Gaza: A Painter’s Tragedy Toolkit

As if his works were from distant crumbling past, Gaza artist Ahmad Mahna documents the aggression on his little enclave. He uses the aid boxes dropped from the parachuted air to feed the starved to draw on and tell a painter’s story of the ongoing Israeli genocide.

Mahna says the goal of drawing is not only to document Israeli crimes but to send a message to the world, there are people in Gaza who love life and have needs beyond food and drink and want to tell the world of the need to stop the criminal actions against them meted by Israel and their forced forced displacement while the world looks on in silence as narrated in Al Mayadeen.

As a citizen living in a besieged enclave, Mahna has always been accustomed to difficult circumstances and never felt bound by the routine methods followed by world artists to see their creations come to light.

When he does not find the appropriate tools, he turns to whatever is available to him. Such may include paper, pencil, wall, piece of cloth, glass and even an old, neglected wooden board. In the artist’s eyes, these “worn-out” things can be transformed into inspiring artworks.

“Being across from an UNRWA school is a major incentive to draw,” Mahna pointing to the scenes of displaced people running to shelters as the aggression thickens combined with people fleeing guns and bombs thrown on displacement camps, queues to obtain water, bread and firewood, and scenes of the wounded carried on shoulders.

These tragedies become sad but rich material for Mahna to transfer such oppression and grief onto paper and from there on pass to the world.

Today the Gazan artist left his mark everywhere through his works and murals, saying it was difficult to stand idly by amidst the horrors he was witnessing, so he armed himself with his charcoal pen, and divided the “carton” into four paintings beginning with “A Four-Year-Old Girl Carrying a 16-Liter Gallon of Water”, and published it on the social media.

It became an instant hit, generating much and unexpected interest with many asking him to draw more about the sufferings of the displaced. Today,  Mahna is a “beacon” for many artists, and the owner of dozens artistic pieces which tell the world, through simple lines, the meaning of the ethnic cleansing that is taking place in Gaza, through such titles as “Escape from Death”, ” Last Embrace” and others.

Mahna says the painting comes out of a “first-time situation I experience” with emotions flooding whether its love, fear, anger or sadness. He fills his painting with details that convey a reality of interconnected circuits surrounding the lives of residents including death to provide basic needs daily, movement of passersby to and from hospitals that has become a daily routine due to the bombs and air-raids, and the incessant spread of diseases that is everywhere.

Because the tent has become the main “hero” in the story of Palestinian displacement, Mahna transfers the canvas into a painting with rich details, focusing on the scorching temperatures that melt the people inside, the insects, scorpions, and snakes that surround them like a barbaric army from every direction, and the sounds they hear from every corner, nullifying the individual privacy and the human need for rest and calm.

Coffee and Painting

“There is no one left who has not been affected by the war,” says Mahna, a former employee in one of the art institutions in Gaza. He lost his job and had to look for an alternative to provide him with his daily bread, so he opened a tea and coffee kiosk whilst making wall paintings where passersby would stop not only for the coffee but contemplate the paintings with respect for the skilled maker, as if directing words of thanks to him for what he conveys for their suffering.

Like others, Mahna did not comprehend the ongoing war of extermination till three months after the massacres when he shook off the cloak of despair and decided to stand up again. Thus, he opened his own studio under his downtrodden house. Only then did he feel he returned to the world he belonged to, amidst the looks of children escaping the boredom of the shelter that now surround him from every direction, reminding him of his societal role in managing workshops to relieve their psychological stress through art.

Mahna describes himself as a street artist because his drawings express the state of society and its conditions. From drawing destroyed homes and the color of the rubble, Mahna gives passersby hope in a city reduced to ruins. He has plenty to draw from images of corpses, limbs, mass graves, grief of bereaved mothers over their sons and their screams over those who remained under the rubble to the depiction of the ungodly famine in north Gaza.

Mahna faces difficulty in obtaining drawing materials. Charcoal pencils can run out at any time. Aid boxes have also become difficult to obtain in light of the increasing gas crisis, as residents prefer to burn them to prepare food instead of producing several paintings to look at while they are starving. He pointed out he faces the same problem that forced him to set fire to the wood that supports his paintings, but he is still trying to keep art alive in Gaza despite everything.

CrossFireArabia

CrossFireArabia

Dr. Marwan Asmar holds a PhD from Leeds University and is a freelance writer specializing on the Middle East. He has worked as a journalist since the early 1990s in Jordan and the Gulf countries, and been widely published, including at Albawaba, Gulf News, Al Ghad, World Press Review and others.

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Top Writer Says ‘No’ to Berlinale

Top Indian writer Arundhati Roy has pulled out of the Berlin International Film Festival (Berlinale) after criticizing “unconscionable statements” by members of the festival jury, who said that art should not be political when asked about the Israeli genocide in Gaza.

Roy had been scheduled to attend a screening of her 1989 film In Which Annie Gives It Those Ones in the Classics section of Berlinale 2026.

In a strongly worded statement, Roy said the selection of the film had initially filled her with warmth and nostalgia. She noted that she had long felt disturbed by the positions of the German government and several cultural institutions on Palestine. Still, she said she had consistently received solidarity from German audiences when speaking about Gaza, which encouraged her to consider attending the festival.

However, Roy said she changed her decision after hearing comments from members of the Berlinale jury earlier that day.

“Like millions of people across the world, I heard the unconscionable statements made by members of the jury of the Berlin film festival when they were asked to comment about the genocide in Gaza,” Roy wrote.

She described labeling the genocide a political issue then insisting that art should remain separate from politics as “jaw-dropping.” She added that such framing shuts down urgent conversations about a crime against humanity.

Roy stated clearly in her message that she believes events in Gaza amount to genocide against Palestinians by Israel. She further added that the United States and Germany, along with several European governments, support and fund Israel and therefore share responsibility.

“If the greatest film makers and artists of our time cannot stand up and say so, they should know that history will judge them,” she wrote, adding that she felt “shocked and disgusted.”

Roy concluded her statement by confirming that, “with deep regret,” she would not attend the Berlinale.

The controversy emerged after journalists asked Berlinale jury members to comment on the genocide in Gaza and Germany’s support for Israel, which also funds the festival.

Polish producer Ewa Puszczyńska, a member of the jury, refused to answer.

“There are many other wars where genocide is committed, and we do not talk about that,” Puszczyńska said. She described the issue as “complex” and claimed that it was unfair to ask jury members to comment on government policies.

Roy’s withdrawal adds to rising tensions within European cultural spaces over the Israeli genocide in Gaza. Artists, writers, and filmmakers have increasingly debated whether cultural platforms should take political positions. – Quds News Network

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Gaza Radio Station Returns to The Airwaves

Broadcaster Rami Al-Sharafi works on a laptop inside the damaged Zaman FM radio station building in Gaza, marking what may seem an unlikely return to the airwaves amid the rubble of the deadly two-year Israel-Hamas war.

While 23 local radio stations were operating in Gaza before the conflict erupted, they were all destroyed and ceased broadcasting, he told UN News.

“Today, we are the only radio station broadcasting on FM from within Gaza after this widespread destruction,” he said. “We hope that other local radio stations will resume broadcasting, thus allowing competition in providing media services to the people of the Gaza Strip.”

Ahead of World Radio Day, observed on 13 February, the resumption of broadcasting comes at a time when Gaza’s media infrastructure still faces significant challenges amid local and international calls to support journalism as part of broader recovery and reconstruction efforts in the sector.

A journalist works at a desk in a damaged office in Gaza, viewed through broken pillars. Another person uses a laptop in the background.

UN News

A journalist works in the damaged office of Zaman 90.60 FM radio station in Gaza City.

Digging through the rubble

After a hiatus of nearly two years due to the war, some local radio stations in the Gaza Strip are transmitting again, in a move showing gradual efforts to revive the media landscape in the war-ravaged Strip – much of which has suffered widespread destruction of infrastructure and civilian institutions from Israeli attacks.

Zaman FM operates in the Tel al-Hawa neighbourhood of Gaza City, where Israeli attacks triggered a famine and left mountains of debris in the streets.

The cracked walls of the station’s building tell a story of immense destruction and the scene inside is unlike any other radio studio in the world. 

Employees dig through the rubble to keep the station broadcasting, working with minimal technical resources while behind them, awareness posters warn people of the dangers of dilapidated buildings.

On-air messages of hope

Local radio remains vital in Gaza as humanitarian crises persist, power outages continue and access to other media remains limited. This makes radio one of the most effective ways of getting key messages out to the public, along with health guidance and information about other services.

Gaza is in dire need of professional local radio stations capable of broadcasting awareness messages and guidance bulletins in light of the spread of diseases, the deterioration of the education system and the disruption of many basic services, said Mr. Al-Sharafi, director of the radio station and host of the morning programme, An Hour of Time.

“We need to deliver information to the population and guide them to the services that have stopped and are gradually being resumed,” he said, “especially in light of the difficult health conditions and the spread of epidemics.”

Amid the destruction all around, Mr. Al-Sharafi sits behind his dust-covered microphone and does just that. 

He sends morning greetings to Gaza residents and provides them with important information and updates, bringing some much-needed hope to the airwaves across a devastated landscape that has only just begun to recover – UN News

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