Hostilities in the Gaza Strip and Israel | Flash Update #56

On 1 December, at about 7:00, hostilities resumed following a humanitarian pause that started on 24 November. Heavy Israeli bombardments across Gaza, as well as ground fighting and indiscriminate rocket fire from Palestinian armed groups to Israel have been reported. As of 20:00, at least 178 Palestinians have been killed and 589 injured, according to the Ministry of Health in Gaza (MoH); no Israeli fatalities have been reported in this context.

  • OCHA Under-Secretary-General Emergency Relief Coordinator Martin Griffiths stated that the pause had “offered us a glimpse of what can happen when the guns fall silent...We need to maintain – and build on – the progress in aid delivery. We need civilians and the life-sustaining infrastructure they rely on to be protected. We need the remaining hostages to be released immediately and unconditionally. We need a humanitarian ceasefire. We need the fighting to stop.”

  • Since the resumption of hostilities on 1 December, and as of 18:00, no aid convoys or fuel deliveries have entered Gaza and aid convoys ready to enter Gaza have remained on the Egyptian side of the border. Humanitarian operations within Gaza have largely halted, except for services within shelters and limited distributions of flour in areas south of Wadi Gaza (hereafter: the south). The evacuation of wounded people and dual nationals to Egypt, and the return of Gazans stranded in Egypt, have also stopped.

  • On 1 December, the Israeli military published online a detailed map, where the Gaza Strip is divided into hundreds of small areas. Reportedly, the map is intended to facilitate orders to evacuate specific areas ahead of their targeting. The publication does not specify where people should evacuate to. It is unclear how those residing in Gaza would access the map without electricity and amid recurrent telecommunications cuts.

  • On 1 December, Israeli forces dropped leaflets ordering residents of localities east of Khan Younis, in the south (Al Qarara, Khuza’a, Abasan and Bani Suheila) to move to the shelters in the Rafah area. As of 21:00, no major displacement from these areas has been reported.

  • In the West Bank, since 7 October, over 3,000 Palestinians have been arrested, with more than 160 in the past six days. Many of them have been arrested without being presented direct evidence of an offense. According to the UN Human Rights Office, six Palestinian men have died in Israeli custody during this period, a decades-long high.

    Read the full report: Hostilities in the Gaza Strip and Israel | Flash Update #56

Destruction in the Gaza Strip. Photo by the Palestine Red Crescent Society, 1 December 2023

Free Documentary films on Gaza

By Lawrence Mosqueda PhD, Professor Emeritus, The Evergreen State College

While it is possible to read many books (another list will be provided for that) on the current situation in Gaza, many people do not have extra time to read those books quickly.  Therefore, the following list of documentary movies, that are freely available, can provide a relatively quick learning curve, individually or in groups, with a minimal amount of time. They are listed in approximate order when they could be watched but, of course, any order is useful.  There are many, many other films, of course, but these are a beginning recommendation.

At the end of this film list there is a very solid list of alternative sources to the mainstream media.  Some are Jewish sources, some are Arab, and some are neither. All are time tested for credibility and historical reliability.

  • Imperial Geography- Palestine and Israel with David Barsamiam

(Available Free On You Tube, 2002 -28 minutes)

Short, concise history of the region by the founder of Alternative Radio

“To grasp the complexities of the struggle between Arabs and Jews in the region, we need to know the maps…. The media often say that the clash between the Palestinians and the Jews is "as old as the hills." This is a fabrication. The conflict is really less than a century old and really develops with clarity after World War I. The role of the Great Powers, especially Britain and France in engineering the current situation is the focus of this program.”

  • Edward Said: On Orientalism, Sut Jhally and Sanjay Talrejo

(Available Free on YouTube – 40 minutes, 1998)

Based on his book Orientalism, “Said argues that the Western (especially American) understanding of the Middle East as a place full of villains and terrorists ruled by Islamic fundamentalism produces a deeply distorted image of the diversity and complexity of millions of people who live in such a vast region…. such perceptions, and the consequent cultural representations, have served, and continue to serve, as implicit justifications for the colonial and imperialist ambitions of the European powers and of the U.S….”

  • Peace, Propaganda and the Promised Land, Bathsheba Ratzkoff and Sut Jhally

(Available Free on YouTube, I hr. 20 minutes, 2003, Age verification needed)

“This video shows how the foreign policy interests of American political elites-working in combination with Israeli public relations strategies-influence US news reporting about the Middle East conflict. Combining American and British TV news clips with observations of analysts, journalists and political activists, Peace, Propaganda & the Promised Land provides a brief historical overview, a striking media comparison, and an examination of factors that have distorted U.S. media coverage and, in turn, American public opinion.”

  • Five Broken Cameras, Emad Burnat and Guy Davidi

(Available Free on YouTube, 2013- 1hr. 26 minutes)

“Nominated for an Oscar, 5 Broken Cameras is a deeply Personal first-hand account of life and non-violent resistance in Bel’in, a West bank village where Israel is building a security fence….”

  • Roadmap to Apartheid, Anna Nogueira, Eron Davidson, and Alice Walker

(Available Free on YouTube, 2012, 1 hour, 34 minutes)

Ana Nogueira is a white South African and Eron Davidson a Jewish Israeli…the producers take a close look at the apartheid comparison often used to describe the Israeli-Palestinian conflict…. There are many lessons to draw from the South African experience relevant to conflicts all over the world. This film is as much a historical document of the rise and fall of apartheid, as it is a film about why many Palestinians feel they are living in an apartheid system today, and why an increasing number of people around the world agree with them.

  • Checkpoint: The Palestinians After Oslo, Tom Wright and Therese Saliba, two members of the Rachel Corrie foundation (Available Free on YouTube, 1997, 58 minutes). Also see Tom Wright’s Video Archive, also Free on You Tube)

“1997 Documentary about Palestinian life in the wake of the Oslo "peace" agreement, as settlement building expands, the Palestinian Authority takes over some areas, and the Israeli occupation worsens.”

Current Information Sources:

Daily news, articles, and YouTube channel.

Daily news, articles, and YouTube Channel.

Excellent Jewish Website for actions and analysis. Read “THE WIRE”

Excellent Jewish Website.  See especially the “Liberation Syllabus” for many books for adults and children and various works of art.

Excellent Jewish website for analysis and podcast.

First (1996) independent Arab news channel based in Qatar.  News on Middle East, Global Politics, and other issues.

Daily news articles and commentary on global and U.S. domestic issues

Daily news program that has hundreds of articles and stories in its internal website since October 2023 and thousands of articles that are archived to the 1990s.


Sixteen Years of Childhood in Gaza

Visualizing Palestine

Israel is not only killing Palestinian children at astonishing rates, but killing the childhood of those who survive. We first published this visual as "Four Wars Old" in May 2021, and with today's update, it highlights SIX Israeli military assaults on Gaza in sixteen years. Disgraceful.

No child should grow up like this. Stay loud, keep the pressure on. Head to the link in our bio for action tools. bit.ly/take-action-gaza

Hostilities in the Gaza Strip and Israel | Flash Update #55. Nov 30

On 30 November, the humanitarian pause entered its seventh consecutive day. It has enabled a major increase in the delivery of basic supplies into and across Gaza, primarily by the Egyptian and Palestinian Red Crescent Societies and UN agencies. However, as stressed by the UN Secretary-General on 29 November, the level of aid remains completely inadequate to meet the needs. 

  • Aid convoys to areas to the north of Wadi Gaza (hereafter: the north), which prior to the pause have received almost no supplies, continued on 30 November. Since the start of the pause until 29 November, approximately 4,850 metric tons (MT) of food, (primarily wheat flour, rice and canned food), 1,700 MT of blankets and mattresses, 1,110 MT of bottled water, 148 MT of medical supplies and 29,500 litres of fuel were delivered to UNRWA shelters, hospitals and warehouses in the north. About 88 per cent of this assistance was delivered by the Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS), in coordination with the UN, and the remainder by UN agencies.  

  • South of Wadi Gaza (hereafter: the south), where most internally displaced persons (IDPs) are staying, enhanced aid distribution, including fuel to hospitals, water and sanitation facilities, and shelters, also continued on 30 November. Between 24 and 29 November, 630 MT of wheat flour were distributed to 224,000 people in the south, along with 63,000 blankets and mattresses. Cooking gas has been entering daily from Egypt during this period and has been available in the market at one distribution centre in the south, albeit in quantities well below the demand.  

  • On 29 November, the Director-General of the World Health Organization (WHO) reiterated his concern about the high risk of infectious diseases in IDP shelters, attributing this to severe overcrowding and the disruption of health, water, and sanitation systems. He noted that more than 111,000 cases of acute respiratory infection, 36,000 cases of diarrhoea in children below five, and 24,000 cases of skin rash had been recorded since the start of the crisis.  

  • On 30 November, eight Israelis held as hostages in Gaza, and 30 Palestinian detainees, held in Israeli prisons, were released. The freed hostages comprised six women, one girl and one man. Among the Palestinian detainees were seven women and 23 children. Since the start of the pause, 240 Palestinians, 86 Israelis, and 24 foreign nationals have reportedly been released. 

Hostilities and casualties (Gaza Strip)

  • While the humanitarian pause that started on 24 November has largely held, sporadic incidents have been reported. On 29 November, at about 18:00, Israeli troops reportedly opened fire at Palestinians in northern Gaza city, killing two of them; the circumstances remain unclear. On 30 November, additional shooting incidents were reported in Gaza city, as well as shelling by the Israeli navy towards the Gaza shore in the south, none of which resulted in casualties. 

  • According to the Government Media Office (GMO) in Gaza, since the start of hostilities, more than 15,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza, including about 6,150 children and 4,000 women. The GMO, which is under the de facto authorities in Gaza, has been reporting casualties since the Ministry of Health (MoH) in Gaza stopped doing so on 11 November, following the collapse of services and communications at hospitals in the north. 

  • The fatality toll since 7 October includes at least 198 Palestinian medics, according to the Gaza Ministry of Health; 112 UN staff; 70 journalists and media workers, according to the Palestinian Journalist Syndicate; and at least 15 Civil Defense staff, according to the Palestinian Civil Defense. 

  • Overall, 75 Israeli soldiers have been killed in Gaza since the start of the Israeli ground operations, according to official Israeli sources. 

    Read the full report: Hostilities in the Gaza Strip and Israel | Flash Update

Critical supplies being prepared for shipment into Gaza. Photo by the Egyptian Red Crescent Society