News

In Gaza, the Monitor’s writer isn’t just reporting the story – she’s living it

This week, the news that an Israeli airstrike had wrecked another shelter, this time a disused Gaza City school, was not merely depressing and shocking. It literally made me tremble.

The video footage of the aftermath filled me with fear. The charred remains of the dead scattered in pieces. Rescuers carting off bodies in blankets and bags because they had neither stretchers nor ambulances. I wanted to scream. Why must we endure such hardship, when all we seek is a life of peace and dignity? The injustice left me feeling paralyzed.

Israel said it had targeted Hamas militants, but more than 100 civilians were killed in the attack, many of them women and children.  “Why doesn’t Israel just kill all of us together and rid the world of Gaza?” one of my neighbors asked aloud in despair.

Why We Wrote This

Ghada Abdulfattah, the Monitor’s Gaza correspondent, keeps her cool when she reports. But sometimes she feels like screaming. In this wrenching personal letter to readers, she voices her fear and her fury at the climate of death that poisons life in Gaza. And ordered to relocate yet again, just today, she cries from the heart: “Why must we endure such hardship, when all we seek is a life of peace and dignity? … Who will stop this war?”

Everywhere here, people’s faces are filled with sorrow and frustration. “Who cares?” one woman wondered. “Who will act? Who will stop this?”

Everyone has the same unanswered question: “Who will stop this war?” We no longer even bother to ask where humanity has gone.

Ghada Abdulfattah

Evacuees stay in makeshift tents on a plot of agricultural land near the correspondent’s house in Deir al-Balah, in central Gaza, Aug. 15, 2024.

In the Al-Mawasi beach area and in Deir al-Balah, children going barefoot or wearing torn sandals wade through sewage-contaminated water and climb over mounds of garbage. Some of them scour for something to sell; others look for wood to burn or clothes to wear. Nearby, makeshift pits shielded by burlap serve as lavatories. There is nowhere to wash your hands.

In the stifling summer heat, the stench and filth that envelope us are an inevitable reality of war – just as familiar as the pangs of hunger and the distant sounds of bombing.

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