Muslim Views
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • All
    • Local
    • National
    • World
    Indonesia to build Shaykh Yusuf Cultural House in Macassar

    Indonesia to build Shaykh Yusuf Cultural House in Macassar

    Grand Parade traders protest City restrictions

    Grand Parade traders protest City restrictions

    Disability groups demand urgent transport reform

    Disability groups demand urgent transport reform

    Cape Town raises the curtain on Shakespeare and the Muslim world

    Cape Town raises the curtain on Shakespeare and the Muslim world

    Ummah Tech Conference 2025: Building a digital Madinah through faith-driven innovation

    Ummah Tech Conference 2025: Building a digital Madinah through faith-driven innovation

    The ethics and barriers for Islamic finance in Africa’s economic development [+video]

    The ethics and barriers for Islamic finance in Africa’s economic development [+video]

    Islamic finance at the first African G20 [+video]

    Islamic finance at the first African G20 [+video]

    Foundation laid for Cape Town’s first Muslim mortuary

    Foundation laid for Cape Town’s first Muslim mortuary

    Muizenberg commemorates 200 years of the legacy of Farmer Peck’s Inn

    Muizenberg commemorates 200 years of the legacy of Farmer Peck’s Inn

    Dr D’arcy’s enduring message: look closely, care deeply, create fearlessly

    Dr D’arcy’s enduring message: look closely, care deeply, create fearlessly

    • National
    • World
    • Local
  • Opinion
    • All
    • Columnists
    • Discussions with Dangor
    • Editorial
    • Guest Writer
    From reformer to living martyr: The legend of Imran Khan

    From reformer to living martyr: The legend of Imran Khan

    Sudan’s silent suffering amid a brutal war on civilians

    Sudan’s silent suffering amid a brutal war on civilians

    Why the US fears Dr Naledi Pandor

    Why the US fears Dr Naledi Pandor

    South Africa’s G20 year: multilateralism myths and Africa’s sidelined agenda

    South Africa’s G20 year: multilateralism myths and Africa’s sidelined agenda

    Islamic finance at the first African G20 [+video]

    Islamic finance at the first African G20 [+video]

    How Pakistan’s 2022 coup reshaped politics — and why global silence still surrounds Imran Khan

    How Pakistan’s 2022 coup reshaped politics — and why global silence still surrounds Imran Khan

    G20 summit a catalyst for new trade frontier in Africa

    G20 summit a catalyst for new trade frontier in Africa

    Why was Naledi Pandor’s US visa revoked? Examining claims of Zionist lobby influence

    Why was Naledi Pandor’s US visa revoked? Examining claims of Zionist lobby influence

    Beyond diagnosis: Why South Africa needs civic renewal to rebuild governance

    Beyond diagnosis: Why South Africa needs civic renewal to rebuild governance

    The light of Lady Fatima (RA)

    The light of Lady Fatima (RA)

  • Features
    • All
    • 1500 Years of Prophetic Legacy
    • AWQAF SA
    • General Features
    • Imam Haron
    • Tributes
    History vs heritage: Why South Africa’s past still shapes its future

    History vs heritage: Why South Africa’s past still shapes its future

    Tracing the Kara family through memory and archive

    Tracing the Kara family through memory and archive

    Clergy and activists on the step of St George’s Cathedral.

    A Journey of Witness — Dr Fatima Hendricks and the return of a moral language

    Seventy years on – The enduring legacy of Imam Abdullah Haron

    Seventy years on – The enduring legacy of Imam Abdullah Haron

    The Sumud of direct non-violent action

    The Sumud of direct non-violent action

    Tribute to a dedicated doctor, life-long student and peer

    Tribute to a dedicated doctor, life-long student and peer

    Scholars assert Prophetic guidance amid Africa’s deepening crises

    Scholars assert Prophetic guidance amid Africa’s deepening crises

    Reflections of Islamic legacy through Africa

    Reflections of Islamic legacy through Africa

    A Prophetic pedagogy for a world on fire

    A Prophetic pedagogy for a world on fire

    Reflecting on the timeless pillars of the 1500 years legacy of Prophet Muhammad ﷺ

    Reflecting on the timeless pillars of the 1500 years legacy of Prophet Muhammad ﷺ

    Megan Choritz: The Jewish star who defied Zionism in South Africa

    Megan Choritz: The Jewish star who defied Zionism in South Africa

    Cape Town gears up for the 1500-year commemoration of the legacy of Prophet Muhammad ﷺ

    Cape Town gears up for the 1500-year commemoration of the legacy of Prophet Muhammad ﷺ

    Prophet Muhammad ﷺ as an embodiment of the Mercy of Allah, al-Rahim

    Prophet Muhammad ﷺ as an embodiment of the Mercy of Allah, al-Rahim

    Carrying Prophet Muhammad’s legacy into today’s world: A dialogue of ethics, imagination, and action

    Carrying Prophet Muhammad’s legacy into today’s world: A dialogue of ethics, imagination, and action

    Global commemoration of 1500 years of the Prophetic legacy launched in Cape Town

    Global commemoration of 1500 years of the Prophetic legacy launched in Cape Town

  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Arts
    • Books
    • Education
    • Food
    • Health
    • Motoring
    • Sport
    • Technology
    Ummah Tech Conference 2025: Building a digital Madinah through faith-driven innovation

    Ummah Tech Conference 2025: Building a digital Madinah through faith-driven innovation

    Dr D’arcy’s enduring message: look closely, care deeply, create fearlessly

    Dr D’arcy’s enduring message: look closely, care deeply, create fearlessly

    Balanced scholarship on Fadak dispute honours both Companions and Household

    Balanced scholarship on Fadak dispute honours both Companions and Household

    Cape Town gynae calls out world body on Palestine

    Cape Town gynae calls out world body on Palestine

    Cape Town to host Ummah Tech Conference 2025

    Cape Town to host Ummah Tech Conference 2025

    Waghid on education as a justice-oriented act

    Waghid on education as a justice-oriented act

    AI and geopolitics: UN, G20 and BRICS navigate uncharted waters

    AI and geopolitics: UN, G20 and BRICS navigate uncharted waters

    BOOK REVIEW: Rethinking Mawlid, bid‘ah, and love for the Prophet ﷺ

    BOOK REVIEW: Rethinking Mawlid, bid‘ah, and love for the Prophet ﷺ

    Youthful energy meets tradition at Rukana Submission wrestling tournament

    Youthful energy meets tradition at Rukana Submission wrestling tournament

    Muhammad Hobe: Bringing home the spirit of Islamic calligraphy

    Muhammad Hobe: Bringing home the spirit of Islamic calligraphy

  • Finance
    • All
    • Islamic Finance
    How MuslimFin serves SA Muslims and its global diaspora

    How MuslimFin serves SA Muslims and its global diaspora

    Oasis Crescent Property Fund predicts promising future

    Oasis Crescent Property Fund predicts promising future

    Breaking the chains of economic slavery

    Breaking the chains of economic slavery

    SARS’s estimated assessments: A growing risk for taxpayers

    SARS’s estimated assessments: A growing risk for taxpayers

    Uniting wealth with purpose: The untapped power of a united Muslim economy

    Uniting wealth with purpose: The untapped power of a united Muslim economy

    Metals shine in 2025’s first half: Platinum, palladium and gold lead the charge

    Metals shine in 2025’s first half: Platinum, palladium and gold lead the charge

    AI in banking and finance: The Islamic finance perspective in South Africa

    AI in banking and finance: The Islamic finance perspective in South Africa

    From the Cape to Gaza: A coin for freedom

    From the Cape to Gaza: A coin for freedom

    The enduring value of money in Islam: Gold, silver and the future of Islamic Finance in SA

    The enduring value of money in Islam: Gold, silver and the future of Islamic Finance in SA

    Ramadan: A month of giving and growing wealth

    Ramadan: A month of giving and growing wealth

  • Islam
    • All
    • Eid
    • Faith and Practice
    • Family
    • Hajj and Umrah
    • Moulood
    • Quran
    • Ramadaan
    From Gaza to Sudan: Justice has no borders

    From Gaza to Sudan: Justice has no borders

    Tracing the Kara family through memory and archive

    Tracing the Kara family through memory and archive

    Re-membering in forgetting: The ethical response to fitan – trials, tumult and oppression

    Re-membering in forgetting: The ethical response to fitan – trials, tumult and oppression

    A Qur’anic maqāsidi critique of Ramaphosa’s food security address

    A Qur’anic maqāsidi critique of Ramaphosa’s food security address

    The legacy of Pope Francis in Muslim–Christian relations

    The legacy of Pope Francis in Muslim–Christian relations

    Neighbourly ethics in a time of testing

    Neighbourly ethics in a time of testing

    Sirah course provides roadmap for cultivating character and deepening faith

    Sirah course provides roadmap for cultivating character and deepening faith

    Seventy years on – The enduring legacy of Imam Abdullah Haron

    Seventy years on – The enduring legacy of Imam Abdullah Haron

    A group of South Africans stands with Hazrat Moulana Sayed Imraan Ziyaee(right) at the Urs of Shaykh Abdul Qadir Jilani (RA). They are pictured at night, with the illuminated mazaar and minarets in the background. (Photo: Ahlus Sunnah Media Network)

    Hundreds of South Africans set to visit Urs of Shaykh Abdul Qadir Jilani (RA)

    Justice: traces in the footsteps of the Prophets

    Justice: traces in the footsteps of the Prophets

  • Archives
  • Donate
Muslim Views
  • News
    • All
    • Local
    • National
    • World
    Indonesia to build Shaykh Yusuf Cultural House in Macassar

    Indonesia to build Shaykh Yusuf Cultural House in Macassar

    Grand Parade traders protest City restrictions

    Grand Parade traders protest City restrictions

    Disability groups demand urgent transport reform

    Disability groups demand urgent transport reform

    Cape Town raises the curtain on Shakespeare and the Muslim world

    Cape Town raises the curtain on Shakespeare and the Muslim world

    Ummah Tech Conference 2025: Building a digital Madinah through faith-driven innovation

    Ummah Tech Conference 2025: Building a digital Madinah through faith-driven innovation

    The ethics and barriers for Islamic finance in Africa’s economic development [+video]

    The ethics and barriers for Islamic finance in Africa’s economic development [+video]

    Islamic finance at the first African G20 [+video]

    Islamic finance at the first African G20 [+video]

    Foundation laid for Cape Town’s first Muslim mortuary

    Foundation laid for Cape Town’s first Muslim mortuary

    Muizenberg commemorates 200 years of the legacy of Farmer Peck’s Inn

    Muizenberg commemorates 200 years of the legacy of Farmer Peck’s Inn

    Dr D’arcy’s enduring message: look closely, care deeply, create fearlessly

    Dr D’arcy’s enduring message: look closely, care deeply, create fearlessly

    • National
    • World
    • Local
  • Opinion
    • All
    • Columnists
    • Discussions with Dangor
    • Editorial
    • Guest Writer
    From reformer to living martyr: The legend of Imran Khan

    From reformer to living martyr: The legend of Imran Khan

    Sudan’s silent suffering amid a brutal war on civilians

    Sudan’s silent suffering amid a brutal war on civilians

    Why the US fears Dr Naledi Pandor

    Why the US fears Dr Naledi Pandor

    South Africa’s G20 year: multilateralism myths and Africa’s sidelined agenda

    South Africa’s G20 year: multilateralism myths and Africa’s sidelined agenda

    Islamic finance at the first African G20 [+video]

    Islamic finance at the first African G20 [+video]

    How Pakistan’s 2022 coup reshaped politics — and why global silence still surrounds Imran Khan

    How Pakistan’s 2022 coup reshaped politics — and why global silence still surrounds Imran Khan

    G20 summit a catalyst for new trade frontier in Africa

    G20 summit a catalyst for new trade frontier in Africa

    Why was Naledi Pandor’s US visa revoked? Examining claims of Zionist lobby influence

    Why was Naledi Pandor’s US visa revoked? Examining claims of Zionist lobby influence

    Beyond diagnosis: Why South Africa needs civic renewal to rebuild governance

    Beyond diagnosis: Why South Africa needs civic renewal to rebuild governance

    The light of Lady Fatima (RA)

    The light of Lady Fatima (RA)

  • Features
    • All
    • 1500 Years of Prophetic Legacy
    • AWQAF SA
    • General Features
    • Imam Haron
    • Tributes
    History vs heritage: Why South Africa’s past still shapes its future

    History vs heritage: Why South Africa’s past still shapes its future

    Tracing the Kara family through memory and archive

    Tracing the Kara family through memory and archive

    Clergy and activists on the step of St George’s Cathedral.

    A Journey of Witness — Dr Fatima Hendricks and the return of a moral language

    Seventy years on – The enduring legacy of Imam Abdullah Haron

    Seventy years on – The enduring legacy of Imam Abdullah Haron

    The Sumud of direct non-violent action

    The Sumud of direct non-violent action

    Tribute to a dedicated doctor, life-long student and peer

    Tribute to a dedicated doctor, life-long student and peer

    Scholars assert Prophetic guidance amid Africa’s deepening crises

    Scholars assert Prophetic guidance amid Africa’s deepening crises

    Reflections of Islamic legacy through Africa

    Reflections of Islamic legacy through Africa

    A Prophetic pedagogy for a world on fire

    A Prophetic pedagogy for a world on fire

    Reflecting on the timeless pillars of the 1500 years legacy of Prophet Muhammad ﷺ

    Reflecting on the timeless pillars of the 1500 years legacy of Prophet Muhammad ﷺ

    Megan Choritz: The Jewish star who defied Zionism in South Africa

    Megan Choritz: The Jewish star who defied Zionism in South Africa

    Cape Town gears up for the 1500-year commemoration of the legacy of Prophet Muhammad ﷺ

    Cape Town gears up for the 1500-year commemoration of the legacy of Prophet Muhammad ﷺ

    Prophet Muhammad ﷺ as an embodiment of the Mercy of Allah, al-Rahim

    Prophet Muhammad ﷺ as an embodiment of the Mercy of Allah, al-Rahim

    Carrying Prophet Muhammad’s legacy into today’s world: A dialogue of ethics, imagination, and action

    Carrying Prophet Muhammad’s legacy into today’s world: A dialogue of ethics, imagination, and action

    Global commemoration of 1500 years of the Prophetic legacy launched in Cape Town

    Global commemoration of 1500 years of the Prophetic legacy launched in Cape Town

  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Arts
    • Books
    • Education
    • Food
    • Health
    • Motoring
    • Sport
    • Technology
    Ummah Tech Conference 2025: Building a digital Madinah through faith-driven innovation

    Ummah Tech Conference 2025: Building a digital Madinah through faith-driven innovation

    Dr D’arcy’s enduring message: look closely, care deeply, create fearlessly

    Dr D’arcy’s enduring message: look closely, care deeply, create fearlessly

    Balanced scholarship on Fadak dispute honours both Companions and Household

    Balanced scholarship on Fadak dispute honours both Companions and Household

    Cape Town gynae calls out world body on Palestine

    Cape Town gynae calls out world body on Palestine

    Cape Town to host Ummah Tech Conference 2025

    Cape Town to host Ummah Tech Conference 2025

    Waghid on education as a justice-oriented act

    Waghid on education as a justice-oriented act

    AI and geopolitics: UN, G20 and BRICS navigate uncharted waters

    AI and geopolitics: UN, G20 and BRICS navigate uncharted waters

    BOOK REVIEW: Rethinking Mawlid, bid‘ah, and love for the Prophet ﷺ

    BOOK REVIEW: Rethinking Mawlid, bid‘ah, and love for the Prophet ﷺ

    Youthful energy meets tradition at Rukana Submission wrestling tournament

    Youthful energy meets tradition at Rukana Submission wrestling tournament

    Muhammad Hobe: Bringing home the spirit of Islamic calligraphy

    Muhammad Hobe: Bringing home the spirit of Islamic calligraphy

  • Finance
    • All
    • Islamic Finance
    How MuslimFin serves SA Muslims and its global diaspora

    How MuslimFin serves SA Muslims and its global diaspora

    Oasis Crescent Property Fund predicts promising future

    Oasis Crescent Property Fund predicts promising future

    Breaking the chains of economic slavery

    Breaking the chains of economic slavery

    SARS’s estimated assessments: A growing risk for taxpayers

    SARS’s estimated assessments: A growing risk for taxpayers

    Uniting wealth with purpose: The untapped power of a united Muslim economy

    Uniting wealth with purpose: The untapped power of a united Muslim economy

    Metals shine in 2025’s first half: Platinum, palladium and gold lead the charge

    Metals shine in 2025’s first half: Platinum, palladium and gold lead the charge

    AI in banking and finance: The Islamic finance perspective in South Africa

    AI in banking and finance: The Islamic finance perspective in South Africa

    From the Cape to Gaza: A coin for freedom

    From the Cape to Gaza: A coin for freedom

    The enduring value of money in Islam: Gold, silver and the future of Islamic Finance in SA

    The enduring value of money in Islam: Gold, silver and the future of Islamic Finance in SA

    Ramadan: A month of giving and growing wealth

    Ramadan: A month of giving and growing wealth

  • Islam
    • All
    • Eid
    • Faith and Practice
    • Family
    • Hajj and Umrah
    • Moulood
    • Quran
    • Ramadaan
    From Gaza to Sudan: Justice has no borders

    From Gaza to Sudan: Justice has no borders

    Tracing the Kara family through memory and archive

    Tracing the Kara family through memory and archive

    Re-membering in forgetting: The ethical response to fitan – trials, tumult and oppression

    Re-membering in forgetting: The ethical response to fitan – trials, tumult and oppression

    A Qur’anic maqāsidi critique of Ramaphosa’s food security address

    A Qur’anic maqāsidi critique of Ramaphosa’s food security address

    The legacy of Pope Francis in Muslim–Christian relations

    The legacy of Pope Francis in Muslim–Christian relations

    Neighbourly ethics in a time of testing

    Neighbourly ethics in a time of testing

    Sirah course provides roadmap for cultivating character and deepening faith

    Sirah course provides roadmap for cultivating character and deepening faith

    Seventy years on – The enduring legacy of Imam Abdullah Haron

    Seventy years on – The enduring legacy of Imam Abdullah Haron

    A group of South Africans stands with Hazrat Moulana Sayed Imraan Ziyaee(right) at the Urs of Shaykh Abdul Qadir Jilani (RA). They are pictured at night, with the illuminated mazaar and minarets in the background. (Photo: Ahlus Sunnah Media Network)

    Hundreds of South Africans set to visit Urs of Shaykh Abdul Qadir Jilani (RA)

    Justice: traces in the footsteps of the Prophets

    Justice: traces in the footsteps of the Prophets

  • Archives
  • Donate
Muslim Views
Advertisement

‘No war and no peace’: Gaza’s ongoing suffocation

14 March 2025
in OPINION, Guest Writer, News, Ramadaan
Reading Time: 8 mins read
A A

Rita Baroud reporting on the destruction she found in Gaza City when she returned to northern Gaza in February. (Photo: Courtesy of the author/TNH)

Share on TwitterShare on FacebookShare on Whatsapp

‘[In Gaza] some families break their fast with the little food they have left – maybe a piece of bread, a cup of water, or a bit of rice, if they’re lucky. Others have nothing at all and settle for water or sleep to escape the hunger.’

This story was originally published by The New Humanitarian.

By RITA BAROUD

Since I last wrote for The New Humanitarian, I finally returned to northern Gaza, where I grew up and lived all of my life before this war. There was no plan, no prior thought. The decision was spontaneous, even though we had been debating whether to go to the north for weeks.

It was as if something was pulling me back to what remained of my old life even though I knew our home no longer existed – that it had been turned into rubble like thousands of others. Something stronger than logic made me want to see it with my own eyes.

So, on February 8, my father, my mother, my sister, and I started walking north along Al-Rashid Street, which runs up Gaza’s coastline. There were other people walking too, but not the same huge numbers as when Israel first allowed people to return at the end of January.

The walk north wasn’t just a journey; it was a test of how much a person can endure. The road was long, vehicles were scarce, and when we finally found one to give us a ride, all I could see was ash. A grey colour swallowed everything: There was no difference between the ground and the sky.

I tried to document it, to take photos, but my hands were shaking – not from the cold but from the horror of what I saw. The pictures didn’t capture the magnitude of the destruction because what was in front of me was beyond what a lens could contain.

On my right, Gaza’s cities and neighbourhoods lay in ruins – every building was either tilted, shattered, or reduced to a heap of stones. On my left, the sea raged, its waves high and angry. I tried to fix my gaze on the sea, to escape the devastation, but my eyes kept stealing glances to the right, searching for traces of my past life – for proof that we had been here once.

You may also want to read

Sam Nujoma personified Namibia’s struggle for freedom

Sam Nujoma personified Namibia’s struggle for freedom

10 February 2025
Imam Zain al Abidin: Taking forth the message from Karbala

Imam Zain al Abidin: Taking forth the message from Karbala

3 July 2025

Hundreds join Cape Town’s march for Prophet Muhammad (SAW) and the Grand Moulood

15 February 2019 - Updated on 2 June 2021
Have your say in UUCSA’s Community Listening Survey

Have your say in UUCSA’s Community Listening Survey

13 November 2025

The visit was supposed to last one day, but I stayed until February 20. I don’t know why. I went to my neighbourhood, al-Rimal al-Shamali, to where my house once stood. It didn’t look the same as when it was first destroyed: It had changed even as rubble. The moisture and bulldozers had worn it down further, erasing even the ruins.

My family and I were nearly buried under that pile of rubble on the third day of the war. Luckily, we had left our house before a missile hit on October 9, 2023, engulfing it in flames and partially destroying it. My father and I ran back to the house to search for my cat, Sarah, who we had left behind; but we couldn’t find her. Just after we left, a second missile hit, collapsing the rest of the house as I stood there, at a distance, watching it turn into rubble.

That was my home for 20 years, where I lived with my grandmother, my uncle and his children, and my family. The house had five storeys. Inside, it was a warm and safe place that held all of us together. My room was my little sanctuary – my own small world filled with books, music, and TV shows. Our balcony was covered with cactus plants. I used to spend time there just sitting and reflecting.

As I looked at the pile of rubble in February, I felt a crushing weight in my chest, but it was brief. I didn’t let myself linger; I didn’t let my eyes absorb the scene. I just walked away quickly, as if running from it again.

The rubble of Rita Baroud’s family home in Gaza City’s al-Rimal al-Shamali neighbourhood, which was destroyed by two Israeli missile strikes on 9 October 2023. (Photo: Rita Baroud/TNH)

A mockery of return

I went to the north because I felt I had to see what was left of my past. But the streets I walked did not resemble the ones I knew. Nothing was familiar. I searched for any sign that I had once been here. Nothing remained. Even the few things that had survived and managed to reopen were different.

Life in my neighbourhood before the war was peaceful, with a sense of stability and routine. Our neighbours were always around, and there was a strong sense of community – people knew each other, greeted each other daily, and shared moments of joy and sorrow.

The streets were lively, lined with trees and shops with everything we needed. There were schools, cafes, and small businesses. Children played outside in the afternoons, families gathered on balconies in the evenings, and the sounds of life – conversations, laughter, and the call to prayer – were always present.

Now, all of that is gone. Wherever I went, everything was collapsed. The destruction was so complete that it felt like a miracle to see a house still standing at all. People were trying to cope with the catastrophe, but there was no water, no electricity, no sanitation, no roads. Only rubble and sand.

Because transportation was too expensive, I walked for hours each day through different neighbourhoods and to the sea, working on articles and trying to reconnect with my memories. I averaged 12 kilometres per day – 16 000 steps – on broken roads, until my feet swelled, and I couldn’t sleep from the pain.

The markets I used to visit, the familiar shops – all of them were without windows, partially destroyed, but still trying to stay open. Some cafés and restaurants had resumed business, but I couldn’t see it as a sign of recovery. It felt more like a mockery – an attempt to create the illusion that life had returned when everything around us screamed that Gaza had not healed and would not heal anytime soon.

A sky without sun

February was difficult. We didn’t see the sun. I stopped being able to remember the last time I woke up to natural light slipping through the window. The air was heavy – not just with humidity, but with the sense that everything was on the verge of collapse.

The rain kept falling but washed away nothing. It didn’t bring new beginnings; it only added more chapters to our suffering. The winter cold felt like slow death seeping into your bones.

Gaza was drowning in puddles, but no one saw their reflection in them because the water wasn’t clear. It was mixed with mud, with debris, with the remnants of war. The roads were no longer walkable, water gathered without drainage, turning into stagnant swamps filled with unexplainable smells, like the war tainted even the rainwater with death.

Inside the tents that fill the camps, the situation was worse. Nothing was dry. Clothes remained damp at all times; mattresses absorbed so much water they turned into rotting sponges. Children huddled beneath wet blankets that provided no warmth, their small bodies trembling without rest. Mothers tried to light small fires to cook, but the wood was too wet, and smoke filled the tents instead of warmth.

It’s not surprising that at least six newborn babies died in the cold. The rain can kill, just like the bombs.

When I finally returned to the south, there was an extremely thin woman sitting next to me in the vehicle I took. She was about 60 years old and pale, as if she had not felt warmth in years. She only wore a very thin black abaya. She did not speak or cry or ask for anything. She only repeated one word in a weak, trembling voice: ‘Cold’.

Without thinking, I took off my jacket and handed it to her. I did not look into her eyes, because I knew that what I would see there would be unbearable. I did not need to look to know the pain. It was there in the way her hands trembled as she took the jacket, in how she clung to it like it was life itself, in the shivering that didn’t stop even after she covered herself.

Her cold settled inside me. It wasn’t just winter’s cold – it was the cold of loss, the cold of helplessness, the cold of watching someone’s body waste away from hunger and daily hardship, slowly, until they lose their will and spirit; it was the cold of realising that all you can give is a piece of clothing, as if that could fix what war has shattered, what hunger has ruined, what the siege had stolen from her frail body.

A boy tends a makeshift shop in Gaza City. The items on the shelves were the only burst of colour amidst the omnipresent grey background of rubble. (Photo: Rita Baroud/TNH)

Ramadan under siege

Now I’m back in Deir al-Balah, in the same partially broken house where my family has been sheltering for months. Ramadan began on March 1. For the second year in a row, it does not resemble any Ramadan we knew before.

In the past, we would prepare for this month weeks in advance. Markets would be full, families would gather, children would rejoice with lanterns, and the scent of food would fill the streets. But this year, none of that exists.

On the second day of Ramadan, Israel closed the border crossings, preventing any humanitarian aid from entering. We were already being strangled. Now, the grip is even tighter. They are blocking the entry of food, fuel, water – everything that we need to survive.

As soon as the aid suspension was announced, Gaza’s merchants began hoarding supplies. In a single night, prices skyrocketed to unimaginable levels. Markets filled with desperate shoppers, each trying to buy whatever they could before prices became completely unaffordable.

In Gaza, we live in a different kind of financial system – a market where prices rise every second, not based on supply and demand but on the level of suffering. The tighter the siege, the higher the prices, until food becomes a rare commodity out of reach for many.

Before the war, Ramadan meant family visits, large iftar gatherings, conversations that stretched until suhoor, and evenings spent with friends in cafés. It meant warmth, life, and a sense of belonging to something greater.

Now, families are scattered between the north and south. Some have left altogether. Many have been martyred. There are no more Ramadan feasts bringing families together; no more children laughing as they wait for the call to prayer. Some families break their fast with the little food they have left – maybe a piece of bread, a cup of water, or a bit of rice, if they’re lucky. Others have nothing at all and settle for water or sleep to escape the hunger.

In some areas, people try to organise communal iftars – not because they have plenty of food, but because sharing hunger feels less cruel than facing it alone. In the camps, mothers sit with their children, trying to distract them from thinking about food. Some tell them stories, some sing to them, and some promise that tomorrow might be better. But no one here truly believes that tomorrow will be any different from today.

Rita Baroud at what remains of Gaza City’s Al-Shifa hospital, once the largest medical facility in the territory, which the Israeli military laid siege to and attacked multiple times during its 15-month military campaign. (Photo: Courtesy of author/TNH)

Where do we go now? 

No one knows what the coming days will bring. No one knows whether the war has truly ended or if we are simply waiting for the next round. Some believe that Gaza can no longer endure – but it is still here.

The real question is not: How do we keep living? It is: How long can this last before everything collapses? No one knows; No one has a real answer. Everything here is temporary; everything is fragile. This is not life – it is a long, suspended waiting, caught between fear and meaninglessness. There is no war and no peace – just this heavy silence.

Children still wake up screaming from nightmares, hiding under blankets as they did during the bombings. Mothers still keep their bags ready by the door, filled with blankets, documents, extra clothes.

In the streets of the city, nothing moves fast. In some neighbourhoods, the smell of death still lingers. The buildings that were destroyed have not been cleared away completely, and some still hold bodies beneath their rubble, waiting to be retrieved.

Clean drinking water is rare. In the camps, people collect rainwater, but no one trusts that it’s safe. Some families boil it before drinking, but fuel is scarce, and no one can afford the luxury of making a fire for everything. Children suffer from diarrhoea due to contaminated water, but there is no medicine, and the hospitals can do nothing.

Inside the hospitals, the situation defies description. Surgeons operate without anaesthesia, patients die from infections that could have been easily treated if antibiotics were available. Malnourished children lie on cold metal beds, their bones protruding, their eyes sunken into tiny skulls, while their mothers sit beside them, powerless, able to do nothing but wait.

During the day, we move without a clear purpose, trying to convince ourselves that we are still alive, that the days have not lost all meaning. And at night, when the streets fall silent, when the noise of the survivors fades, the real questions creep in:

Are we still ourselves? Are we still the people we were before all this? Or has the war reshaped us, erased us, turned us into ghosts wandering a city that no longer recognises itself?

The New Humanitarian puts quality, independent journalism at the service of the millions of people affected by humanitarian crises around the world. Find out more at www.thenewhumanitarian.org.

Signup to our Newsletter

* indicates required
Advertisement

You may also want to read

Indonesia to build Shaykh Yusuf Cultural House in Macassar
News

Indonesia to build Shaykh Yusuf Cultural House in Macassar

4 December 2025
Grand Parade traders protest City restrictions
News

Grand Parade traders protest City restrictions

4 December 2025
Disability groups demand urgent transport reform
News

Disability groups demand urgent transport reform

4 December 2025
From reformer to living martyr: The legend of Imran Khan
OPINION

From reformer to living martyr: The legend of Imran Khan

2 December 2025
Cape Town raises the curtain on Shakespeare and the Muslim world
News

Cape Town raises the curtain on Shakespeare and the Muslim world

1 December 2025 - Updated on 2 December 2025
Sudan’s silent suffering amid a brutal war on civilians
Guest Writer

Sudan’s silent suffering amid a brutal war on civilians

28 November 2025
November 2025

November 2025

FILE SIZE : 7.1 MB
Download
Advertisement

Latest News

How MuslimFin serves SA Muslims and its global diaspora

4 December 2025

Indonesia to build Shaykh Yusuf Cultural House in Macassar

4 December 2025

Grand Parade traders protest City restrictions

4 December 2025

Disability groups demand urgent transport reform

4 December 2025

From reformer to living martyr: The legend of Imran Khan

2 December 2025

Cape Town raises the curtain on Shakespeare and the Muslim world

1 December 2025 - Updated on 2 December 2025
Advertisement
Advertisement
Next Post
ebrahim-rasool

The Empire strikes back at Ambassador Rasool to impose

Noorie Fakie: Tribute to a selfless community servant

Noorie Fakie: Tribute to a selfless community servant

Bokaap, Afriforum and Solidarity: The call for cultural preservation

Bokaap, Afriforum and Solidarity: The call for cultural preservation

Shaikh Yusuf al-Maqassari: 400 years of resistance, faith and legacy

Shaikh Yusuf al-Maqassari: 400 years of resistance, faith and legacy

ABOUT MUSLIM VIEWS
About Us
Archives
Terms & Conditions
Privacy Policy
Contact Us
Donate to Muslim Views
NEWS
Local
National
World
OPINION
Columnists
Discussion with Dangor
Editorial
Guest Writers
FEATURES
AWQAF SA
Imam Haroon
Tributes
FINANCE
Islamic Finance
ISLAM
Eid
Faith and Practice
Family
Hajj and Umrah
Moulood
Quraan
Ramadaan
FEATURES
Arts
Books
Education
Food
Health
Motoring
Sport
Technology

© Muslim Views 2025. All Rights Reserved

Design by: Rashaad Sallie

Download Your Free PDF Now!

Don’t miss out on this valuable resource. Fill out the form below, and we’ll email the download link directly to your inbox.

[ninja_form id=2]

No Result
View All Result
  • NEWS
    • Local
    • National
    • World
  • OPINION
    • Columnists
    • Discussions with Dangor
    • Editorial
    • Guest Writer
  • FEATURES
    • AWQAF SA
    • Imam Haron
    • Tributes
    • 1500 Years of Prophetic Legacy
  • LIFESTYLE
    • Arts
    • Books
    • Education
    • Food
    • Health
    • Motoring
    • Sport
    • Technology
  • FINANCE
    • Islamic Finance
  • ISLAM
    • Eid
    • Faith and Practice
    • Family
    • Hajj and Umrah
    • Moulood
    • Quran
    • Ramadaan
  • ARCHIVES
  • DONATE