Gaza Hungers and Thirsts for Justice
by Fr. Ibrahim Faltas *
Malnourished Palestinian girl Seela Barbakh receives treatment at Nasser HospitalFor months, no food or
medicine has entered the Palestinian enclave, while there is a shortage of
electricity and the bombings continue. To the already extremely high numbers of
those who have lost their lives, those still trapped under the rubble, those
who have been injured, and those left orphaned, must now be added the equally
painful number of those who have died from hunger.
The tragic situation the people of Gaza are living through and the sense of powerlessness lead us to lose hope and trust. Yet, it is the certainty that the hungry and the thirsty in Gaza will one day be satisfied that reignites our commitment to demand justice.
A protest demonstration
On Sunday July 20, 2025 despair and the feeling of being
forgotten led the people of Gaza to launch massive protest demonstration to
tell the world that children are dying from hunger. The population has been
suffering for months without the basic necessities to survive, their bodies
weakened and frail after nearly two years of hardship and suffering. For months
now, food, medicine, and electricity have not been entering Gaza — these vital
necessities are blocked just a few kilometers away from those who need them,
and that is inhumane. The sound of ambulance sirens produces a long and deafening
noise which should awaken the dulled consciences of those silently witnessing a
slaughter, one that becomes a massacre when food is denied to the hungry and
water to the thirsty. This is the greatest scandal, the indelible shame of a
world that has placed economic interests and greed for power at the top of its
value scale, and human life and the denial of human rights at the very bottom.
Death in real time
Gazans starve to death due to Israel's blockade on all essentials but the world looks away
Elderly people, people with disabilities, and children make up a large and fragile part of a population that no longer has a home and may no longer have a land — a population subjected to deadly attacks while sleeping in tents and makeshift shelters. To the already extremely high number of those who have died, those still under the rubble, those injured, and those orphaned, we must add the equally painful number of those dying from hunger. The world knows that for many months now, countless children have been suffering from malnutrition and that thousands have died of starvation. It seems unbelievable, but this is happening just a few kilometers away from a world that consumes beyond its needs and wastes vital resources. The world watches, live, the avoidable deaths of children dying from hunger: among the 900 who were killed while queuing in humiliation for a piece of bread, the majority were fathers trying to find food for their families. Those who did manage to return home with something to survive on often found their children already dead. A video showed the heartbreaking tragedy of an elderly and frail man who, while standing in line for food, died from hunger and heat. This is the daily, painful reality for my friends in Gaza, for so many people — human beings, children who deserve to be respected without any distinction of nationality or faith, like all children of the world.
Images of suffering that unite consciences
Editor: Fr.
Faltas is Vicar of the Custody of the Holy Land
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