menu_open Columnists
We use cookies to provide some features and experiences in QOSHE

More information  .  Close

Gaza Strip

35 0
yesterday

The catastrophic destruction across the Gaza Strip has been described by educators as a scholasticide. With nearly 90% of school buildings damaged or destroyed, and over 625,000 children denied formal education for more than a year, the crisis is not merely infrastructural—it is existential.
While the world debates the logistics of aid and reconstruction, the true blueprint for Gaza’s future is not drawn in cement and steel, but in the restoration of a child’s right to learn. Rebuilding the education system must be recognized as the paramount priority of any genuine recovery effort.
The scale of the devastation is difficult to comprehend. Not only have classrooms been flattened and universities razed, but thousands of students and educators have been killed or injured.
The remaining schools, often serving as crowded displacement shelters, offer no secure or stable environment for learning. This complete loss of educational routine, compounded by profound psychological trauma, risks creating a lost generation—a generation scarred by violence and stripped of the intellectual tools needed for reconstruction.
For these children, school is not just about literacy and math; it is a critical safe space, a source of stability, and the anchor of hope.
Education is the anti-fragility mechanism of any society. Gaza’s future engineers, doctors, teachers, and civic leaders must be trained today to lead the recovery tomorrow. When schools........

© The Patriot