//Gaza’s Hunger Crisis Deepens as Aid Runs Out Six Weeks Into Israel’s Total Blockade//

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//Gaza’s Hunger Crisis Deepens as Aid Runs Out Six Weeks Into Israel’s Total Blockade//

Palestinians gather to receive food cooked by a charity kitchen, in Nuseirat, central Gaza Strip, April 8, 2025. 

Six weeks have passed since Israel completely sealed off Gaza, blocking all supplies from entering the strip, and now, the situation has grown truly desperate for the 2.3 million people trapped inside, as food that was stockpiled during a brief ceasefire earlier this year has nearly vanished, emergency kitchens are running out of ingredients, and ordinary people are surviving on scraps and hope, with humanitarian agencies warning that time is almost up, and unless aid is allowed in soon, the looming threat of starvation will become a horrifying reality—one that already shows signs of unfolding across every city, tent camp, and war-damaged street in Gaza, especially in places like Khan Younis and Nuseirat, where families such as that of Rehab Akhras, a 64-year-old woman now forced to cook a single can of fava beans over cardboard flames to feed her 13 hungry relatives, say they have already survived war, airstrikes, and displacement, but now fear hunger more than bombs, because while they once woke and slept in fear of explosions, now they lie down and rise only to find nothing to eat, and it’s not just them, because throughout the central Gaza Strip, hundreds of people, including desperate children, queue for hours at the few remaining charity kitchens, like the one in Nuseirat, where kids push forward with empty buckets hoping for just one portion of cooked rice to bring back to siblings and parents who haven’t had a real meal in days, and these kitchens, supported by international aid groups, are themselves facing shutdown within days due to the blockade, which has made it impossible to restock food supplies or transport basics such as flour, oil, or lentils, leading organizations such as the World Food Programme

Palestinians gather to receive food cooked by a charity kitchen, in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip, April 8, 2025.

(WFP) to halt bread distribution after all 25 bakeries it supported were forced to close due to lack of flour and fuel, while UNRWA, the United Nations’ agency for Palestinian relief, warns of “very, very deep hunger” taking root in the population as basic food becomes unaffordable or simply nonexistent, and markets that once had affordable staples now offer only exorbitantly priced leftovers—like flour that used to sell for $6 a sack now costing over $60, or cooking oil jumping from $1.50 a liter to $10, if it’s even available at all, and in the absence of affordable nutrition, cases of malnutrition are rising fast, with the medical organization Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders) reporting increased numbers of severely undernourished children and pregnant women, and even nursing mothers now so weak and hungry they can no longer breastfeed their infants, while many families, like that of Neama Farjalla, begin their day before sunrise, trekking through dangerous war zones with young children in tow in search of a single soup kitchen with food left to serve, knowing full well that if the airstrikes don’t kill them, hunger will, especially when all her son wants is a simple glass of milk, something now harder to find than safety itself, and yet, amid all this, Israeli officials continue to deny there is a hunger crisis in Gaza, claiming instead that aid is being exploited by Hamas, the group governing Gaza, to rebuild its military capacity, and citing the 25,000 trucks of aid they say entered Gaza during the 42-day ceasefire before the borders were once again sealed in March, asserting that aid will not resume unless it is guaranteed to avoid so-called “terrorist” hands, while Hamas, for its part, denies using aid for military purposes and accuses Israel of weaponizing hunger to achieve political and military goals, creating a scenario in which millions of civilians are caught between politics and survival, with little hope in sight unless an immediate corridor is opened for humanitarian relief, and the longer this situation drags on, the closer Gaza moves toward famine, a new vocabulary term describing extreme scarcity of food causing widespread starvation and death, which is now a very real danger if trucks carrying flour, rice, oil, and basic medicine are not allowed in within days, not weeks, as even international food aid is being redirected away from standard food parcels and focused solely on providing hot meals for the most desperate—meals that will soon stop too, and Gaza’s people, especially its most vulnerable—babies, children, the elderly, and the sick—will be left with absolutely nothing, not even hope, as mothers watch their children shrink and faint from hunger, fathers return from long days of searching with empty hands, and every Gaza resident becomes a living witness to a preventable tragedy being allowed to unfold in slow, agonizing motion, while the world debates policy, and residents like Rehab Akhras can only wonder whether they will survive to see another ceasefire, or whether this blockade, more than the war itself, will finally break their bodies and spirit, and as global voices grow louder demanding access for food and medicine, time is ticking faster than aid talks, and the world must decide now whether it will let Gaza starve—or whether it will act before famine replaces hope as the only word that truly defines what life has become inside this besieged strip of land, where starvation, not just war, has become the gravest enemy.
Palestinians gather to receive food cooked by a charity kitchen, in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip, April 8, 2025. 

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