Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Gazans: 'We are living a nightmare'
Gazans: 'We are living a nightmare'
Nov 9, 2025 6:29 PM

  As the death toll from Israel's aerial bombardment of the Gaza Strip continues to climb, Al Jazeera asked Gazans to describe the situation where they are and to explain how the offensive is affecting them.

  Majed Badra, 23, Gaza City, cartoonist and student at the Islamic Universitysaid:

  "Unfortunately the situation is very bad in Gaza city - the Israeli occupation is striking more and more organizations, more houses and the mosque, and my university was hit last night.

  They focus on the civilians. It is easy for them.

  Nothing is working in Gaza and we don't do anything. We stay inside the house, my family and I. Every family in Gaza is doing the same.

  We are used to hearing these airstrikes, everybody here is used to it and we don't have any way to protect ourselves. We just stay inside the home, hearing the news, hearing where the Israeli [army] strikes, hearing the F16s and Apaches and waiting to see what will happen.

  We were not prepared for the war. They attack civilians and children and don't care if we are armed or not.

  Yesterday, my sister's house was damaged in a strike on a target nearby. Every room was damaged except for the kitchen, where she and the children were. Allah kept them alive.

  The world looks at unarmed Palestinian people as though they are a nation with an army, as though we are equal to the Israelis. They think we have real rockets that cause a lot of damage or have a big effect, but this is not true.

  Nida' Aniss Abu al-Atta, 26, Gaza City, projects officer said:

  "At first, the Israeli opening raid was unexpected for normal people. We were totally shocked and for the first minutes we didn't realize it was new Israeli military aggression against Gaza.

  Children thought there would be new clashes between Hamas and Fatah supporters. They were afraid and started crying and running to their mothers.

  I and my family were so angry, believing that no one made enough effort to avoid this. Israel planned for this and we show readiness to resist despite being powerless compared to the Israeli arsenal.

  I feel angry with the Palestinian internal scene. They were unable to show themselves unified even before this tragedy.

  Palestinian people are bleeding and shouting "enough". Even our president [Mahmoud Abbas] was powerless to the extent that it makes me sick and makes me lose faith in anybody.

  I expected nothing from the international community, the Arab world and Muslims. It is not adequate anyhow; they just shout and burn flags.

  At the same time, I would say that I really value the world reaction in Europe and in France in particular. I call on the Arab community to be more effective and to practice its responsibility and power against governments, like the Lebanese did before in Beirut.

  We all, the Palestinian people and leaders, are responsible for this crime. We execute the Israeli plans without thinking who would be the only ones benefitting from our division.

  Hamoudi, Tal el Hawa said:

  "More than three buildings have been brought to the ground in my area.

  Two of my neighbors were killed on their way back from school - sixteen-year-old Yasmeen and her sister, 15-year-old Haneen. They were innocent girls.

  In my household, where I live with my brothers, sisters and my sister's eight-month-old baby, we have been sleeping far from the windows and living in darkness due to the lack of power.

  But despite all of that we are still alive. Life is precious and worth fighting for.

  All I seek in these moments is for the truth to get out there. Let it be known that in the 21st century this is happening while the whole world is watching but remains silent.

  I wonder how cheap Palestinian blood is."

  Amin Asfour, Gaza City, doctor in a public hospital said:

  "The situation here is very difficult. They are shooting at us from everywhere, at all targets - military or not.

  Many have been killed and more injured, especially in the first two days.

  They are using all sorts of bombs. They weigh up to 500kg and can take out a 15-storey building in a second, like an earthquake.

  Everyone is living in fear. You never know who they are going to hit.

  Obviously, there is anger. It's our people dying - our kin, our relatives, not strangers. But people stick together. They live because they have to live.

  We're just waiting for the next bomb to fall and wondering whether it will hit us or the neighbors. We are not afraid of the bombs falling, just anxious about who they will fall on. It's war.

  In the hospital, we are short on medicine, but we work with what we have. We do miss many supplies and the equipment we work with is really old but our doctors are hardened - no situation will surprise them."

  Ghada Snunu, 30, Gaza City, human rights worker said:

  "What is happening here is unbelievable, it's shocking – a catastrophe. We've been living a nightmare for the past two days because of what's happening around us.

  I fear for myself, my family and the people I care about. In all my life, I've never had such a bad feeling.

  The children, my nephew and niece, are so scared. They hide under the beds, terrified, and I can do nothing to help them, except to sing soothing words to them. But nothing can help them in this situation.

  We need serious action to be taken right now to end this violence against our people. I am so angry with the world – we hear nothing but words and there is no action, no real change. Enough, we are sick of hearing just words even from the Arab countries. We are human beings living here in Gaza just like animals – although maybe animals live in better conditions. We don't have medicine, food, cooking gas, fuel, power – we haven't seen electricity for a week now.

  Every single person in Gaza is in a very bad psychological state – what is happening here is urging you to be unhappy, it is pushing you into despair. I feel depressed and sick and bored of everything around me – also because of the internal fighting between Hamas and Fatah.

  I feel so bad for our people being separated from each other – we should unite in this bad situation. But while we are under siege and ongoing attacks, Hamas and Fatah are still fighting. This is the time for them to re-unite and work together and put an end to this deteriorating situation.

  In the beginning I thought that Israel is targeting Hamas, but then I saw houses and other buildings and roads being destroyed, and innocent people being killed and injured. Now I think that Israel is targeting Gaza and not Hamas.

  We never expected an attack of this scale and this number of people killed. It is a massacre. I didn't believe my own eyes at first, because it is so disgusting to see such a thing."

  PHOTO CAPTION

  Palestinian man looks at a destroyed building of the Islamic University in Gaza City .

  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
Hundreds of patients await evacuation in E. Ghouta
  Hundreds of patients are awaiting evacuation from Syria's Eastern Ghouta, which is besieged by the Bashar al-Assad regime.   Many babies and children have lost their lives in the area due to hunger and lack of medicines.   Assad regime, which has intensified its siege on Eastern Ghouta in the last eight...
Palestinian minors arrested by Israel 'suffer abuse'
  Mohammed, 14, was with his friends riding horses in a park in Jerusalem's Old City when the Yassam, a special patrol unit of the Israeli police, arrived at the scene.   Sound grenades were fired at the teenagers. One landed near Mohammed's feet. He picked up a rock and threw it...
Salvaging bodies: A doctor's everyday reality in Syria
  Trauma surgeon Shazeer Majeed has worked for Doctors Without Borders (MSF) in Yemen, South Sudan and Iraq. He is now working in northern Syria, a region gripped by instability, and shares his day-to-day reality of trying to keep victims of war alive.   "We usually think of the remnants of war...
Entire Bedouin village faced with forced displacement
  An entire village consisting of dozens of Palestinian Bedouin families is threatened with imminent forced displacement, after Israel issued a rare evacuation order for the whole community.   Jabal al-Baba, which lies to the east of Jerusalem in the occupied West Bank, is home to more than 300 people.   "Residents are...
Raed Jarrar's detention by Israel raises alarm
  A leading human rights group has raised the alarm over an incident it fears is an indication of the Israeli authorities' growing intolerance of dissent.   Last week, Raed Jarrar, advocacy director for the Middle East and North Africa division of Amnesty International USA, was stopped at the Allenby crossing between...
Gaza: Children suffer from war trauma three years on
  As Gaza marks three years since the Israeli assault that devastated the Strip and left more than 2,200 Palestinians killed, the psychological effects of the violence linger on.   Children were among the most affected groups; in the 50-day onslaught, the Israeli army killed 500 children. The bombing campaign, which started...
How Israel occupies education in East Jerusalem
  The Zahwat al-Quds kindergarten and primary school's walls are decorated with colourful cartoons, while its students are dressed in grey-and-red striped uniforms.   The children's wide smiles and laughter echo through the hallways, belying their lingering anxiety after a recent Israeli raid on the school.   At the start of the school...
Israel closes Palestinian media groups in West Bank
  The Israeli army closed several Palestinian media companies in the occupied West Bank in a wave of raids overnight Tuesday, drawing criticism from the Palestinian Authority (PA).   The Israeli military authority in the occupied territories, COGAT, said in a statement that they raided eight Palestinian companies, accusing them of inciting...
2nd largest mosque in Central Asia accommodates 10,000
  Khazret Sultan Mosque in Astana can accommodate up to 10,000 worshippers and stands as one of the Kazakh capital’s most unique and magnificent buildings.   Built on 27-acres of land, it is the second largest mosque after Turkmenbasy Ruhy Mosque in Turkmenistan’s capital Ashgabat and has been attracting tourists since 2012....
More than 465,000 killed in Syria, refugee group says
  More than 465,000 civilians have been killed in Syria’s six-year war, a refugee rights group said Saturday.   Abdullah Resul Demir, deputy chairman of the International Refugee Rights Organization, said the fatalities had been caused during fighting or in prison.   “The century’s most serious human rights violations have been going on...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved