More shelter, food and hope needed in Gaza
![The photograph shows a cluster of tents in a sandy area near a beach, with some people visible in the background.](/sites/default/files/2025-02/RS140184_17.jpeg)
While the ceasefire has brought a sense of relief to the people of Gaza, the need for humanitarian assistance is critical, particularly during these winter months when most of the population is homeless.
MCC has provided waterproof tarps for 500 families in Gaza this winter, but much more assistance is needed. An official from the Palestinian Authority has estimated temporary housing for Gaza’s population of more than 2 million will cost $6.5 billion, even before long-term reconstruction begins.
Winds off the Mediterranean Sea are especially cold for those living in makeshift camps. The rain and the chilly temperatures at night can be miserable, says Seth Malone, an MCC representative for Jordan, Palestine and Israel.
Like 90% of the population in Gaza, Nael*, his wife and seven children have been displaced multiple times as they fled the Israeli military invasion. Their house was destroyed, so they eventually set up their shelter on a relative’s land in a remote area of central Gaza.
Nael built a shelter out of blankets and fabric to try and protect his family from the elements. When staff from Al-Najd Developmental Forum, an MCC partner organization, found Nael’s family late in 2024, they realized immediate help was needed.
“Life in their improvised shelter was grim,” says an Al-Najd staffer. “The family lived without sufficient food, a safe place to stay or protection from the elements. Rainwater seeped through the thin layers of fabric, further deteriorating their harsh living conditions.”
![Two individuals adjust a tarp inside a tent. The space contains a patterned rug, bedding, and various items scattered around.](/sites/default/files/2025-02/RS140183_16.jpeg)
Al-Najd field workers gave the family a food basket and installed a durable, waterproof canvas tarp over a wooden frame for them. “For Nael and his loved ones, this intervention brought not only physical relief, but also a renewed sense of dignity and hope for the future,” reports the Al-Najd staffer.
Under the ceasefire terms, Israel is required to allow at least 600 truckloads of aid to enter Gaza each day of the initial six-week ceasefire, including 50 carrying fuel. Half of those trucks are supposed to go to Gaza’s north, which has near-famine conditions.
Despite numerous obstacles imposed by Israel, MCC is diligently working to deliver food shipments to Al-Najd to support 4,000 families in northern Gaza. Since the ceasefire, many people are returning north to camp where their homes once stood. The food is funded from MCC’s account at Canadian Foodgrains Bank and includes matching funds from the Government of Canada and the Humanitarian Coalition.
“We are dedicated to meeting immediate needs and providing what we can to help people through the initial phase of recovery,” says Malone. “But the road to reconstruction is going to be long, and it’s an even longer road to peace and justice.”
![man with one leg in wheelchair beside daughter and wife sitting on the floor](/sites/default/files/2025-02/legless%20man%20and%20family.jpg)
Receiving food and shelter goes a long way toward helping people have hope for the future despite their suffering. MCC partner Al-Najd built a shelter for 21-year-old Ahmed*. He was caught in a bombing in December 2023, while on the way to the grocery store. Both of his legs had to be amputated.
Tragedy has since followed him. During his stay at the hospital, his wife and their young son and daughter visited him, but as they walked home, more shelling occurred. A driver, who lost control of a car in the chaos, hit and killed their young son.
After Ahmed was released from the hospital, he and his wife and daughter found a place to stay close to the Mediterranean Sea, where Al-Najd built a shelter for them.
“I can’t thank them enough,” he says repeatedly. “My wife, daughter and myself would have been soaked. They brought me covers, blankets, bedding. Thank God. May God reward them with everything good.”
![father holding young daughter in his lap](/sites/default/files/2025-02/legless%20man%20with%20daughter%20smiling.jpg)
Despite the calamities he and his wife have endured, Ahmed hopes to walk again with prosthetic limbs and get a job so that his wife no longer needs to be the sole provider.
“First and foremost, I wish the war would stop and our lives would change for the better and improve. We want to live. We are human beings. We want to live, by God, nothing more. We want to live.”
MCC’s advocacy staff is working with legislators and in collaboration with other humanitarian agencies to ensure a permanent ceasefire, to support a Palestinian-led reconstruction of Gaza and to champion new opportunities for peace and justice for both Palestinians and Israelis.
“Now is the time to work towards ensuring that this ceasefire becomes permanent, supporting a Palestinian-led reconstruction of Gaza, and championing renewed possibilities for peace and justice for Palestinians and Israelis.”
MCC Canada Peace and Justice Office with MCC US NPJM support