World

Gaza children risk snipers to attend tent schools after years without education

January 08, 2026
For many children at this school, it's the first return to education since the war began
For many children at this school, it's the first return to education since the war began

JERUSALEM — After two years of war, the hum of lessons and chatter of classmates resonates around the ruins of what was once Lulwa Abdel Wahab al-Qatami School, in the Tel al-Hawa neighbourhood in south-western Gaza City.

The relentless Israeli war has destroyed the vast majority of Gaza’s educational infrastructure, forcing families to create makeshift “tent schools” in dangerous proximity to Israeli forces — an area demarcated by Israel as the “yellow zone”.

According to Unicef, more than 97% of schools in Gaza were damaged or destroyed during the war. The Israeli military has made repeated claims that Hamas uses civilian infrastructure including schools to carry out operations but has rarely provided solid evidence.

The Lulwa school was hit in January 2024, and for months afterward, its grounds served as a shelter for displaced families. Today, it is again a place of learning — albeit in a more basic form.

The makeshift school is run by Unicef and brings together children from the original Lulwa school and others displaced by the war.

It does not teach the full Palestinian curriculum — only the basics: Arabic, English, mathematics and science.

The principal, Dr Mohammed Saeed Schheiber, has worked in education for 24 years. He took over management of the site in mid-November.

"We started with determination," he said, "to compensate students for what they lost."

Of the Strip's 658,000 school-aged children, most have had no formal education for nearly two years. During that time, many learned first-hand how hunger, displacement and death can shape their young lives. Now, something rare is emerging: a fragile glimpse of the childhoods they once knew.

The school currently serves 1,100 boys and girls, operating in three shifts a day — with boys attending on alternating days from girls. There are just 24 teachers.

"Before the war," Dr Schheiber says, "our students learned in fully equipped schools — science labs, computer labs, internet access, educational resources. All of that is gone."

There is no electricity here. No internet. And many children are struggling with trauma.

More than 100 students at the school lost one or both parents, had their homes destroyed, or witnessed killings during the war. In total, Dr Schheiber says, every student has been affected - directly or indirectly.

A counsellor now runs psychological support sessions, trying to help children process what they have endured.

Despite the effort, demand far exceeds capacity.

"We have more than a thousand students here already," Dr Schheiber says. "But only six classrooms per shift. There is a large displacement camp next to the school — families from northern and eastern Gaza. Many children want to enrol. We simply cannot take them."

Huda Bassam al-Dasouki, a mother of five displaced from southern Rimal, says education has become an overwhelming challenge.

"It's not that education doesn't exist," she says. "It's that it's extremely difficult."

Even before the war, schools struggled with shortages, she says. Now, basic supplies are unaffordable or unavailable.

Some children, she says, have fallen four years behind, including time lost during the Covid pandemic.

Standing outside one of the school tents, Jonathan Crickx, a Unicef spokesman, points to what is missing.

"Paper, notebooks, pens, erasers, rulers... we've been asking for a long time that these supplies can enter the Gaza Strip and they haven't been allowed in. It's the same for mental health and psychosocial recreative kits - toy kits that can be used to do mental health activities and recreational activities with the children," he says.

Israel says it is meeting its obligations under the ceasefire deal with Hamas and facilitating increased aid deliveries. The UN and multiple aid agencies dispute that, accusing Israel of continuing to restrict access to essential supplies.

Despite the ceasefire, Israel's bombardment of Gaza continues — with almost daily strikes — in response to what it says are Hamas violations of the deal. Still, the children keep coming. — Agencies


January 08, 2026
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