
Searching for a signal in Gaza
I am determined to continue my education amidst the scholasticide.
- Gaza Strip

I am determined to continue my education amidst the scholasticide.

From the balcony of our home, we now look out at bombed buildings, a pool of sewage water, and dark clouds of pollution hovering over a lifeless sea.

Reading by candlelight is a fire hazard but the only option without electricity, generators, or batteries.

Deadly odors, insects, mice, and mosquitoes proliferate as rubbish piles up in Gaza City.

I am a diligent student, but conditions inside Gaza make it incredibly hard to succeed academically.

I’ve lost 60 family members in the last year, and I struggle to process how quickly everything has changed.

The Israeli occupation destroyed Gaza’s public water works and killed my father’s colleagues as they repaired pipes.

A youth-led organization provides support, empowerment, and reasons for hope to families displaced by the war on Gaza.

Writers from WANN bring light and life back to displaced residents by installing emergency solar kits.

They may be slow and old-fashioned, but they are essential for survival.

Four newly graduated engineers in Gaza think harnessing the sea could fill a part of the electricity gap.

Gaza could be energy-independent. But will we be allowed to breathe on our own, or kept on life support?