How Do You Cope With Famine?

Palestinians are struggling with famine and trying to satisfy their hunger by eating tree leaves in the Gaza Strip, where Israel has been carrying out attacks for nine months.

Said Abu Abdo, who lives in Gaza City, is searching for ways to convince his son Majid, 8, and daughter Sara, 5, to eat mulberry tree leaves cooked with rice he tells Anadolu.

Abu Abdo tries to persuade the children, noting that they are similar to the grape leaves they used to eat before Israel began attacking.

But due to their bitter taste, the children refuse to eat.

The effects of famine, with the lack of necessities in the area, are clearly visible from the weak bodies, pale faces and tired expressions of Abu Abdo and his children.

“Famine is haunting Gaza City and the north once again. The situation is getting worse. With Israel closing the border crossings and blocking aid and supplies, we have resorted to eating tree leaves,” he told Anadolu.

Abu Abdo highlighted that Israel’s targeting of health services has exacerbated malnutrition, weakened immunity and the spread of infectious diseases due to an inadequate health care infrastructure and restricted access to aid and supplies.

He is concerned about his children, who have contracted contagious diseases like hepatitis and gastroenteritis multiple times because of the absence of proper and healthy food.

Israel’s control of border crossings and blocking humanitarian aid has caused famine to reappear in northern Gaza and Gaza City.

Palestinians are relying on canned food and wild plants for sustenance.

‘We’ve had to eat anything and everything imaginable to stave off hunger’

In Gaza City, Mahmood el-Bawab, 28, could not buy most of his family’s basic needs at the es-Sahabe market due to shortages.

Like other markets in the region, the market is also empty, and Palestinians, struggling with economic difficulties due to Israeli attacks, can hardly find anything to buy except some vegetables and products that have significantly increased in price.

Essential items like vegetables and fruits are scarce, causing prices to soar. Tomatoes are around $30 per kilogram (2.2 pounds), onions about $60 per kilogram, cucumbers $15 each and eggs $4 each.

“Prices have skyrocketed insanely and the available products are previously stored and low-quality. Due to limited cash, we can only buy these products in very small quantities,” he told Anadolu.

He said his family is trying to cope with the famine. “There’s nothing we can eat — no vegetables, fruits, meat, nothing. We’ve had to eat anything and everything imaginable to stave off hunger: animal feed, tree leaves, wild plants and expired food.”

People have been hospitalized due to illness and poisoning caused by unhealthy eating habits, he noted.

The director of the Kemal Advan Hospital in northern Gaza’s Beit Lahia, Husam Abu Safiye, also said that signs of famine have appeared in Gaza City and northern areas.

Abu Safiye said in the past week, four children have died from malnutrition upon arrival at the hospital, and in the last two weeks, 250 children were hospitalized for malnutrition and fluid loss.

Gaza journalists note hunger

“I am a journalist from the northern Gaza Strip. I am hungry, and my family has been away from me for eight months. I have lost more than 20 kilograms during the war,” said Mahmud El-Awadiyye, a journalist from the El-Meyadin television channel.

“I want to eat, but there’s nothing to be found. We haven’t had meat for months,” Awadiyye lamented on social media.

Mahmud el-Amudi, who works at Aksa’s Voice Radio posted on Facebook about his struggles. “I still haven’t had lunch because my stomach burns from eating bread, dukkah (a mix of nuts and spices), and powdered red pepper.”

One journalist said hunger surrounds him in Gaza.

“I am journalist Usame el-Asiy. My wife is pregnant and very hungry. I am very afraid for her because of her hunger. My family, friends, and neighbors are also hungry,” he said.

Israel, flouting a UN Security Council resolution demanding an immediate cease-fire, has faced international condemnation amid its continued brutal offensive on Gaza since an Oct. 7, 2023 attack by Palestinian group, Hamas.

More than 37,600 Palestinians have since been killed in Gaza, most of them women and children, and over 86,000 injured, according to local health authorities.

More than eight months into the Israeli onslaught, vast tracts of Gaza lie in ruins amid a crippling blockade of food, clean water and medicine.

Israel is accused of genocide at the International Court of Justice, whose latest ruling ordered Tel Aviv to immediately halt its military operation in the southern city of Rafah, where more than 1 million Palestinians had sought refuge from the attacks before it was invaded on May 6.

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72% of Saudis Support Boycott of Brands Over Gaza War

Latest global purchasing survey shows 1 in 3 consumers are boycotting brand names over the Israeli war in Gaza.

The survey made by the Edelman’s public relations firm polled 15,000 consumers around the world across 15 countries that included USA, France, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, UK, India and Indonesia.

The consumer boycotting brands include Starbucks, McDonald’s and Coca-Cola with news of the Trust Barometer report currently trending on the social media.

The top five consumer boycotting countries are Saudi Arabia, UAE, Indonesia, India and surprisingly Germany.  In Saudi 72 percent of those surveyed said they are boycotting international brands followed by 57 percent in the UAE because of the Israeli war on Gaza now in its ninth month.

Respondents perception is the major reason for their boycott, saying they believe one side is actively supporting the other in the genocide on Gaza.

One commented this is a shocking surprise for the boycott’s enemies and a joyful surprise for its supporters while another said this is a reminder to the “boycotts don’t work idiots.”

The boycott campaign has been strongest in the Middle East when many consumers stopped buying products and/or frequenting brand cafes with international tag names associated with Israel.

Further, the campaign took off last October after McDonald’s  Israel’s “franchise announced it was giving free meals to Israeli soldiers in its branches in the country,” according to Middle East Eye. Its CFO Ian Borden says it lost $7 billion because of the boycott.

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