Opinion

Don’t stop talking about the famine in Gaza

Israel wants you to believe that airdrops and symbolic aid trucks will solve the famine in Gaza. Don't believe them. These measures are not meant to end hunger, only to quell growing global outrage as the genocide continues unchecked.

Recently, several friends and colleagues messaged me about protests and international outrage over the famine in Gaza. “There’s been a huge push,” they said. Israeli media spoke of growing global pressure on Israel and how its image had been damaged in the eyes of the world. Some Arab and Western countries even floated the idea of airdropping aid again, ignoring how unsafe and ineffective it has always been.

On Saturday night, July 26, Telegram chats where people in Gaza discuss news went crazy. It started with Israeli officers admitting that aid had never been stolen by Hamas. Then came the surreal headline: Israel deciding to drop aid, as if they weren’t the ones controlling all crossings and borders, as if trucks had not been stacked for months that they refused to let in. They also declared tactical humanitarian pauses, notably from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. in Gaza City, Deir al-Balah, and Muwasi, to create limited aid corridors for UN convoys. Egypt announced it would allow dozens of trucks carrying tonnes of humanitarian aid to pass through the Karam Abu Salem (Kerem Shalom) crossing in southern Gaza.

We didn’t believe our eyes. What happened? What suddenly changed the Israeli stance?

How could this be possible when the same people had just announced they were no longer interested in ceasefire negotiations?

Visuals of parachuted food packages and aid trucks accompanied the news, along with statements filled with numbers and achievements. Hundreds of trucks were reported heading to Gaza. Relief seemed near. Finally, real action. We felt hopeful. After four months of documenting and speaking, it seemed someone had listened.

Meanwhile, many jokes circulated online: that Israel had agreed to let us be fed before completing the slaughter. Still, a small wave of relief passed through. Parents would finally have something to offer their children, even if only briefly.

But on the ground, nothing changed. The crisis ended only in the headlines. 

Humanitarian aid supplies are airdropped by military cargo planes over the western part of Deir al-Balah, in Gaza, on July 28, 2025. (Photo: Ahmed Ibrahim / APA Images)
Humanitarian aid supplies are airdropped by military cargo planes over the western part of Deir al-Balah, in Gaza, on July 28, 2025. (Photo: Ahmed Ibrahim / APA Images)

In the two days following Israel’s announcement of the tactical pause, Israeli forces killed over 160 Palestinians, including children. People thought they could take the chance to move, collect aid, or breathe, but that too became another Israeli trap. It was a lie crafted by Israel, amplified by Western media, declared without our knowledge, and never enforced. The bombing never stopped. The death toll remained just as high. Some Arab governments echoed the false narrative, while only a handful of aid trucks entered—much of it looted before reaching the people. Food prices soared to unbearable levels.

In fact, none of the current methods of aid distribution are functioning. Egyptian trucks are often looted before reaching civilians due to the collapse of order and lack of secure passage. Israeli forces have repeatedly attacked police escorts and civilians waiting for aid. Airdropped aid is minimal, scattered, and deeply dehumanizing.

There is massive media buzz around humanitarian pauses and aid convoys, but the reality is far worse. Aid enters in small, inconsistent trickles. Israel has allowed only symbolic amounts of fruit or goods, just enough for photos, not to solve the crisis.

Israel wants the famine to appear complicated—something out of its hands and nearly impossible to resolve. However, improving quality of life and ending the crisis can be done quickly and easily by simply opening the crossings and allowing aid, medicine, and commercial goods to enter.

It is striking how they try to invent other methods, such as airdrops or the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation. But these are well-planned performances. Both share humiliation and carry the underlying message that aid will not reach everyone equally. They are solutions that are not meant to solve.

When an airdrop falls anywhere in Gaza or trucks arrive, it becomes like a battle. People shout and fight over a can of beans or a few grams of sugar because those simply do not exist in markets, and the amount of aid is small compared to the need. This is a natural reaction after months of severe famine and deprivation. There should be no expectation of organized behavior from someone who has been starved for so long. But this fractures us. It chips away at our sense of community, turning survival into competition. People in Gaza were always generous, but Israel has turned them into people scrambling for food. And while the headlines focus on aid and chaos, Israel goes on committing crimes and quietly executing its plans in the background without questioning.

Don’t stop talking about the famine and genocide. Don’t let Israel and the complicit Arab countries manipulate you into thinking they’ve made efforts or a difference. Famine isn’t over. It still exists. And the killing has not stopped for almost two years.

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Alas, the information that Israelis get about conditions in Gaza is limited, to put it mildly. The New Yorker posted a piece titled “Israel’s Zones of Denial” ( probably a reference to the 2023 film “Zone of Interest”, about a group of Germans living in willful obliviousness right next to a concentration camp ):

Yet the horrific scale of suffering among Gazans is nearly invisible in the Israeli media, aside from the liberal paper Haaretz and a few smaller outlets. Media executives seem convinced that they will alienate audiences if they give the subject much attention. Though the fighting long ago shifted from all-out assault on Hamas to a grinding, sporadic campaign, hospital officials in Gaza report dozens of Palestinians—sometimes more than a hundred—killed on most days. They’re killed in their homes or in the streets. They’re killed lining up for a sack of flour or a jerrican of water at aid stations. They perish of starvation. Or as “collateral damage” during targeted strikes. Often enough, the “targets” surpass understanding. While I was in Israel, the country’s Air Force dropped a five-hundred-pound bomb on the Al-Baqa café, a two-story seaside refuge with cool drinks and internet access. Saher al-Baqa, the owner, was killed. So were forty others, many of them women and children…. An I.D.F. spokesman promised to review the bombing but maintained that “prior to the strike, steps were taken to mitigate the risk of harming civilians using aerial surveillance.”

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2025/08/04/israels-zones-of-denial

I’ll stick my neck out and say that I think the tipping point has been reached. Tragically, that point was when photos of skeletal dying babies appeared in the press and on social media. It took pictures that looked like something from Ethiopia in the ’80s, or Belsen in 1945, but caused by a supposed democratic ally of us here in the “West”, which is to our eternal shame. When Marjorie Taylor Greene calls it genocide, and even Trump had to admit children in Gaza were being starved by Israel’s blockade, Israel’s support network in the US is beginning to collapse.

If Israeli Jews don’t know what their government, and their army, is doing in Gaza, it’s because they have chosen not to know. The rest of the world knows.

The famine in Gaza is finally all over the news. Netanyahu’s denial compromised his integrity perhaps fatality.

Unfortunately, the uncertanity of the Palestine vision is, or what “free Palestine” is intended to mean, still inhibits public opinions. Is there leadership, or thought leaders, who will advance fortunes.