Wed 30-April-2025

Gaza’s students fight back after Israel tried to destroy their future

Monday 9-August-2021

As Palestinian high school students celebrate their success in the Tawjihi exams and plan for the future those in Gaza are still trying to rebuild their lives after Israel’s brutal bombing campaign in May.

The Tawjihi exams were held just one month after the ceasefire was announced which brought 11 days of Israeli bombing to an end. Tens of thousands of Palestinians were forced to flee from their homes during the assault leaving all their belongings behind. Some have been able to return while others found their belongings buried under the rubble.

However emerging from the depths of this tragedy we find impressive and inspiring stories of success.

Wafaa Amjad Musa Abu Al-Naga from Khan Younis was a student at Umm Salamah Secondary School for Girls in the southern Gaza Strip. This week she discovered that she attained 99.1 per cent in her Tawjihi exams.

Her description of the days before the exam make her feat ever more striking.

“Our house was threatened by Israeli bombing. When we left I could not take my school books. Two days before it was bombed I risked my life and went to the house despite the threat of the occupation and took all my books” she explains.

The atmosphere of displacement from one house to another made me unable to study for nearly a month.

“After the trouble of the end of the war on Gaza we were able to settle in a house a week before my exams. The time I had to study was very limited so I relied on the summaries and questions from here and there” she adds.

With God’s help her family were able to create the appropriate conditions for her to study while they were in their new accommodation she explains.

Some 82924 students sat the Tawjihi exams this year the Palestinian Ministry of Education has said of whom 59182 passed a passing rate of 71.37 per cent.

Amongst them was Abd Al-Rahman Ayman Muhareb Habib who found himself in the middle of the bombardment breathing in smoke and dust. Despite this and the constant shelling and aggression by the occupation’s warplanes on Gaza City he achieved a 99 per cent average in the exams.

Though he excelled at his studies Abd Al-Rahman ‘s medical condition worsened with the rubble surrounding his building affecting his lung disease.

For these students they were the lucky ones they survived the bombing sat their exams and excelled. Tawfeeq Abu Alouf wasn’t so lucky he and his entire family were murdered in an Israeli strike leaving only his brother Amjad behind. The family perished in what Palestinians refer to as the Al-Wehda Street Massacre when more than 45 Palestinians were killed.

Amjad tells MEMO: “Tawfeeq was in his room studying science minutes before the house was hit.”

Students now face the challenge of enrolling in universities this will not just be determined by their grades but by their ability to afford the fees that come with this new phase.

Israel didn’t only target homes during its latest bombing campaign it hit health centers and factories leaving hundreds without jobs or an income.

Amna Khaled’s dreams of going to university were levelled as soon as the Israeli missile hit the factory where her father worked.

“My father worked in a factory in the industrial estate east of Gaza for many year but the occupation warplanes bombed it … this means that I will not be able to get in in the university” she tells MEMO.

Some 3000 factory workers were laid off as a result of the strikes. The effects of the brutal air raids campaign have still not fully come to light.

– Wafa Aludaini is a Gaza based journalist. Her article appeared in MEMO.

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