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In northern Gaza, famine sets in: ‘We will eat anything’

When Ahmed Sawafiri isn’t chasing after parachuted aid packages, the photojournalist and father of seven from western Gaza City scours the land for grass and wild herbs.

“We have tried everything for food: animal feed, barley, leaves,” he says. “We eat for survival. We will eat anything.”

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Not by bread alone: While reports indicate that flour supplies entering Gaza may be ticking up, aid experts say much more has to be done to alleviate burgeoning famine there.

Under pressure, Israel says it is allowing mass food aid into besieged Gaza via new land and sea routes. But Palestinians in Gaza and aid workers say little has improved on the ground. And as famine sets in, families struggle to eat more than one meal a day. 

With hurdles ranging from logistical issues to a lack of safety to restrictions imposed by Israel, the promised wave of food aid has been little more than a trickle, aid workers say. That leaves Gazans struggling to stave off malnourishment and starvation.

In Rafah, Sabreen Shamalakh and her six children have one meal per day despite living in an evacuee center near the hubs of humanitarian organizations in Gaza. Unable to purchase eggs, they rely on canned fava beans for their meal. 

“Nutritious food is a luxury,” she says. “When the doctor at the field hospital asked me to feed my children vegetables, I told him, ‘You have to be kidding me. Where can I find them?’”

Searching the sky, or in the fields, even on the streets, residents of the northern Gaza Strip are constantly looking for food – and finding little.

When Ahmed Sawafiri isn’t chasing after parachuted aid packages, the photojournalist and father of seven from the war-torn neighborhood of Tal Hawa in western Gaza City scours the land for grass and wild herbs.

“We have tried everything for food: animal feed, barley, leaves,” he says. “We eat for survival. We will eat anything.”

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Not by bread alone: While reports indicate that flour supplies entering Gaza may be ticking up, aid experts say much more has to be done to alleviate burgeoning famine there.

Under pressure after the deadly strike on World Central Kitchen staff, Israel says it is allowing mass food aid into besieged Gaza via new land and sea routes. But two weeks later, Palestinians in Gaza and aid workers say little has improved on the ground.

As famine sets in, families in northern Gaza, where some 300,000 Palestinians remain, and elsewhere in the strip struggle to eat more than one meal a day. 

Hurdles range from logistical issues to a lack of safety to restrictions imposed by Israel. That means the promised wave of food aid has been little more than a trickle, aid workers say, leaving Gazans struggling to stave off malnourishment and starvation.

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