Palestine Team Towers at The Paris Olympics

In the world of sports, the Olympics represent the pinnacle of achievement, bringing together the world’s best men and women in dozens of disciplines to push the limits of athletic prowess with each passing Games.

While Olympians from most countries prepare for years to put on their best performance at the largest sporting event, those from Palestine must face the double challenge of surviving periodic Israeli military incursions. Over the decades, these have cut short the athletic journeys of hundreds if not thousands of aspiring sportspeople in the occupied territories according to Anadolu.

Hassan Abu Zaitar, Shaker Safi, and Basem Al-Nabahin are just a few of those killed by relentless Israeli airstrikes and ground attacks that have devastated the Gaza Strip since Oct 7 last year.

With the Paris Games starting on July 26, Israel’s killing of athletes and players in Gaza, along with its destruction of the enclave’s sports facilities, has triggered mounting demands to disqualify Israel from the tournament as activists and spectators question the legitimacy of its participation.

Palestinian writers and sports commentators contend that Israel’s Gaza onslaught, which has killed nearly 40,000 Palestinians, also represents an attempt to eliminate sports and athletic achievement.

“It’s a genocide … ethnic cleansing of the Palestinian people, and the attacks on athletes and sports in particular in the Gaza Strip are all very systematic attacks to obliterate and erase sports in the territory,” Abubaker Abed, a Gaza-based sports journalist told Anadolu.

Israel’s intentions go further than eliminating Gaza’s current athletic capacity, according to writer and lecturer Abdaljawad Omar, who held that it was part of a concerted effort by Tel Aviv to undermine Palestinians’ achievements in all areas, with sports being no exception.

“Israel systemically seeks to ensure that Palestinian accomplishments and potential in all realms remain dampened and always dwarfed by its own achievements.

“This applies to political, intellectual, economic, and literary fields, where historically, many talented and highly accomplished Palestinians have been targeted. Sports is no exception in this sense,” he explained.  

Killing of athletes

The situation is “extremely worse” for athletes in Gaza, according to football journalist Abed, adding that many players have been killed in the territory.

According to the Palestinian Olympic Committee and Palestine Football Association, about 400 athletes have been killed since Oct. 7, with the football association noting that the war has claimed 245 players in that sport alone, including 69 children and 176 young men.

Some 33 scouts and 70 members of sports unions have also been killed.

According to the association, Israeli forces have also detained players, including 12 in the occupied West Bank.

Israel’s attacks have killed several Olympians as well. Sixty-nine have been killed during Israel’s ongoing assault, says the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel, launched in 2004.  

Destruction of sports facilities

Besides athletes, sports facilities also have not been spared. Dozens, including gyms, training halls, fields, and stadiums, have been damaged or destroyed since Oct. 7.

A total of 42 facilities have been leveled in Gaza, while seven were destroyed in the West Bank, says the Palestinian Football Association.

Abed pointed out how Israel has destroyed football schools, including the Al-Wahda Academy and the Champions Academy, which “was one of the most promising football projects” in Gaza.

He pointed out how Israel has eradicated talent in football, the most popular sport among Gaza’s residents, leaving only one stadium, the Al-Dorra stadium, intact out of the enclave’s 10.

Israeli forces have been seizing stadiums in Gaza and turning them into detention centers.

Human rights monitor Euro-Med highlights that the Israeli army turned the Yarmouk Stadium in Gaza City into a detention center “to hold and humiliate hundreds of Palestinians, including children, shown naked and stripped of their clothes in footage published by the Israeli media in December 2023.”

A report by the group published in May indicates that facilities bulldozed and destroyed include “300 five-a-side courts, 22 swimming courts, 12 covered sports halls for basketball, volleyball, and handball, and six tennis stadiums.

“Twenty-eight sports and fitness centers have been targeted, damaged, and destroyed.”  

Death of prominent athletes

Israel’s offensive has also caused the death of prominent players in Gaza, including champions of tournaments in ……

This includes Palestine’s first-ever Olympian and flagbearer, Majed Abu Maraheel, who died due to kidney failure in a refugee camp in June.

The 61-year-old Olympic distance runner died as Israel’s ongoing blockade of humanitarian assistance left many, including Maraheel, lacking medical treatment and facilities.

Maraheel had competed in the men’s 10,000-meter race at the 1996 Atlanta Olympic Games.

In January, the Palestinian Olympic football team’s coach Hani Al-Mossader was killed in an Israeli airstrike.

The same month, Nagham Abu Samra, a karate champion who was set to participate in the Paris Olympics, died in a hospital in Egypt after succumbing to her injuries.

She had been severely wounded by an Israeli attack that left her with head injuries and led to the amputation of one of her legs.

Prominent football players have also been killed in Israeli attacks.

In March, Mohammed Barakat, nicknamed the “legend of Khan Younis,” died in a raid targeting him in the southern Gaza Strip city.

The 39-year-old forward, who scored 114 goals, had played for several football clubs including the Khan Younis Youth Club, which he captained. He also played in the occupied West Bank and Jordan, including Al-Wahdat, as well as Al-Shoalah, a Saudi club.

Hazem Al-Ghalban was also killed by Israeli an bombing in Khan Younis. According to Abed, the 26-year-old defender scored seven goals in his career and “put on stellar displays with his team before Oct 7th, placed 3rd in the league.”

Shadi Abu-Alarraj, a renowned goalkeeper for the Khan Younis Youth Club, was killed last week.

“The death toll among athletes continues, unfortunately,” says Abed.  

‘Apartheid’ Olympics

With hours left until the Paris 2024 Games’ opening ceremony, experts are still questioning the International Olympic Committee’s (IOC) decision to keep Israel in the tournament.

“Athletes, whether footballers … whatever the sport is, they don’t belong to political factions … they are targeted and are illegitimate targets for Israeli forces, and this is absolutely prohibited by all international laws and all FIFA regulations,” says Abed.

He argued that Israel’s actions show that it lacks the Olympic values of peace, tolerance, forgiveness, love, and sportsmanship.

“So, how could Israel even participate in the Olympics?” he asked.

Russia, meanwhile, has been banned from Olympic and FIFA tournaments after it launched its war on Ukraine in 2022, noted Abed, who maintained that Moscow’s actions in that conflict were mild compared to the devastation Israel has caused in Gaza.

This “disgraceful stance,” he asserts, revealed the hypocrisy of the IOC, as well as the world governing body for football.

The organizers of this year’s Olympics have said their decision to keep Israel in the Games while upholding the ban on Russia and Belarus is due to Moscow’s annexation of Ukrainian territory, while Tel Aviv has not formally seized territory in Gaza.

Fadi Quran, senior director at US-based rights group Avaaz, said the Olympics and the IOC’s current leadership will be remembered for “turning a blind eye to a country committing what the ICJ ruled is a plausible genocide, and said is apartheid.”

He was referring to a preliminary ruling by the International Court of Justice that recognized genocide as a plausible risk in Gaza. Israel stands accused of genocide at the top UN court, which in its latest ruling has ordered Tel Aviv to immediately halt its operation in the southern city of Rafah, where over a million Palestinians had sought refuge from the war before it was invaded on May 6.

Quran expects that athletes will protest Israel’s presence at the Olympics and fans will boycott events where the Israeli flag is raised.

“Now that the IOC has refused to ban Israel, activists across the world will take action to ensure that the Paris Olympics are branded as the ‘Apartheid Olympics,’ or ‘War Crime Olympics’,” he said.

According to Abed, it will take a decade to revive sports in the Gaza Strip.

“The war on Gaza has changed everything. The war on Gaza has killed the dreams of many.”

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Under Israeli Guns: People of Khan Younis Told to Move

The Israeli army has killed more than 70 Palestinians and wounded 200 others, mostly children and women, in less than 12 hours in Khan Yunis, in the southern Gaza Strip. Meanwhile, hundreds of thousands of civilians have received new evacuation orders in the area.

These latest crimes come as part of Israel’s genocidal war against the Palestinian people in the Gaza Strip, ongoing since 7 October 2023.

The atrocities committed by the Israeli army against civilians in the Strip over the past nine months are well-documented and carried out consistently. These crimes include killing, mass murder, starvation, blocking the entry of humanitarian aid, forced evacuation, destruction of civilian objects, and the denial of any kind of stability, as has been the case in Khan Yunis since this morning (22 July 2024). Such actions indicate that the occupation army is essentially destroying the Palestinian people in the Gaza Strip in every way that it can.

Every time there is talk of returning to the negotiating table to reach a truce and an exchange agreement, the Israeli army purposefully increases the number of massacres and mass killings of Palestinian civilians. This raises concerns that Israel is engaging in political blackmail by using the killing and displacement of civilians as a tool of pressure, as it has done repeatedly in recent weeks.

After carrying out a premeditated mass murder this morning, the Israeli army launched dozens of raids, fire belts, and artillery shelling on homes, streets, and gatherings of displaced people. Thousands of these people fled into the streets in a panic, looking for a safe place that did not exist.

Residents and displaced people sheltering in the following towns were given evacuation orders from the Israeli army: Bani Suhaila and its surroundings; Abasan al-Kabira and al-Jadidah and its surroundings; al-Qarara and its surroundings; al-Fukhari and its surroundings; Khuza’a and its surroundings; al-Qurain; al-Manara; al-Salam; Jurat al-Lot; Qizan al-Najjar; Sheikh Nasser; al-Mahatta; al-Satar; and al-Katiba. This coincided with the Israeli army’s declaration that the so-called “humanitarian zone” in Al-Mawasi would be reduced. This was all part of Israel’s media disinformation campaign and psychological warfare tactics, since military assaults on forcibly displaced people and their tents have occurred continually in this area for several weeks now, resulting in hundreds of deaths and injuries.

Out of the 10 residences for which preliminary information was available since the 7:30 a.m. start of the Israeli military operation on Khan Yunis, the Euro-Med Monitor field team recorded the Israeli army bombing six homes on the heads of their occupants. Seventy citizens were killed and over 200 others were injured, many of whom were women and children, as a result of the Israeli bombing. Two of the deceased victims were infants, while several families were taken off the civil registry, including the Jabour and Harb families.

In addition to aerial bombardment and shooting from quadcopter aircraft, the Israeli army employs direct and indiscriminate artillery shelling against civilians. This has resulted in a high death toll, with many victims remaining trapped under the rubble and in the streets, where rescue workers have not been able to retrieve their bodies. Israel also deliberately targeted two civil defence paramedics, who were injured while ambulance crews in Bani Suhaila were attempting to evacuate other injured people.

Israeli forces entered the town of Bani Suhaila amid very violent bombardment, even though the Israeli army had said in its orders that the displacement was going to be temporary. This constitutes a kind of deception of the residents—large numbers of whom were not able to evacuate as a result of the bombing, or had not attempted to before it began because they estimated that the attack was a series of air strikes as opposed to a ground incursion. (On the first of this month, the Israeli army issued similar displacement orders but only carried out intense air strikes without a ground incursion).

Two Palestinian Red Crescent clinics were forced to close due to the aerial bombardment, and several health centres experienced disruptions as a result of the forced displacement orders.

Given these facts, all nations must fulfil their international obligations by enacting strong sanctions against Israel and severing all political, financial, and military support and cooperation with it. This should include immediately halting arms transfers to Israel, including export permits and military aid; otherwise, these nations will be held accountable for the crimes that have been committed in the Gaza Strip, including genocide.

Furthermore, accountability must be established at the local, regional, and global levels. Working diligently and cooperatively to pave the way for universal jurisdiction will enable national courts to hold accountable the perpetrators of the egregious crimes being committed against Palestinian civilians.

Additionally, the International Criminal Court must continue to investigate any and all crimes committed by Israel in the Gaza Strip; broaden its investigation into the criminal responsibility of all parties, including Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Galant, in order to hold all perpetrators accountable; issue arrest warrants for those responsible; and acknowledge and address Israel’s crimes in the Strip as international crimes that fall under the purview of the International Criminal Court, and are clearly crimes of genocide.

This article is reprinted from the Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor website.

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War on Mosques: ‘We Will Rebuild What Israel Destroys’

“The 79-year-old Ibrahim Abu Al-Atta said he lost his soul when the mosque was destroyed as he was present in ts construction stage 15 years ago.”

When the young men echoed the call to prayer via a small loudspeaker in Gaza after many months of silence due to the Israeli occupation destroying most of the mosques, Palestinians couldn’t not hide their joy.

“This echo prayer will remain raised no matter how much they demolish and destroy, and we will rebuild the mosques just as we will rebuild our destroyed homes, hospitals, and buildings,” said one of the residents.

The Palestinians of Gaza are closely linked to their mosques, many of them perform group prayers in mosques and prayer halls despite the dangers of repeat bombings.

In this ongoing genocidal war against the Gaza Strip, now in its 10th month, Israel has left no taboos and sin, killing, bombing and destroying.

These houses of God have become targets of the Zionist destruction machine, with no regard to religion, morals, and/or law.

Some were bombed by planes on the heads of worshipers, as happened in the prayer hall of the White Mosque in Gaza days ago, and some were bulldozed and blown up with dynamite.

The Israeli occupation forces have completely destroyed 610 mosques and partially destroyed 211 of these houses of God in the Gaza Strip since 7 October, 2023, in a declared war on them.

Al-Rahma Mosque

Al-Rahma Mosque in the Al-Amal neighborhood in Khan Yunis, was one of the mosques completely destroyed; thousands of worshipers prayed there daily. The mosque was a beacon of worship and knowledge, preparing young people for faith and religious duty.

 “I was greatly affected by the destruction of Al-Rahma Mosque, it was part of my life, and second home,” said Nabil Dabour, who used to pray there on a daily basis.

“The destruction of the mosque had a deep psychological impact, exceeding my sadness over the destruction of my home,” he told the Palestinian Information Center.

He pointed out the mosque had a special place in his heart from a young age, performing his five daily prayers there. He added it added elegance to the neighborhood with its continuous calls to prayer, and its contribution in Muslim Eid festivities.

He explained Al-Rahma Mosque was like an Islamic center for teaching the Holy Qur’an, the Sunnah of the Prophet, and good morals, in addition to holding many sports, cultural activities.

The destruction of the mosque removed its  splendor with the people of the neighborhood seeing it as the center for  their meetings, communications and worship.

Al Noor Mosque

In Deir al-Balah Camp in the central Gaza Strip, Israeli warships targeted Al Nour Mosque which was on the seashore and destroyed large parts of it.

With the mosque in such a state, worshipers resorted to performing prayers in their homes and neighborhoods.

The 79-year-old Ibrahim Abu Al-Atta said he lost his soul when the mosque was destroyed as he was present in its construction stage 15 years ago.

“It was like my soul was ripped from my body when the Israelis destroyed the mosque,” he said emotionally. “But mark my word, we will rebuild once again,” he stressed.

Prayers in squares

As mosques were destroyed, people began to perform prayers in their ruined houses, some debris-ridden squares and near destroyed mosques.

“The mosque has great value in the souls of the Palestinians. It is not just a place of prayer, it is their meeting point and solidarity,” Mahmood Hassan said.

He explained these mosques are centers of  social weight, building human beings, society and virtuous morals.

Inshrah Abdel Fattah said the mosque had special importance in her life, she used to go there daily for help and guidance in Islamic law and sharia.

“By targeting and destroying the mosques in Gaza the Israeli occupiers want to alienate Palestinians from their beliefs and religion,” she said.

The Palestinian Ministry of Endowments confirms that desecrating the mosques is part of the occupation’s war on the houses of God and part of their effort to destroy everything in the Gaza Strip.

There is no street or neighborhood in Gaza without a mosque attended by worshipers, and in which adults, young men and boys find a haven for prayer, worship and learning.

War against God

Imam Khaled Mahmood from the Ministry of Endowments, believes the occupation’s targeting of mosques is part of its hateful religious war and war against God, which will bring about destruction.

He points out the occupation is lying about the alleged justifications for targeting mosques, it is destroying them because it does not want places of worship in which boys and young men learn about their religion. From there, they graduate as strong men loyal to everything they do.

Mahmoud added the attachment of families, young men, boys, and even women to mosques prompts them, immediately after the bombing of each mosque, to cooperate to establish a prayer hall, perform prayers inside it, and initiate memorization circles.

The mosques of the Strip produced thousands of memorizers of the Holy Qur’an, and this is what frightens the occupation that there is a Qur’anic generation whose faith cannot be shaken and whose beliefs solid and what was destroyed will be reconstructed, Qur’anic verses will be re-established on these ruins, and the generation will set out again to confront the occupiers until they are swept away.

The above article on the destruction of Gaza mosques reproduced from Arabic from the Palestine Information Center website.  

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Tired Gaza Voices Speak of Israeli Atrocities

The Israeli army is escalating its targeting of all aspects and basic elements of life in the Gaza and North Gaza governorates, in an attempt to render them uninhabitable and force their citizens to evacuate to the southern governorates according to Euromed Monitors.

In its 10th month of continuing genocide, the Israeli army is intensifying its attacks with mass killings, starvation, deprivation of medical care, intimidation, arbitrary arrests, torture, and forced evacuations.

Israeli airstrikes against the Gaza Strip have expanded to target every basic aspects of daily life. These include direct targeting of vendors at their stands, Internet distribution centers, and areas where people gather, including where women fill water containers or prepare food, in addition to the ongoing targeting of homes and shelters.

Blocking any attempt to restore even the barest necessities of life in Gaza City and North Gaza governorates, the Israeli army appears to aim to force residents to comply with the orders it continues to issue to evacuate all inhabitants of the two governorates.

Israeli fire on women cooking

On Saturday, 20 July, at around 9 a.m., the Israeli army opened fire on several women who were cooking and filling water containers in their home. Noura Al-Sabbagh, 28, was killed, and several others were injured during the attack, one of whom was in critical condition. The incident occurred in the hallway of a home in the Zarqa neighbourhood of northern Gaza.

Saif Ali Al-Sabbagh told Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor: “We suddenly heard the sound of a missile fired by an Israeli drone, targeting the women who were in the house’s corridor working on preparing food without prior notice. Noura Al-Sabbagh was standing close to the stove when the missile’s fragments instantly killed her. The rest of the women were brought to the Baptist Hospital with injuries described by the medical teams as moderate and serious. One of the women suffered a serious injury. This totally unnecessary bombing caught us off guard. The area quickly filled with blood and shrapnel, with women being specifically targeted.” 

On Tuesday, 2 July, 10 Palestinians were killed by Israeli artillery shells, including a child and a disabled person, as they gathered to fill water containers in the Al-Zaytoun neighbourhood south of Gaza City. 

Thirty-four-year-old Muhammad Khaled Al-Malahi described what happened, saying: “At 11.30 a.m., as I was leaving the house, I saw an artillery shell (fired by Israeli tanks) falling on people, children, and young people, who were lining up to fill and transport water to their homes next to the Al-Shamaa Mosque, which was destroyed by the Israeli army at the onset of the war. After the shell fell, people fell to the ground and left the water gallons empty, and we began transporting the victims on animal-drawn carts to the Baptist Hospital.”

“This is not the first time that people have bottled water in the Shamaa area. Ever since the war started, people of all ages—men, women, and children—have been arriving at the Shamaa area to fill water containers and then carry it back to their homes. Adjacent to the mosque’s debris lies a water filling station with food, candy, and nut stalls. It is a bustling neighbourhood with constant public movement and a high concentration of displaced people, particularly after the ongoing Israeli invasion of the Shujaiya neighbourhood,” he said.

Shooting at vendors

On Tuesday, 26 June, Euro-Med Monitor documented the killing of three Palestinians, Jawad Ali Al-Zabut, 40, his son Ali, 18, and Mahmoud Fouad Zahra in an Israeli attack on a group of vendors in downtown Gaza City. Four other people were injured in the attack.

Speaking to Euro-Med Monitor, Dawoud Al-Zabut provided the following information regarding the targeting of Jawad and his son: “Jawad and his son go out every day to sell in the streets where residents pass by, like the intersection where families congregate west of Gaza City. For the past two months, Jawad has operated a small stand where he sells candies to help support his displaced family. He and his son Ali were on their mat at 8:30 a.m. when a reconnaissance plane fired a missile into the area. The missile fragments killed both of them, while his brother’s sons were injured.”

Days after designating specific routes as safe, to allow people to escape to the south without being subject to inspections, Israeli forces sent voice messages to residents of these two governorates, requesting that they evacuate to the south of the Gaza Valley amid the ongoing airstrikes and artillery shelling.

In testimony provided to Euro-Med Monitor, however, it was revealed that the Israeli army tracks individuals moving through the designated passageways on Salah al-Din Road and Al-Rashid Street in Gaza City using electronic monitoring equipment.

According to an anonymous eyewitness, the Israeli army equipped an escape corridor with monitoring devices. Israeli forces were stationed several metres away, and soldiers controlled who was allowed to pass by illuminating a green light for passage or a red light for no entry and exposure to direct fire.

The witness saw numerous bodies of displaced people who had been shot during their evacuation attempt and had been left to bleed to death. Among them was a man on an animal-drawn cart; a military bulldozer intervened to remove both the man and the cart from the area.

Moving under the bombs

Residents are being directed to relocate to the central Gaza Strip by the Israeli army, which last week intensified aerial bombardment of the area and launched dozens of raids that resulted in the deaths of over 160 people, most of them women and children, including a sizable number of displaced individuals.

Israel plans to exterminate the Gaza Strip’s population by starvation and murder, as well as the destruction of all fundamental elements of existence. This includes attacking the UN headquarters and its shelters and carrying out mass killings there, all of which are unquestionably international crimes.

By targeting UNRWA schools functioning as shelter centers, Israeli bombing tactics demonstrate a deliberate intention to prevent security across the entire Gaza Strip and deny displaced Palestinians stability or shelter, even if that shelter is only temporary.

According to UNRWA, Israel has bombed 190—more than half—of the agency’s facilities in the Gaza Strip, some of them more than once since the genocide began. As a result, thousands of Palestinian civilians have been killed and injured while seeking refuge.

War-ravaged enclave

By UN estimates, 1.9 million people in the war-ravaged enclave are internally displaced, including some individuals who have now been displaced up to nine or 10 times. Israel’s evacuation orders, its widespread damage to both public and private infrastructure, restrictions on access to essential services, and the ongoing Israeli violence constitute the main causes of the mass displacement waves.

Given these facts, all nations must fulfill their international obligations by enacting strong sanctions against Israel and severing all political, financial, and military support and cooperation. This should include immediately halting arms transfers to Israel, including export permits and military aid; otherwise, these nations will be held accountable for the crimes that have been committed in the Gaza Strip, including genocide.

Furthermore, accountability must be established at the local, regional, and global levels. Working diligently and cooperatively to pave the way for universal jurisdiction will enable national courts to hold accountable the perpetrators of crimes against Palestinian civilians.

Additionally, the International Criminal Court must continue to investigate any and all crimes committed by Israel in the Gaza Strip; broaden its investigation into criminal responsibility of all parties, including Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Galant, in order to hold all perpetrators accountable; issue arrest warrants for those responsible; and acknowledge and address Israel’s crimes in the Strip as international crimes that fall under the purview of the International Criminal Court and are clearly crimes of genocide.

This article is reproduced from Euromed Monitors.

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Living in a Tent: Gazans Pour Out Their Woes

Across vast agricultural lands and along the coast in central and southern Gaza, tens of thousands of tents have become shelters for hundreds of thousands of Palestinians displaced by the ongoing, bloody Israeli war for the 10th consecutive month.

Once a symbol of the Nakba (catastrophe) and displacement for more than seven decades, the tent has now become a dream for thousands of displaced families in Gaza, despite the harsh living conditions it imposes.

What is it like to live in a tent? This question might seem devoid of emotions and disconnected from the harsh realities of Gaza amid the Israeli genocide that has taken many Palestinian lives but failed to break their will and determination to cling to their land. However, the  question is crucial to understand the extent of the Palestinian tragedy and resilience.

The Palestinian Information Center (PIC) interviewed some of those that were displaced and are now living in tents to see the harsh situation they are now under.

Quest for a tent


Whilest all those interviewed speak of the difficulty of living in a tent – suffering the harsh hot summers and cold winters – for many of the displaced, the tent has become a dream come true as it is easily hoisted and dismantled quickly. This is important for those displaced who needed to move more than once because of the Israeli army gunfire, tanks, drones and warplanes.

Mohammed Said said he bought a tent for 1,200 shekels ($330) after he could no longer bear living in a “khas,” a makeshift shelter made of wooden sticks covered with nylon or any other available material.

He explained a khas provides no privacy because of the mostly nylon material its made of and its impossible to move when forced to relocate. Thus, he went for a tent, having relocated at least twice already.

Various NGOs provide tents for free, but with demand shooting up some of the tents have started to be sold, forcing people to buy them due to the lack of alternatives. Today tents vary in shape and size, according to how much you want to pay.

Finding a place to set up the tent
After getting a tent, the second challenge is to find a place to set it up. Such areas are currently limited to around Khan Yunis and Deir al-Balah.

Khaled Al-Masri said he had to move his tent several times to be close to water sources and/or the scarce aid.

“Today, there are camps made up of a group of tents overseen by an association or individuals’ initiatives to provide some aid, ensure water access, and establish shared bathrooms. Other tents are set up randomly on agricultural land and near destroyed homes,” he said.

Life in the tents


Living in tents are tales of pain and suffering, varying according to the family’s resources, number size, tent location and the supervising entity.

A small family with a tent in an area receiving aid can adapt better and suffer less compared to an extended family with a small tent in an area lacking in services.

With the scorching summer heat, living in a tent among hundreds of others in Gaza feels like a living hell said  Amani Hamdan.

Hamdan told PIC she was forced to live in a tent on a land of a friend of her husband.  She is joined by her mother-in-law, disabled sister-in-law and her four children.

 “We relocated at least seven times from Khan Yunis since our house was bombed. Initially, we had no tent and suffered much until we managed to obtain one, and its only advantage is it can be unhooked easily if we need to move again.

Living in a tent is harsh and difficult, a  primitive life. And with no walls, and privacy, our voices reach the people in the tent next door and theirs reach us,” she added.

Suffering in tents


“We can hardly move around inside the tent, some  sleep on mattresses, some without, part of the tent holds food supplies. The temperature is scorching, forcing us out of the canvas. In winter, we were drenched by rain; now, the heat is unbearable, but we thank God for what we have,” Hamdan added.

“We cook on fire outside the tent, bake bread in a shared oven, share a bathroom, and bathe rarely, needing prior coordination with the other tent partners. The children start their morning search for wood, while my husband travels long distances for water that is sometimes brought by volunteers. Life has become primitive with no kitchen, bathroom, or water faucets.”

What is a tent?


After enduring the harsh tent life for months, engineer Mohammed Munir wrote about its meaning, “To burn while sitting inside, to suffocate with no air or cooling. It’s like a greenhouse during the day.”

 “A tent means living on the ground, separated only by fabric, coexisting with all the insects of the earth as you are now their guest,” He wrote on Facebook.

“Normal activities become complicated, like taking a nap or a bath, walking comfortably, sitting peacefully, feeling safe, or sleeping without back pain from the hard ground, all of our dreams are now out of reach.

A tent means no privacy, speaking in whispers inside your tent while your neighbor hears you. With tents set up on sand and agricultural land, it means living with all types of insects and with no hygiene,” Munir concluded.

The meaning of a tent


“A tent means having no wall to lean on, no private life,” Sama Hassan wrote.

 “Displacement means not to live in safety or stability. We first moved from Gaza City to the north in search of ‘fake’ safety until the missiles to land on us. We then fled to southern Gaza in the first Friday of the war and stayed in Khan Yunis for two months, then moved to Rafah when the city was invaded in early December 2023.

 With each relocation, I lost a thread of my privacy, becoming more displaced and homeless like thousands in Gaza. A tent is harsher than a shared room in a stranger’s house as the bathroom is either within the tent, set up primitively, or shared, half a kilometer away, established by a charity. If a woman needs to use it at night, she must wake a man to escort her,” she ended by saying.

Life in a tent is hard for women, who must fully dress as they usually do when they go out of the house. She maintains dressed at all time despite the heat, lack the freedom of movement. In the tent, fires are lit, cooking is made, washing dishes, with large water containers placed in the corner.

Bathing in a tent involves women surrounding the one washing with thick blankets, like forming a small tent within the main tent, with the woman hurrying before the others tire of holding the blankets.

If living in a tent is already insufferable, doing so amid the ongoing Israeli genocide and bombings is even more so, because the strikes continue targeting as what happened to us in Rafah and Khan Yunis. This is beyond words.

In recent months, Israeli bombs have burned tents and killed dozens, leaving survivors to search for the remains of their their loved ones before finding a new place to set up another tent if one is available, continuing their struggle.

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