
Gaza Families Burn Remains of Their Homes for Survival
DaysofPal- In a scene that starkly illustrates the growing humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza, many families are now burning the remnants of their destroyed homes to cook food for their children. With cooking gas supplies cut off by the Israeli blockade, residents have resorted to using wood scraps, plastic, and even their broken furniture to survive.
Since the outbreak of the war on October 7, 2023, Gaza's supply of cooking gas has come to a complete halt. More than two million residents have been forced to adopt dangerous and improvised alternatives, often at the expense of their health and environment.
Although the Israeli occupation temporarily allowed limited gas shipments during a short-lived ceasefire, this access ended abruptly after the collapse of the truce on March 18, 2024 — a deal brokered by Egypt and Qatar with U.S. support.
Burning Their Belongings to Stay Alive
Mohammad Mousa, a former carpenter and father of six, now uses parts of his furniture to light fires and prepare meals for his family. 'I can't afford firewood anymore,' he told Palestine Newspaper. 'It used to cost one shekel; now it's three. I haven't worked since the war began, and I've spent everything I had just moving between areas to keep my children safe from airstrikes.'
With safety elusive in every corner of the besieged enclave, Mousa says what's left of his home has become fuel for survival. 'The war has made firewood our only option, but its soaring price has turned it into another crisis on top of many.'
The story is the same for Kamal Obeid, a father of four, who says he's reduced to burning plastic and paper indoors after running out of furniture to burn. 'At first, I bought wood, but the price drained my savings. Then I turned to whatever I could find — plastic, trash, anything,' he said. 'Now my kids are sick. The air inside our home is toxic.'
Fires Born from Rubble
Mouin Abd Al-Al, displaced from his destroyed home in Gaza's Al-Nasr neighborhood, is gathering debris from what's left of his house just to cook food. 'Everything I owned is gone,' he said. 'Now, I pick up broken wooden panels to make a fire. This is how we eat.'
But the health toll is mounting. With people burning plastic and other non-household materials, residents are increasingly suffering from respiratory illnesses. Abd Al-Al says he experiences frequent headaches, blurred vision, and difficulty breathing. 'Sitting in front of this fire has become a daily routine — not by choice, but by necessity,' he said.
A Cry for Help Amid the Ashes
As the blockade tightens and airstrikes continue, residents are pleading with the international community to act. From under the rubble and rising smoke, Gazans are calling for an immediate end to what they describe as a genocide and for humanitarian aid — especially cooking gas, food, and medicine — to be allowed into the Strip.
'We're not asking for luxuries,' said one resident. 'Just the bare essentials to keep our children alive.'
With every passing day, the fires burning in Gaza are no longer just for cooking — they are a symbol of a people struggling to hold on in the face of total devastation.
Shortlink for this post: https://daysofpalestine.ps/?p=62890

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


Days of Palestine
26-05-2025
- Days of Palestine
In Gaza genocide, hungry children walk miles for food
DaysofPal- Each day, countless children across Gaza walk the rubble-strewn streets, clutching empty bowls and bottles in search of food and clean water. After more than eleven weeks of a total Israeli blockade that has choked off humanitarian aid, the situation has reached catastrophic levels, with families resorting to desperate and dangerous means to keep their children alive. Rachel Cummings, humanitarian director with Save the Children, who is currently on the ground in central Gaza, described the unfolding humanitarian disaster as 'desperate and dire,' saying it is 'unimaginable how it feels to be a child in Gaza' under current conditions. 'I see children every day walking the streets trying to find food with empty bowls, trying to find water with empty bottles in hand,' Cummings said. 'We have mothers telling us how they are trying to keep their children alive, how they're talking to bulk it out with grass or dirty water, knowing that could result in their child becoming sick.' Cummings acknowledged that a trickle of aid has entered Gaza in the past 72 hours, calling it 'welcome but insignificant in terms of the actual number of people it can help.' 'What is needed are the thousands of trucks carrying humanitarian supplies that are held up by Israel outside Gaza, carrying life-saving aid,' she said, underscoring the urgent need for widespread humanitarian access. 'This is a very active and complex war. Bombs are dropping on children every day,' she continued. 'So we need a definitive ceasefire in Gaza, we need to be able to access populations and children who are in the most desperate circumstances, and we need humanitarian supplies to enter.' As famine conditions accelerate, humanitarian agencies are also raising serious concerns over new aid delivery proposals that could undermine neutral humanitarian operations. On Sunday, Save the Children issued a strong statement distancing itself from the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation and any associated plans for militarized aid delivery. The organization reiterated that it will not participate in any system that compromises humanitarian principles. Gabriella Waaijman, Chief Operating Officer of Save the Children, said: 'Save the Children reiterates its firm position that it will not engage with any system of aid delivery in Gaza that fails to uphold humanitarian principles following reports about engaging with the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation over a new militarized proposal for aid delivery. We have not agreed to support or collaborate with the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, nor will we support limiting the number of humanitarian actors in the Gaza response. We stand united with our peers in calling on the Government of Israel and the international community to let us do our jobs.' Waaijman stressed the distinction between principled humanitarian assistance and politicized service delivery. 'Humanitarian principles guide the delivery of the aid people need to the people who need it most, independent of political considerations. Those principles are the difference between real humanitarian action and service delivery, and guide Save the Children's assistance to children and families across the world.' She warned of the consequences of deviating from these standards: 'New proposals for aid delivery that fail to uphold these standards are a distraction with devastating costs. After 11 weeks of total siege on the entry of all supplies into Gaza, thousands of children's lives hang in the balance. But instead of ensuring urgent, principled humanitarian aid delivery at the vast scale needed to save them, the Government of Israel is wasting time on political interference with what must remain a humanitarian-led system.' 'We reiterate our call to the Government of Israel and the international community to uphold humanitarian principles and international humanitarian law to ensure that people urgently receive the relief they need. Anything less is yet another world failure in what is becoming a long list for which the people of Gaza are paying with their lives.' These urgent calls have been echoed by the UN and other international aid organizations, which have warned that the death toll, especially among children, will continue to rise at a horrifying rate unless immediate, widespread access to Gaza and an end to the blockade are granted. Since March 2, Israel has been systematically starving some 2.4 million Palestinians in Gaza by closing the crossings to aid that has been piling up at the border, leading to famine and many deaths. Shortlink for this post:


Days of Palestine
26-05-2025
- Days of Palestine
Only 4.6% of Gaza's Cropland Remains Usable: UN Assessment
DaysofPal- A new United Nations assessment has revealed that just 4.6 percent of Gaza's cropland remains usable, as widespread destruction and access restrictions cripple the territory's food production system and push it closer to famine. The analysis, conducted by the UN Satellite Centre (UNOSAT) and the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), paints a grim picture of the devastation. As of last month, more than 80 percent of Gaza's farmland — over 12,500 hectares — has been damaged, and nearly 78 percent is now inaccessible to farmers. That leaves only 688 hectares, or 4.6 percent of Gaza's cropland, available for cultivation. The destruction extends beyond fields. The report also found that more than 70 percent of Gaza's greenhouses and nearly 83 percent of its agricultural wells have been damaged or destroyed, making local food production virtually impossible. 'This level of destruction is not just a loss of infrastructure — it is a collapse of Gaza's agri-food system and of lifelines,' said FAO Deputy Director-General Beth Bechdol. She warned that what once sustained hundreds of thousands of people has now been reduced to ruins, adding that the road to recovery will require not just major investment but long-term international commitment. The findings underscore the worsening humanitarian crisis in Gaza, which has endured 19 months of war, mass displacement, and severe restrictions on humanitarian aid. Earlier this month, the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) released an analysis warning that all 2.1 million people in Gaza are now at critical risk of famine. The FAO emphasized that without immediate restoration of farming infrastructure and access to land, the already dire food insecurity will continue to spiral, threatening the lives and livelihoods of an entire population. Shortlink for this post:


Days of Palestine
25-05-2025
- Days of Palestine
Death by Starvation: The Other Face of Israel's War on Gaza
DaysofPal – In a scene that epitomizes the harshest forms of genocide, over two million people in the Gaza Strip are enduring a deepening catastrophe marked by hunger. Having fled relentless bombardment, they now find themselves trapped under a suffocating blockade, as the Israeli occupation seals border crossings and denies the entry of humanitarian and food aid. Since 2 March 2024, the Israeli occupation has severed Gaza's lifeline—tightening its grip, blocking supplies, and intensifying the siege. Bread has become a distant dream; meals have turned into fading hopes buried in empty stomachs—especially in overcrowded displacement camps, where families who fled bombs now face starvation. A Missing Loaf and Withering Bodies Kareem Hamdan, who fled from Tel al-Zaatar to western Gaza with his family, recounts: 'We fled the bombs only to face starvation. We're not living—we're merely waiting to die. There's no food, no water, no medicine—just fear, hunger, and cold.' In a makeshift shelter at a school in Gaza City's Sheikh Radwan neighborhood, 73-year-old Umm Al-Saeed holds her hungry grandson: 'I've been displaced four times, but this is the hardest. My grandson begs for bread, but I have nothing to give him. We survive on bits of rice from charity kitchens. I've lived through many wars, but never one as cruel as this.' A Deepening Humanitarian Catastrophe The numbers are staggering. The UN states that Gaza needs at least 500 aid trucks daily. Yet in recent weeks, only 87 trucks have entered, allocated primarily to a few organizations. As food and medicine vanish, malnutrition is spreading fast. With the healthcare system collapsed, children and the elderly—many of whom are dying quietly from hunger and cold—are bearing the brunt. Starvation as a Weapon of Genocide Mousa Al-Abdallat, a member of the international organization One Justice, described Israel's starvation policy as 'an act of genocide': 'This deliberate starvation constitutes a war crime under Article 8 of the Rome Statute. The Israeli occupation is not just bombing people; it's using hunger as a weapon to force Palestinians to surrender, flee, or die.' He added that hundreds of deaths and miscarriages have been documented, illustrating that what's happening in Gaza is not merely a siege—but a systematic plan of extermination. A Cry Unheard Amid international silence and Arab inaction, Gaza's tragedy deepens. The cries of the hungry echo across the globe, yet no one responds. With each passing day, the circle of death widens while hope narrows—while Israel boasts of its policy of starvation and destruction, indifferent to the pleas of the victims or the rules of humanity. This is death by starvation— the ugliest face of a war still writing its chapters in blood and fire, leaving behind a people searching for bread and dignity in a world where silence has become a partner in the crime. Shortlink for this post: