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

Days of Palestine

time29-05-2025

  • Health
  • Days of Palestine

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:

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