DaysofPal- On New Year’s Eve, the banners held by children in the Shati refugee camp were more than fleeting slogans—they were a direct humanitarian message from Gaza’s children to the conscience of the world, urging action. When they wrote “Gaza Deserves Life”, they were claiming the most basic right to safety and survival. When they held signs reading “Give Gaza Joy That It Deserves”, they were pleading for a childhood untouched by tents and fear.
The words “Gaza Calls, Its Needs Cannot Wait” served as an urgent warning that their suffering could bear no more silence, while the simple plea “Aid Gaza” captured the daily tragedy they endure. In declaring “People of Gaza Deserve Happiness”, the children reminded the world of a basic human truth: joy is a right, not a privilege, and these small messages, carried on modest banners, were a last attempt to stir a conscience long delayed in defending Gaza and its children.
Candles Weaker Than the Wind
In the cold night air, mixed with the scent of rubble, small children stood before tattered tents in the Shati camp, holding candles weaker than the wind but stronger than the surrounding war. With the arrival of the new year, they proclaimed a single message: Gaza deserves life.
The photographs captured at Shati were not casual snapshots—they were silent testimonies to two years of loss and displacement. Children, dressed lightly with feet on the cold ground, eyes fixed on tiny flames, clung to the last remnants of hope.
A Call to Restore Joy
Amid tents erected over the ruins of a sports club destroyed by bombing, children gathered in a symbolic vigil at midnight. They held banners written in childlike handwriting, yet carrying profound meaning—demanding joy, pleading for life, and shouting at a world accustomed to their suffering without pause.
As the clock neared midnight, the candles were lit. Small hands trembled—not only from fear, but from the cold that accompanies them every night. Yet shy smiles struggled to emerge, piercing the darkness with fragile warmth.
A School Instead of a Tent
One child, speaking softly while staring at a candle, wished for a year without the sound of explosions, a return to school instead of a tent, and a normal day like children elsewhere in the world.
Another child, unnamed, expressed how the war had forced him to grow up too soon, stealing his play and laughter. Yet he joined the vigil to show that they are still here, and still able to dream, despite everything they have witnessed.
A Warm Home, Not a Tent
In another corner, a girl gripped her candle tightly and said her only wish was to return to a warm home that rain does not soak, and where fear does not wake her. She emphasized that a tent is no substitute for a home, nor for a childhood.
These candles were not a celebration—they were an act of human resistance, an attempt to redefine the new year in a place that has long known only the countdown to airstrikes. While children elsewhere exchange gifts, Gaza’s children exchange tents, cold, and anxiety.
Organized by local activists, the vigil was a statement that despite everything imposed upon them, Gaza’s children still possess the ability to stand and send a clear message: We are here, we love life, and we deserve it.
Children Remember, Adults Die
“The adults may die, but the children do not forget,” said Mohammed Madi, head of the Shati Camp Committee in western Gaza City, summarizing the message of the children’s vigil on New Year’s Eve.
In the harsh night of the camp, the candles did not dispel the darkness, but they revealed it. Behind these images were small faces yearning for a less cruel year, a land free from bombing, a childhood unthreatened, and a dawn that resembles life itself.
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