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Tag: starvation

  • What Comes After Starvation in Gaza?

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    A few weeks ago, Soliman Zyad, a young health-care worker in northern Gaza, told me that his family was near starvation. On some days, he and his uncle AbdulKareem walked in search of food from 3 A.M. until the afternoon. “We swore we would not return home without finding flour,” Zyad told me. “People were ready to risk their lives for a single sack.” Almost forty per cent of the population was going days at a time without eating, according to the World Health Organization. Sometimes AbdulKareem would vomit from hunger and fatigue. His wife, pregnant with twins, was severely anemic.

    The latest food shortage in Gaza began in March, when Israel ended a ceasefire and imposed a blockade on all aid that lasted eleven weeks. After that, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which was backed by Israel and the U.S., began distributing limited amounts of aid; around three thousand Palestinians were killed while seeking food. This month, a United Nations study published in The Lancet reported that more than fifty-four thousand children are malnourished in Gaza. “Every family, by now, has been affected,” John Kahler, a pediatrician and a co-founder of MedGlobal, a humanitarian organization that operates in Gaza, told me. About one in five babies was born premature or underweight. MedGlobal cared for one infant, Rafeef, who weighed just four pounds at birth. Her mother was too malnourished to breast-feed; the baby cried constantly, began losing weight, and developed ulcers and infections. On August 18th, she died.

    “We live day by day,” Eyad Amawi, a father of four who works as an aid coördinator in Gaza, told me in September. “We have just enough to survive, but not enough to carry out our normal activities.” On the black market, the price of a kilogram of flour—about ten cents before October 7, 2023—had risen to thirty-five dollars, when it could be found at all. Amawi often saw malnourished children who lacked the strength to play. He worried that months of famine had already inflicted irreversible damage. “We are losing the next generation,” he said. “They will suffer for all their lives from this.”

    Now that a ceasefire is in place, aid is trickling in. Under the terms of the ceasefire agreement, six hundred trucks a day are meant to enter Gaza. The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East reports that it has stockpiled three months of food for everyone in the territory. There is reason to hope that, for all the lasting destruction in Gaza, the immediate crisis of hunger will come to an end. “As this famine is entirely man-made, it can be halted and reversed,” the Famine Review Committee, an international body that monitors food insecurity worldwide, wrote in August.

    Yet numerous experts warned that not all consequences of famine can be undone. “People don’t realize that one doesn’t just recover from starvation,” Dana Simmons, a historian and the author of “On Hunger: Violence and Craving in America, from Starvation to Ozempic,” said. For the severely malnourished, simply starting to eat normal meals again can cause sickness—even death. And survivors of starvation are at risk of chronic diseases and mental-health conditions for decades after they regain access to food. “You’ve stunted a generation,” Nathaniel Raymond, the director of the Humanitarian Research Lab at Yale, told me. Ruth Gibson, a scholar at Stanford’s Center for Innovation in Global Health, spoke in even starker terms. “Can this be reversed?” she said. “The answer is, it can’t be.”

    Much of what we know about the toll of starvation comes from the Warsaw Ghetto, where the Nazis forcibly resettled about half a million Jews starting in 1940. German authorities in occupied Poland restricted provisions to “less than the minimum to preserve life”; a ration card from October, 1941, allotted most Jews roughly three hundred daily calories. Deaths eventually climbed to five hundred per day. Under these horrific conditions, twenty-eight Jewish doctors who had been sent to the Ghetto, led by a dermatologist named Izrael Milejkowski, recruited seventy adults and forty children for research into what they called pure starvation, meaning that those afflicted had no additional infections or diseases. As the physician Leonard Tushnet wrote, in 1966, the researchers—who were themselves going hungry—conducted “an exhaustive and precise study of the effects of starvation.” The study continued until deportations to the Treblinka extermination camp, where many of the researchers would ultimately perish, began, in 1942. They hurriedly compiled their charts and graphs into a manuscript, which was then buried in a steel jar. It was recovered after the war and published, in Polish, in 1946.

    In the forties, exactly how the body dealt with starvation remained a mystery. The doctors used equipment that had been smuggled into the Ghetto to measure capillary circulation, examine bone marrow under microscopes, and record electrocardiograms. The quality of their scientific work was “amazing,” Merry Fitzpatrick, a scholar of malnutrition and famine at Tufts University, told me. They wrote that muscle melted away, skin acquired the texture of cigarette paper, and swelling often afflicted the legs, scrotum, labia, heart, and lungs. In a cemetery shed, the doctors performed more than three thousand autopsies, which revealed that starvation softened the bones and atrophied vital organs. Starving children stopped playing and appeared sluggish or apathetic; cognitive development seemed to halt or even regress. Some looked like “skin-covered skeletons.”

    A nurse attends to two starving children at a hospital in the Warsaw Ghetto, in 1942.Photograph from United States Holocaust Memorial Museum / Maladie de Famine / American Joint Distribution Committee

    One of the study’s most important findings was that the body has sophisticated ways of saving energy and sparing critical tissues and functions. Reserves of glucose in the blood, liver, and muscle quickly run low. Then the body shifts to burning fat in three different ways. Some of the fat molecules can be used to create glucose; some can be used to create ketones, an alternative energy source for certain tissues, including the brain; and some can be directly broken down inside the mitochondria to create adenosine triphosphate, or ATP, the primary energy source for our cells.

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    Clayton Dalton

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  • Opinion | Free Gaza’s Palestinians from Hamas

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    Trump’s peace plan is a path to freedom and stability for the strip’s oppressed residents.

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    Moumen Al-Natour

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  • Israeli fashion brand launches campaign about hunger in Gaza: ‘We cannot use food as weapons’

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    The campaign lands as conditions facing Gazans after nearly two years of war are gaining attention among Israelis in new ways.

    (JTA) — In the early days of the war in Gaza, the Israeli women’s fashion brand Comme Il Faut launched a campaign with prominent models and female business leaders drawing attention to the Israeli hostages abducted by Hamas.

    This week, the brand turned heads again: with a social media campaign protesting alleged starvation among civilians in Gaza.

    Israeli chefs and restaurateurs hold empty pots along with the caption “Resist starvation” in Hebrew, English and Arabic in the campaign, which was posted to the brand’s Instagram and Facebook accounts. The campaign has stirred controversy and condemnation among an Israeli public that is both ready to end the war in Gaza and torn over reports about grim conditions for the Palestinians who live there.

    “We thought, because of what’s going on in Gaza and the hunger in Gaza, to do this photo shoot with people from the food industry and chefs,” Romi Kaminer Goldfainer, the director ofComme Il Faut, said in an interview. “We thought how difficult it is to talk about fashion during this time — it’s even harder to talk about food and wine [and] dining when there’s this terrible hunger, like in one hour away from Tel Aviv.”

    Kaminer Goldfainer, whose mother Sybil Goldfainer founded the brand in 1987, said she was inspired after seeing an Israeli chef’s recent social media post about struggling to promote their business amid reports of starvation in Gaza.

    Palestinians run towards airdropped aid packages, in Deir Al-Balah, in the central Gaza Strip, August 19, 2025 (credit: REUTERS/Ramadan Abed)

    “We make clothes for women, and we believe that fashion is also a political thing, like food, like anything in culture,” she said.

    The campaign lands as conditions facing Gazans after nearly two years of war are gaining attention among Israelis in new ways. Israel has long rejected claims of starvation in the enclave, but last month, a global hunger monitoring group released a report stating that parts of Gaza meet its standards for declaring a famine. Amid an international outcry and growing opposition among the Israeli public to the war, Israeli news organizations have begun reporting more often on the plight of Gazans and some anti-war protesters have started incorporating the photographs of Gazans into their demonstrations.

    Humanitarian aid to Gaza

    But some Israelis have rejected the expressions of concern, charging that they represent giving aid to an enemy and place the onus of responsibility unfairly on Israel — criticism also leveled recently at efforts by Diaspora Jews to blunt the privations of war on Gazans.

    Such sentiments exploded in the comments of Comme Il Faut’s Instagram posts.

    “Tell it to Hamas. The food is at their place,” wrote one user. Another posted, “The only ones who are starving are our kidnapped. Shame of a campaign.”

    Kaminer Goldfainer said the expectation of such a response deterred some potential participants in the campaign.

    “People are very afraid for their businesses and for speaking up,” she said. She said Comme Il Faut had reached out to almost 100 Israeli chefs and restauranteurs to see if they would participate in the campaign, but many said no or did not respond to their inquiry. Others cancelled after initially saying yes for fear of the backlash.

    In the end, the campaign featured a dozen Israeli chefs and restauranteurs, including Michal Levit, a food culture researcher; Tamar Cohen Tzedek, the chef and owner of the restaurant Cucina Hess 4; Avivit Priel Avichai, the chef and owner of Ouzeria restaurant; and Aviram Katz, the restauranteur behind HaBasta, Mifgash Rambam and Morris Bar.

    In the caption of some of the posts, the chefs wrote in Hebrew, English and Arabic that they “can no longer stay silent in the face of the systematic starvation of the people of Gaza and the hostages among them.”

    “Our stomachs turn. From its depths, from the abysses of the soul, we cry out against the starvation of millions of innocent people and children, who are perishing and dying en masse,” the captions continued.

    Comme Il Faut also collaborated with Parents Against Child Detention, an Israeli organization that raises awareness about the mass detention of Palestinian children, on the campaign.

    “Our protest against hunger is a protest on behalf of the children and girls, who have no voice in the public sphere. For us this is not a political question but a basic moral responsibility — no boy and girl should starve,” PACD wrote in an Instagram post of the campaign.

    “The voices that arise from the food community, from people and women whose lives are devoted to food and filling, echo our call: you must not comply with the reality of empty pots,” the post continued. “We will continue to fight — until the pots are full.”

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  • How the Israeli Right Explains the Aid Disaster It Created

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    Last week, in a piece for the Guardian, Nick Maynard, a volunteer surgeon at a hospital in southern Gaza, wrote, “I’ve just finished operating on another severely malnourished young teenager. A seven-month-old baby lies in our paediatric intensive care unit, so tiny and malnourished that I initially mistook her for a newborn. The phrase ‘skin and bones’ doesn’t do justice to the way her body has been ravaged. She is literally wasting away before our eyes and, despite our best efforts, we are powerless to save her.” The humanitarian situation in Gaza, which was already dire, deteriorated even further in July, with sixty-three people, including twenty-five children, dying from malnutrition-related causes, according to the World Health Organization. This past weekend, Israel announced that it would pause some military activity in the territory and allow more aid in, although it remains unclear how long that pause will last.

    As more reports and images of emaciated children emerge from Gaza, close Israeli allies, such as France and the United Kingdom, have issued harsh critiques, calling the current humanitarian situation a “catastrophe.” Emmanuel Macron, the President of France, announced that his country would become the first member of the G-7 to recognize a Palestinian state, and Keir Starmer, the British Prime Minister, has also promised to do so unless Israel agrees to a ceasefire. On Monday, even President Trump acknowledged that children were going hungry. (Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, meanwhile, has continued to insist that there is “no starvation in Gaza.”) Two Israeli human-rights groups have begun referring to Israel’s actions as “genocide.” The scale of the crisis has also caused a number of American politicians and commentators, including defenders of the war, to argue that more aid needs to be allowed into the territory, or that the war itself has become unjust.

    Amit Segal, the chief political correspondent for Israel’s Channel 12, is widely considered one of the country’s most influential journalists. Segal is a prominent defender of the Netanyahu government. He has written on topics such as what he calls “The Settler Violence Scam” and the need to annex parts of Gaza. Last week, he wrote a piece for the Free Press in which he said that “Gaza may well be approaching a real hunger crisis.” He approvingly quoted the Israeli journalist Haviv Rettig Gur, who said, “It’s hard to convince Israelis of that because literally everything said to them for 22 months on this topic has been a fiction.” He also wrote that without Hamas’s “gleeful hoarding of food,” Gaza “would not be facing the current food shortage.” (The following day, Reuters reported that an analysis conducted by U.S.A.I.D. found “no evidence of systematic theft” of U.S. humanitarian supplies by Hamas. Another report, in the Times, said that Israeli officials privately agree that Hamas has not systemically looted United Nations aid, directly contradicting a central talking point of the Israeli war effort.)

    I recently spoke by phone with Segal. During our conversation, which has been edited for length and clarity, we discussed his wavering opinion on whether there is hunger in Gaza, his support for Trump’s plan to develop Gaza without Palestinians, and just how much power the extreme right has over the Israeli government.

    For Americans who might not know your work, you’re often talked about as someone who’s very familiar with Netanyahu’s thinking. Are you in touch with

    Yeah, that’s correct. I’m not the mouthpiece of Netanyahu. I’m a right-winger, but not more than this. I speak only for myself.

    I just meant that people say that you understand his thinking and have good sources in the government.

    I wouldn’t deny it. Yes.

    So tell me what caused you to write this piece for the Free Press saying that there was grave concern about the food situation in Gaza.

    So, first of all, I don’t think there is hunger in Gaza. I want to put that first and foremost.

    You do not think there is hunger in Gaza?

    I don’t think that the hunger campaign that Hamas runs in the international media is anything remotely connected to the truth. However, I do think there is a situation that can actually deteriorate to something like this. For the past twenty-two months, Hamas has been running a hunger campaign in Gaza. Israelis and maybe some Americans are wary of these accusations because they know it’s propaganda. The fact that there is a developing crisis does not emanate from Israeli decisions, but from a cynical game played by Hamas and the United Nations. However, Israel will be blamed for it. That’s why I want Israel to be wise and not only to be just.

    Just to be clear, your article does talk about a “hunger crisis” in Gaza.

    Developing. Developing. [The piece is titled “The Price of Flour Shows the Hunger Crisis in Gaza.”]

    There are reports of starvation deaths in Gaza. Are you denying those?

    I doubt ninety per cent of it. I can’t tell you that it doesn’t exist in specific places or specific people, but I don’t think that the numbers Hamas and the international media quote are the numbers.

    One of the things your piece says is that, essentially for the entire duration of the war, there’ve been false warnings about a hunger crisis. Why do you think the warnings were false previously?

    Hamas tried to depict a picture that did not exist. There was no hunger in Gaza. For years, Hamas has claimed that Gaza is starving. Hamas always used this weapon of alleged hunger in order to get more humanitarian aid. [A U.N. study from 2022, prior to the war, found that more than three-quarters of Palestinian families reduced the number of meals they consumed because of a lack of food.]

    The Times reported that “at least 20 Palestinian children had died from malnutrition and dehydration.” So we’re not denying that people have died, right?

    No, we do not deny that people died. We just are not sure that people died from dehydration or starvation.

    That report I just quoted was from March of 2024.

    I see. I beg to differ with the New York Times because the New York Times bases its reports on Hamas sources. The New York Times relies heavily on stringers in Gaza that have two options: either report what Hamas wants or die, and I blame the New York Times for this. The head of the legal department of the New York Times told me, How can you blame us for writing what Hamas wants? Our journalists died because in the past they reported things that Hamas didn’t like.

    This person told you this on the record?

    They wanted to sue me when I claimed that they relied on stringers who collaborated with Hamas.

    So they told you this privately?

    Yeah. You can quote it. [David McCraw, the lead newsroom lawyer at the Times, was identified to me later by Segal as the person who allegedly said this. McCraw told The New Yorker, “I never said any of that. We never threatened to sue him. And our journalists have not been killed by Hamas.” In 2023, McCraw asked Segal to make corrections to some statements he had made on social media, including that the Times employed “ISIS-embedded stringers.”] So even if we take into account the fact that twenty children died of dehydration, which I doubt and which the I.D.F. doubts, there is no way to double-check it. [In the past several days, a number of news organizations have called on Israel to allow international reporters to enter Gaza, something that it has thus far largely restricted them from doing.] What can make hunger in Gaza is the unholy coalition between the U.N. and Hamas. Each and every organization in Gaza has to pay at least fifteen to twenty per cent of the humanitarian aid directly to the pockets of Hamas.

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    Isaac Chotiner

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