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People, not numbers: stories of displacement in Gaza

Ahmad, Saadiya, Abu Osama, Jamal, Mervat, Raghad and Umm Mohammed stories reflect loss, resilience, and the ongoing need for humanitarian access at scale

Posted on 30 Dec 2025

Since the escalation of hostilities and airstrikes in Gaza, the world has witnessed mass destruction of homes, infrastructure, schools, hospitals and entire neighborhoods being levelled. Families have been displaced repeatedly — some more than ten times — seeking safety that does not exist. Shelter is fragile, food and clean water are limited, medical supplies are scarce, electricity is absent, and winter conditions bring additional risk to all and especially children, older people, and people with disabilities. 

More than two years into this humanitarian catastrophe, families continue to live in makeshift tents, damaged buildings or overcrowded informal sites with minimal protection from rain, heat, flooding or disease. Mothers raise children in unstable shelters and indecent living conditions. Students have lost education. Breadwinners have lost livelihoods. Survivors carry trauma in silence. 

DRC’s role is to respond — urgently and continuously — through protection, shelter, legal aid, cash assistance, winterization, psychosocial support, and emergency relief delivered with local partners and field teams. Today we carry both the operational responsibility and the moral responsibility to ensure that people in Gaza are seen, heard, supported and remembered. 

Below are first-hand testimonies from people living the reality of displacement. They reflect loss, resilience, and the ongoing need for humanitarian access at scale. These are not statistics. They are people. 

Meet Ahmad, the Trainer Who Lost His Gym but Kept His Strength

Meet Ahmad, the Trainer Who Lost His Gym but Kept His Strength

 

Ahmad Hamdan, once a nurse and fitness trainer living a peaceful life in Rafah, has endured seven displacements, constant danger, and harsh conditions, yet continues to fight for his son’s survival and dreams of a childhood without fear. Read his story.

 

Meet Umm Saber — A Voice From The Ruins of Beit Hanoun

Meet Umm Saber — A Voice From The Ruins of Beit Hanoun

Saadiya Abdelhadi, known as Umm Saber, 75, has lost her home, her son, and everything she owned, surviving nine displacements and now caring for seven children in a leaking tent in Ansar 5 Camp, where she struggles daily for food, water, medicine, and the hope of a safer shelter to protect them from winter. Read her story..

 

Meet Abu Osama — The Long Journey of Displacement From Jabalia to the Unknown

Meet Abu Osama — The Long Journey of Displacement From Jabalia to the Unknown

 

Abu Osama, 58, once a carpenter in Jabalia, has been displaced more than ten times since October 2023 and now lives in a fragile tent with his family, struggling daily for food, water, and warmth while fearing the coming winter and dreaming of returning home. Read his story.

 

Meet Abu Khaled - Where the Seashells Meet the Dust of War

Meet Abu Khaled - Where the Seashells Meet the Dust of War

 

Jamal Qishta, known as Abu Khaled, 56, a carpenter from Rafah who lost the home he built stone by stone, now lives in a tent after six displacements, creating small touches of normalcy with flowers and shells while struggling to keep his family safe and warm through another harsh winter, holding onto hope of rebuilding. Read his story.

 

Meet Mervat: A Mother Holding Four Daughters Through War and Displacement

Meet Mervat: A Mother Holding Four Daughters Through War and Displacement

Mervat Mahdi, 37, has endured over twelve displacements and now lives in a torn tent in Rafah with her four daughters, struggling without aid, privacy, or medical care while fearing another winter and dreaming only of safety and schooling for her children. Read her story.

 

Meet Raghad and Umm Mohammed - “We Are Not Numbers — We Are Lives, Dreams, and Families”

Meet Raghad and Umm Mohammed - “We Are Not Numbers — We Are Lives, Dreams, and Families”

 

Raghad Salem, 19, and her mother, Umm Mohammed, live in a fragile tent in Deir al-Balah after losing her home, two brothers, and her dreams of finishing school, clinging to hope for education and family reunion amid displacement, poverty, and grief. Read their story.

 

Gaza’s families continue to endure displacement, loss and instability, but they also continue to survive, adapt and hope. Humanitarian assistance remains critical. 

These stories are a reminder of why the humanitarian response must continue and why safe, sustained access is essential. 

We ask the world to listen and to act. 

Enough destruction… In the name of humanity, I beg the world to listen. We are not numbers on the news. We are lives, families, and dreams — we only ask for the right to live.

/  Umm Mohammed, Gaza

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30 Dec 2025
Meet Raghad and Umm Mohammed - “We Are Not Numbers — We Are…