Discussion about this post

User's avatar
George Leone's avatar

What stays with me in this piece is how, even in a night shaped by hunger and gunfire, the moral center of the story is a simple choice: refusing to survive at someone else’s expense. In a place where the world has stripped people of everything, this young man and his friend still protected an old man’s dignity. That’s not sentimentality — it’s the kind of humanity that survives when every system around it has collapsed.

The contrast is brutal: an army treating starving civilians as targets, and civilians treating each other as family. The people with the least power are the ones still acting with honor. Stories like this matter because they expose the lie that Gaza is defined by violence. What’s actually being documented here is character — the kind that persists even when the world looks away.

Humanity didn’t disappear in Gaza. It’s the only thing that hasn’t.

Leonie Brittain's avatar

We have a saying: when one door closes, a window opens. This is a beautiful story, Abood, about generosity over the instinct to self preserve. Ultimately, it is about treating the Other, as you yourself would wish to be treated. But more profoundly, it is about doing the thing you can live with, and maintaining your self respect. I want to praise you, but that would be patronizing. Extreme hunger is a terrible, painful thing that I have never experienced, and the way it has been imposed on you Palestinians in Gaza is sadistic beyond measure. All I can say with any certainty is that beyond generously yielding the bag of rice, you did something much more important, you restored the old man’s faith in humanity and gave him hope, a gift that would have lifted his heart and maybe the hearts of his children, made his life more bearable.

1 more comment...

No posts

Ready for more?