Israel’s War on Gaza Is a War on Children | Truthout

Israel’s War on Gaza Is a War on Children

Children in Gaza are not merely collateral damage; they are often actively 
being targeted.

In November, over a year into Israel’s genocide in Gaza, a report by the 
Gaza-based Community Training Center for Crisis Management produced a grim 
statistic: “Nearly all children in the embattled Palestinian enclave believe 
their death is imminent — and nearly half of them want to die.”

It is no wonder why the statistic, which came from a survey of families with 
disabled, injured or unaccompanied children, is so bleak. Amnesty 
International’s recent report lays bare the magnitude of the crisis: “Israel’s 
actions … have brought Gaza’s population to the brink of collapse. Its brutal 
military offensive had killed more than 42,000 Palestinians, including over 
13,300 children, and injured over 97,000 more, by 7 October 2024, many of them 
in direct or deliberately indiscriminate attacks, often wiping out entire 
multigenerational families.”

This unfathomable suffering — inflicted disproportionately on women and 
children — represents a moral abomination, a political travesty, and a 
militaristic cruelty of the highest order. The destruction of lives, 
institutions and essential humanitarian infrastructure goes beyond the 
annihilation of a people; it constitutes an assault on future generations and 
the very fabric of our shared humanity. Genocidal language dehumanizes and 
legitimizes the unthinkable: an indiscriminate war waged against the most 
defenseless — children.

Israel’s war on Palestinian youth is genocidal — not only in the starvation, 
maiming and unimaginable killing of children but in its relentless assault on 
any viable notion of what it means for these young people to be valued, human 
and alive with hope. It seeks to strip them of their dignity, rendering them 
invisible and unworthy in the eyes of the world, as if their lives are 
expendable, their dreams inconsequential. This overpowering violence amounts to 
what we may term childcide, which is the deliberate or systematic destruction 
of children, whether through direct violence, neglect, or the conditions of war 
and oppression that render them uniquely vulnerable. It is a traumatic 
manifestation of collective failure — a war against innocence, in which the 
fragile promise of childhood is extinguished before it can bloom. In Gaza, 
where children face relentless bombings, displacement and deprivation, 
childcide becomes not just an act of violence but a moral collapse: the erasure 
of futures, dreams and entire generations. It is a crime not only against the 
child but against humanity itself, leaving behind a void that no words can fill 
and no justice can fully repair.

In the U.S., the violence of childcide manifests more covertly in the 
censorship and repression of free speech driven by right-wing politicians, 
neoliberal educators and a reactionary billionaire donor class. This assault 
seeks to stifle the imagination and critical capacities of young people, 
eroding their ability to envision a more just future.

In Gaza, childcide takes on an overt and devastating form. The violence there 
kills and maims children, denies them lifesaving medical treatment, and robs 
them of their futures — sometimes their very limbs. The scale of this horror is 
staggering, matched only by the indifference or active complicity of nations 
like the United States, whose silence or direct support fuels this mass 
atrocity.

Under the incoming Trump administration, these forms of childcide in both the 
U.S. and Gaza are likely to intensify.

The War on Children

In October, close to 100 U.S. health care providers who have volunteered in the 
Gaza Strip over the past year sent a letter to President Joe Biden and Vice 
President Kamala Harris detailing “every one of us who worked in an emergency, 
intensive care, or surgical setting treated pre-teen children who were shot in 
the head or chest on a regular or even a daily basis. It is impossible that 
such widespread shooting of young children throughout Gaza, sustained over the 
course of an entire year is accidental or unknown to the highest Israeli 
civilian and military authorities.” Put differently, many of these children 
were deliberately killed by Israeli snipers and other troops.

This violence is not merely an attack on bodies but on the spirit, denying 
Palestinians the right to be seen as fully human, to belong to a community that 
nurtures their future, and to inhabit a world where intimacy and compassion 
prevail over violence and despair. Such cruelty is not just a crime against a 
people — it is a wound to the very essence of our shared existence.

The face of childcide was on full display for the world to see when news 
reports and videos circulated revealing a teenage boy, Sha’ban al-Dalou, 
burning alive in a tent in a refugee camp which had been hit by an Israeli 
airstrike. Zak Witus, writing in The Guardian describes what he saw:


I clicked on the accompanying video and I could not believe what I saw: an 
inferno blazing, people running around screaming, and there, amidst the flame, 
a body writhing, crackling; a raised arm, reaching out for help, still attached 
to an IV. I waited for the following morning to share the video, until the 
event had been reported by reputable news outlets, because the images appeared 
too gruesome to be real — like they were something out of a movie — but they 
were real: an Israeli airstrike hit near the grounds of al-Aqsa Martyrs’ 
hospital in the central Gaza city of Deir al-Balah and killed at least four 
people. The man that we saw burning alive? His name was Sha’ban al-Dalou, a 
19-year-old software engineering student.


The killing of Sha’ban al-Dalou is not an isolated act — it is part of a war of 
annihilation. How can any nation continue to support Israel, a rogue state 
pursuing a policy of extermination? How can the U.S., with full knowledge of 
this genocidal war waged with impunity, not act to oppose it? This is not just 
a war of brutality — it is also a damning indictment of Western European 
nations, who pride themselves on being democracies yet remain complicit through 
their refusal to condemn or obstruct the mass killing and extermination of 
Palestinian women and children. The evil of fascism lies not only in its acts 
of systemic violence but also in the silence of those who enable, justify and 
profit from it.

As Iain Overton, executive director of the United Kingdom-based group Action on 
Armed Violence, notes, “The world’s failure to protect Gaza’s children is a 
moral failing on a monumental scale. We must act decisively and compassionately 
to ensure that these children’s voices are heard and their futures protected.” 
Parliament member Jeremy Corbyn goes further, stating that, “Every single 
supplier of arms to Israel has blood on its hands — and the world will never 
forgive them.”

Of all those complicit, the Biden administration has the most blood on its 
hands. Even as Biden’s presidency comes to an end and Prime Minister Benjamin 
Netanyahu has been declared a war criminal by the International Court of 
Justice, Biden refuses to end the U.S.’s complicity in Israel’s war crimes. As 
Jeffrey D. Sachs notes, Biden has turned “the U.S. military and federal budget 
over to Netanyahu for his disastrous wars … which have been an unmitigated 
disaster for the American people, bleeding the U.S. Treasury of trillions of 
dollars, squandering America’s standing in the world, making the U.S. Complicit 
in his genocidal policies, and bringing the world closer to World War III.”

Gaza Is a Warning

The elimination of the Palestinian people and the genocidal war against its 
children are not merely a campaign of death; they are a calculated assault on 
history, heritage and memory, systematically erasing an entire generation and 
leaving behind a void where lives, dreams and the promise of a future once 
flourished. This assault is being committed by an authoritarian state sustained 
by a cruelty so profound it extinguishes any semblance of morality, justice or 
freedom, leaving only the desolation of unchecked cruelty. James Baldwin once 
wrote, “The children are always ours, every single one of them, all over the 
globe; and I am beginning to suspect that whoever is incapable of recognizing 
this may be incapable of morality.” Today, this form of immorality is 
everywhere — it has become a signifier of power, a weapon wielded by those who 
conflate might with right.

The dream of democracy, once a beacon of hope, has been hollowed out by the 
militarized machinery of death. In Gaza, this machinery lays bare its darkest 
truth: Children are not only expendable but deliberately targeted, their deaths 
a chilling symbol of a deeper intent. Here, the global war on youth reaches its 
most grotesque conclusion. The bodies of Palestinian children litter the ruins 
of Gaza, serving as grim declarations — a warning that not only fighters and 
militants must be extinguished, but the very possibility of a Palestinian 
future must be annihilated.

What is unfolding in Gaza is not an isolated atrocity; it is a preview of the 
insidious fascism colonizing the globe. The deliberate targeting of the most 
vulnerable reveals a chilling calculus of power, one that sees children not as 
the bearers of hope but as obstacles to a supremacist vision of conquest. Their 
destruction is meant to erase not only their lives but also the memory and 
resilience of their people, ensuring that the very idea of Palestine is 
consigned to oblivion.

This is the bitter lesson of our time: the war on youth, waged in countless 
ways across the world, finds its endpoint in Gaza. There, children are not 
merely collateral damage; they are the targets of a brutal ideology that seeks 
to eradicate the possibility of a Palestinian tomorrow. If we cannot rise to 
this moment, if we cannot defend the sanctity of childhood and the universality 
of human rights, we risk forfeiting what it means to be human — as well as the 
ideals, promises and hopes for a radical democracy.

How We Resist
Resistance must begin by exposing the fascist threat for what it truly is — a 
systemic and calculated assault on democracy, justice and human dignity. This 
is not simply a matter of defending the rule of law; it demands a mobilization 
of collective passions and civic courage to fight repression and ignite mass 
resistance. The fight for justice can only commence with a clear recognition of 
the state of injustice that grips the U.S. today. This is both a political and 
pedagogical imperative.
For resistance to be lasting and meaningful, people must grasp not only how 
these violations shape their own lives but also how they harm their neighbors 
and erode the broader social fabric. This recognition fosters solidarity, 
building the foundation for resistance that is rooted in shared purpose and 
mutual accountability.

When the political and the personal intersect, thinking becomes a form of 
action. It is this interplay — between the intimate realities of individual 
lives and the structural conditions of the social order — that fuels movements 
capable of transformative change. Only then can resistance transcend fleeting 
gestures and ignite a sustained fight for justice and democracy.

We must create spaces and strategies that enable people to question, think 
critically and reclaim their agency. This means investing not only in direct 
action but also in educational efforts that cultivate a collective 
understanding of how capitalism and imperialism dehumanize and divide, eroding 
both social responsibility and democratic ideals. Resistance requires not just 
acts of defiance but the formation of a new language, a new imaginary, and new 
institutions capable of inspiring solidarity and sustaining a culture of 
resistance.

The intertwined crises of scholasticide and childcide represent not merely a 
breakdown in politics and morality but a failure of ideas and critical 
consciousness. What is needed is an ongoing struggle over ideas — a battle for 
radical imagination and awareness as the foundation for mass resistance. The 
staggering inequalities of wealth and power must not only be named and 
addressed but systematically dismantled. The stakes are too high to ignore: 
democracy itself, the lives of the marginalized, the futures of young people, 
and the survival of the planet are all at risk.

Palestine exemplifies the resilience and power of such resistance, where 
education under siege becomes a weapon against erasure, and the act of learning 
transforms into a form of defiance.

Popular education initiatives, underground schools and steadfast communities 
refusing to abandon their heritage are living testimonies to the unyielding 
Palestinian character. The spirit of Palestinian resistance embodies the moral 
and political essence of collective courage, unwavering determination and an 
unrelenting struggle for freedom, justice and sovereignty against overwhelming 
odds. Their struggle reveals that even in the face of unrelenting oppression, 
the collective imagination for justice and freedom can thrive.

In her poem, “We Teach Life, Sir,” Palestinian poet Rafeef Ziadah touches on 
these themes, refuting a common refrain from U.S. pundits that Palestinians 
“teach their children to hate.” Instead, Ziadah asserts, “We Palestinians teach 
life after they have occupied the last sky. We teach life after they have built 
their settlements and apartheid walls, after the last skies.” A multiracial, 
multi-class movement must absorb these lessons of life. We must draw 
inspiration from this steadfastness, transcending its divisions, and uniting 
around a shared commitment to confronting and defeating both Trumpism and the 
neoliberal fascism that made it possible.

As I have argued before, under these circumstances and at this juncture in 
history, resistance is not optional — it is an absolute necessity. To resist is 
to reclaim hope, justice and the possibility of a radically better future, 
drawing strength from the enduring examples of those who, like Palestinians, 
refuse to relinquish their humanity or their dreams for liberation.
Henry Giroux


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