Our humanity is lost under the rubble in Gaza

May 19, 2025
Issue 
A protest marks 77 years of the Nakba, Gadigal Country/Sydney, May 15. Photo: Zebedee Parkes

It is a Sunday evening and I am shopping online. But there is a difference. I am looking for baby formula 鈥 in Gaza.

I am willing to buy as much as we can find, I tell Abdullah. He is the partner of our Olive Kids charity in Gaza, trying to support 1000 children on the edge of life and death in a cage closed off from the outside world and international aid by the Israeli military, in what some people have decided to call a 鈥渨ar鈥.

On Tuesday morning, my Gaza shopper is back in touch. There is no formula to be had.

A $2 bag of flour now costs over US$500, if it can be found. Our partner鈥檚 warehouse is nearly empty and yet it was raided, like many others, as starvation is fast-tracked in the chaos created by Israel鈥檚 offensive.

This is how delivering aid in Gaza works. Plans constantly change, chasing disappearing supplies before they are gone.

Yet, it can be worse. Sometimes you have the supplies but the children are gone.鈥 Last month, four children from聽the 聽were killed with their mother. Ahmed (7), Mohammed (9), Warda (11) and Firas (13) were part of our Olive Kids child sponsorship program. 鈥疶he young boys loved soccer and Warda loved drawing. Firas was devoted to鈥痵upporting his widowed mother.鈥

Then there鈥檚聽, who was sitting on his father鈥檚 knee when he became fatherless, landing on the roof of the building next door. His sister was on the same roof, in two pieces. His five siblings were all killed in the Israeli air strike that sent him flying. Ali survived with his mother, but more than 200 people, their family and neighbours, did not.鈥

If the Israeli soldiers responsible for such wanton destruction of life are troubled, they have a funny way of showing it.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a boy!鈥 one group of soldiers shouted and laughed after they blew up a building in a cloud of blue smoke. The mass slaughter of Palestinians is compared to the 鈥済ender reveal鈥 that accompanies a new birth.鈥

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu鈥檚 plan to subject Gaza to indefinite 鈥渃ontrol鈥 of this sort was聽. The plan envisions Palestinians being squeezed into the southern third of what was already among the most densely populated regions on earth, in zones mislabelled 鈥渟afe鈥.

鈥淕aza will be entirely destroyed,鈥 Israel鈥檚 Finance Minister聽 said, a few days after declaring Israel would extend its full sovereignty over the occupied West Bank, where destruction and bloodshed continues unabated.鈥

This slaughter and starvation have not prompted any significant international mobilisation. No calls for intervention to enforce a ceasefire or resumption of aid. No calls to sanction Israel or expel its diplomats. No military, financial or political consequences. Only words. The words: 鈥淲e will continue to call on all parties 鈥 ceasefire, hostage returns and humanitarian aid to be delivered鈥澛爁oreign minister continues to parrot.

But, at 77, Israel is ailing.

The old tales that sustained its propaganda in the West stand exposed. The 鈥渓and without a people鈥 had people, the Palestinians, who never ceded their rights to freedom and sovereignty.

People now grasp that it is international law that should be respected, not promises transferred from the scripture of one community among many in our modern world.鈥

As the 鈥渕iracle called Israel鈥 narrative wanes, as attempts to dress up a genocide in the clothes of 鈥渟elf-defence鈥 fail,聽聽have become Israel鈥檚 only discourse.

Even in the United States, long a bastion of political and cultural support for Israel, Americans鈥痑re 聽by Zionism鈥檚 hideous face. The resurgence of university protests, despite their repression, is a testament to the depth of the change.

It is a change that seems to have passed our leaders by.

Palestine鈥檚 impact on the outcome of Australia鈥檚 federal election has been contested. The Greens 鈥斺痶he most vocal party on Palestine 鈥 have improved their popular vote, but lost their seats in the lower house. Electoral redistributions and Liberal, Labor and One Nation coalescing against them on preferences are the reason for this outcome.

But penalising the Greens for taking a moral stance on Palestine won鈥檛 change the feelings of ordinary Australians sickened by Israeli war crimes.

The Liberals, the most militant supporters of Israel鈥檚 onslaught,鈥痺ere wiped out and their leader Peter Dutton鈥檚 anti-Palestinian racism rejected.

Palestinians and their supporters must not count on the government suddenly finding its conscience at the back of a drawer. We must continue pressing for our country, a middle power with a secure majority government, to use every lever at its disposal to advocate for the rights of Palestinians, as it does for Ukrainians.

Last month, Abdullah helped us get spectacles for 600 children, so they could resume their education. We were going to focus on dental health and education next, but our plans had to change.

It is US$11 for a kilogram of potatoes, Nidal, another partner of Olive Kids, tells me. Please move fast and secure all the vegetables you can get, I told him, hoping this won鈥檛 change tomorrow.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese once said: 鈥淲e need a government that leaves no one behind.鈥 I wonder if his government believes the children of Gaza deserve to be left behind. If it can鈥檛 take a tangible step to save them, it is humanity we are leaving behind.

[Amin Abbas is a diaspora Palestinian and founding board member of the Australian Foundation for Palestinian Children, Olive Kids. This article was first published at .]

You need 一品探花, and we need you!

一品探花 is funded by contributions from readers and supporters. Help us reach our funding target.

Make a One-off Donation or choose from one of our Monthly Donation options.

Become a supporter to get the digital edition for $5 per month or the print edition for $10 per month. One-time payment options are available.

You can also call 1800 634 206 to make a donation or to become a supporter. Thank you.