul, another mother affected by the blockade, said she's been forced into harsh austerity. She bakes bread every other day—one loaf per person—and limits the family to a single meal of rice, pasta, or vegetable salad.
'The price of basic items is astronomical,' Bulbul said. 'Cooking oil went from 10 shekels to 70; sugar from 5 to 80; flour from 20 to over 500 shekels.' She now cooks rice without oil, using only boiling water and salt, which has also become costly. 'Chicken broth cubes? I've stopped buying them. Flavor no longer matters—only survival.'
Creative Adaptations Amid Scarcity
In the Sheikh Ajlin neighborhood, Aisha Shamlekh, a mother of five, has had to improvise to feed her family. With no meat or poultry and canned goods becoming prohibitively expensive, she relies on a few kilograms of chickpeas she received in a food package during Ramadan.
'Every three days, I grind a small amount and make falafel,' she said. But with cooking oil now unaffordable, she prepares the falafel on a griddle, flipping it on both sides until it's cooked—without oil. 'We're surviving on whatever is left. There's no nutrition, no vitamins, not even clean air—just the will to endure.'
Health System on the Brink
Gaza's already-fragile health sector is now overwhelmed. Hospitals lack basic supplies to treat acute malnutrition, including intravenous fluids. Medical staff face growing cases of emaciation, and there's no access to therapeutic food or infant formula.
Both local and international humanitarian organizations have issued urgent appeals, but aid remains largely blocked. The World Food Programme has described the crisis as 'catastrophic,' warning of the potential total collapse of Gaza's food security system.
In Gaza, life is now measured in crumbs, and dignity is preserved through morsels of bread. The famine of the 21st century is not unfolding in some remote village—it is happening in a densely populated enclave, home to over two million people, buried beneath the rubble of broken international promises.
Shortlink for this post: https://daysofpalestine.ps/?p=62586
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