Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Fear and trauma in Gaza's schools
Fear and trauma in Gaza's schools
Nov 11, 2025 4:55 AM

  As students filed into the courtyard of Asma elementary school in Gaza City for the first time since the Israeli offensive began, they were greeted by a bleak reminder of the violence that left more than 1,300 Palestinians dead and thousands injured.

  A hole punched by an Israeli rocket scarred the courtyard latrine and blood soiled the wall beside it.

  Asma is one of over 600 schools in Gaza - most of which reopened on January 24 - that is today facing a large number of post-war operational challenges.

  Educators across the Gaza Strip are now considering whether to reschedule exams which were abandoned when Israel began bombing the territory on December 27.

  Teachers are also faced with the task of teaching in rooms which had served as shelters for dozens of refugees.

  Addressing the trauma

  On their first day back to class, most children meandered in the courtyard, eating bread and cheese provided by the school and playing with their friends.

  Inside the classrooms, debris left by the scores of refugees housed there until a few days ago still covered the floors – a box of tomatoes, empty bottles and, in some rooms, the shattered remnants of boards and chairs used for firewood in the absence of gas and electricity.

  Many teachers say that a normal curriculum cannot be administered until students have been treated for trauma from the deaths of their classmates and family members.

  "In the morning when I was working among the students, some of them were very frightened," said Amirah Hamdan, a teacher at Asma who handles the morning attendance call.

  "They thought that the war would start again because they were in the school."

  Other teachers and administrators say they will take the next few days to help the school's nearly 900 students put the war behind them and return to their studies, but the first day made it clear that this will take time.

  Students at the Asma school were mostly glad to return, though many were still shaken by the violence of the past few weeks.

  Nour Abdel All, 10, says she lost two of her seven brothers during the war and is worried that she will lose more.

  When she is old enough to work, she says, she would like to teach human rights, an attitude inspired by the loss of her brothers.

  The bombing terrified her and she is still scared - particularly of the Israeli fighter jets.

  "I pray that God will one day burn them all," she says.

  School exams

  Suha Dawoud, a supervisor at Asma, says her daughter was one of many students who had been taking her annual exams when the Israeli attacks began.

  "They [the students] are not in a state of mind in which they can concentrate and focus," says Dawood.

  "Even the most disciplined student would not be able to cope with examinations after the horrible scenes they have watched either on TV or on the ground."

  However, many students had been performing poorly at school even before Israel launched the war on Gaza on December 27.

  The Israeli blockade has stifled the local economy forcing many students to reportedly abandoned their studies and seek employment.

  Turning to education

  Many Palestinians see education as one of the few paths available to them to leave the territories in search of better lives.

  In recent decades, the West Bank and Gaza Strip have posted better high school enrolment rates than Lebanon and higher literacy rates than Egypt and Yemen.

  The Palestinian territories and Diaspora have produced many influential academics, such as Edward Said and Rashid Khalidi.

  "Our goal is to keep the wheel of education going, because education is what our children have. It is their actual wealth," says Dawood.

  "We do not have resources here in Gaza. We do not have raw materials or industry. We have nothing other than education itself."

  Educators like Dawood are also up against the prevailing atmosphere of occupation and violence.

  Graffiti depicting armed and masked men cover the walls, the faces of fallen martyrs glare down from lamppost signs, and digital gunfire sputters from internet cafes as rows of children sit enthralled by military-themed video games.

  Even in Dawood's classes, the air of violence is there.

  As a kind of therapy, she often gives children papers and pencils and asks them to draw what they are feeling.

  "You might be shocked," she says.

  "Blood, destruction, people killing each other; guns are in their paintings and drawings."

  Angry students

  At the Palestine Secondary School for Boys, a government-run school for some 700 students in Gaza City, administrators have decided to cancel exams altogether.

  They had been scheduled for December 29 – two days after the Israeli assault began.

  El-Khalily, the school's manager, told Al Jazeera that on their first day back, teachers did not hold regular class session but instead chose to help students cope with what they had seen and heard during the war.

  Two students from the school were killed during the war and another five were wounded.

  Teachers at the school are worried that student anger could lead to violence and failing grades in the days ahead.

  "Maybe a teacher is explaining a lesson and the student is in another mental place," says Nour El-Deen, an English teacher.

  "His body is with the teacher, yes, but his mind is out. He is thinking of destruction, demolition."

  PHOTO CAPTION

  Palestinian schoolboys play during recess at a school run by UNRWA in Beit Lahiya in the northern Gaza Strip.

  Source: Aljazeera.net

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
Report details dire plight of Syrian children
  Rights group finds at least two million children have suffered malnutrition, disease and severe trauma during conflict.   An international children’s' rights organization has released a report highlighting the severe plight of Syrian children during the regime’s two-year crackdown.   UK-based Save the Children said on Wednesday that at least two million...
Syria's internally displaced grow desperate
  As darkness descends on the dreary refugee camp bordering Turkey, hungry residents queue for the daily distribution of meager rations.   Displaced Syrians wait in the long line with tin and plastic containers, hoping those dishing out food will provide enough to feed their families.   Shortages of all kinds of supplies,...
Torture taint hangs over Iraq death sentences
  For three years, Nadiha Hilal has begun each day waiting to hear if she's become a widow.   Hilal's husband has been awaiting execution since he was sentenced to death in 2009, along with 10 other people in a case that illustrates Iraq's deeply troubled criminal justice system.   Iraq's Justice Ministry...
Syrian town begins a return to civilian life
  Asem Halaq sits in a war-damaged, colonial-era building in central Azaz and looks at the pile of dossiers stacked atop his desk. Just down the road in Aleppo, war is raging.   Yet here in Syria's relatively safe opposition-controlled north, a semblance of normality is taking hold and civilian-organized judicial systems...
Camp Nama: horrors of a secret US base in Baghdad
  British soldiers and airmen who helped to operate a secretive US detention facility in Baghdad that was at the center of some of the most serious human rights abuses to occur in Iraq after the invasion have, for the first time, spoken about abuses they witnessed there.   Personnel from two...
Irregular Afghan forces in focus for abuses
  Abdul Rahim was in Kabul when the raid on his family home took place. When he returned to his house in Maidan Wardak province in eastern Afghanistan, he found blown-off doors, shattered windows and closets in disarray.   But what Abdul Rahim remembered most were the faces of his brother Nasibullah's...
Jailed Palestinian hunger striker faces death
  "He is chasing death," Samer Issawi's sister, Shireen, says. "My brother is in serious danger."   Issawi, 33, has been on a hunger strike in an Israeli jail for more than 203 days. Initially released by Israeli authorities in an October 2011 prisoner swap, Issawi was re-arrested in July 2012 and...
Four children among the dead following joint Afghan-NATO operation
  At least five Afghan civilians, of which four were children, were reportedly killed Tuesday night during an operation by joint NATO and Afghan forces in the eastern Arghanistan province of Logar, according to reports by a local police official.   Reports indicate that the military operation included both soldiers operating on...
Iraq: War's legacy of cancer
  Two US-led wars in Iraq have left behind hundreds of tons of depleted uranium munitions and other toxic wastes.   Contamination from Depleted Uranium (DU) munitions and other military-related pollution is suspected of causing a sharp rises in congenital birth defects, cancer cases, and other illnesses throughout much of Iraq.   Many...
Syria: the failure of our so-called international community
  The massacres in Syria rage on and yet we stand idle. We must realize that, to millions of Syrians trapped in the country, the virtual absence of humanitarian relief is nearly as arbitrary and cruel as the war itself.   Bombs, even ballistic missiles, are tearing homes apart and more than...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved