
Eid under way in Gaza Strip with prayers outside destroyed mosques
Palestinians across the war-ravaged Gaza Strip marked the start of one of Islam's most important holidays with prayers outside destroyed mosques and homes early on Friday, with little hope the war with Israel will end soon.
With much of Gaza in rubble, men and children were forced to hold the traditional Eid al-Adha prayers in the open air and with food supplies dwindling, families were having to make do with what they could scrape together for the three-day feast.
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'This is the worst feast that the Palestinian people have experienced because of the unjust war against the Palestinian people,' said Kamel Emran after attending prayers in the southern city of Khan Younis.
'There is no food, no flour, no shelter, no mosques, no homes, no mattresses … The conditions are very, very harsh.'
Palestinians gather for Eid al-Adha prayers beside the ruins of Al-Kanz mosque in Gaza City (Jehad Alshrafi/AP/PA)
The Islamic holiday begins on the 10th day of the Islamic lunar month of Dhul-Hijja, during the Hajj season in Saudi Arabia.
For the second year, Muslims in Gaza were not able to travel to Saudi Arabia to perform the traditional pilgrimage.
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In northern Gaza on Friday, Israel issued a new warning to civilians saying the military was about to undertake intensive operations in an area after it said rockets were fired toward Israel from the sector.
The war broke out on October 7 2023 when Hamas-led militants launched a surprise attack on Israel, killing some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducted 251 hostages.
They are still holding 56 hostages, around a third of them believed to be alive, after most of the rest were released in ceasefire agreements or other deals. Israeli forces have rescued eight living hostages from Gaza and recovered dozens of bodies.
Palestinians offer Eid al-Adha prayers beside the ruins of a mosque in Deir al-Balah, Gaza (Abdel Kareem Hana/AP/PA)
Since then, Israel has killed more than 54,000 Palestinians in its military campaign, primarily women and children, according to the Gaza health ministry, which does not distinguish between civilians or combatants in its figures.
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The offensive has destroyed large parts of Gaza and displaced around 90% of its population of roughly two million Palestinians.
After blocking all food and aid from entering Gaza for more than two months, Israel began allowing a trickle of supplies to enter for the UN several weeks ago.
But the UN says it has been unable to distribute much of the aid because of Israeli military restrictions on movements and because roads that the military designates for its trucks to use are unsafe and vulnerable to looters.
The UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation in Rome said on Thursday that Gaza's people are projected to fall into acute food insecurity by September, with nearly 500,000 people experiencing extreme food deprivation, leading to malnutrition and starvation.
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'This means the risk of famine is really touching the whole of the Gaza Strip,' Rein Paulson, director of the FAO office of emergencies and resilience, said in an interview.

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Come on, wake up. Let's get out of here, let's crawl on the ground. Don't worry, you'll be OK. I'll pull you with me. But she didn't respond.' For three hours, Mirvat and Ahmad waited beside Reem's body for the shooting to stop. When it finally did, crowds surged forward for food and the children began looking for a car or cart that could take their mother to a hospital. In the chaos they were separated and Mirvat had to choose between leaving her mother's body or abandoning her little brother. She decided to focus on the living, whispering to Reem: 'I entrust you to God.' By the time she found her brother, emergency workers had taken their mother's body away, so the siblings began a bleak tour of Gaza's battered hospitals to find her. First the British hospital, then the American hospital, then the Red Cross. Finally as they reached Nasser hospital, an ambulance arrived carrying unidentified bodies. Reem was among them. A journalist captured Ahmad grieving over the body, stroking, kissing and hugging his mother through tears. 'No, no, my mother is not dead. She's still alive,' he says. The video spread online, because of his raw grief and also because a video of Reem herself identifying Nabil's body had gone viral a year earlier. Nabil was killed in a bombing in January 2024, as civilians fled Khan Younis in the face of an Israeli advance, but Reem could not retrieve her son's body for months. The moment when she recognised his clothes on an unidentified victim, then broke down in agony, captured the pain of so many Palestinians in Gaza. Now her killing is a brutal reminder of the scale of suffering and death visited on the most ordinary families there. Before the war, the family of 10 were poor but had each other. Nabil worked for a cleaning company and earned 50 shekels (about £11) a week alongside Reem for many years. His father worked as a day labourer when he could find employment. Reem was kind and cheerful, Mirvat said, quick to laugh and with a ready smile. She treated her children with respect and kept order in their large family through love, not fear. When a child got upset at being chastised, she would comfort them with their favourite food. 'She'd come with a smile on her face and start explaining that she did what she did for his own good. She would keep trying until he was happy again,' her daughter said. 'She loved to listen to our thoughts and valued our opinions.' Mirvat was in her last year of high school when the war began. Her dreams of going to university to study law have been set aside, replaced by the basic hope that the rest of her family will survive the war, and by new responsibility now her mother is gone. 'My future is clear. There are children depending on me, so even if education starts up again I won't be able to go back,' she said. 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