Displacement, hunger push some desperate families in Gaza to marry off their children |
Warning: The following includes descriptions of sexual violence
DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip (AP) — Majda was destitute. Her husband and eldest son were killed by Israeli airstrikes. Living in a ragged tent in Gaza with rats and the stench of sewage, she couldn’t support her children and feared her daughters would be harassed going to the communal latrine in a camp with hundreds of strangers.
So she made a decision she now deeply regrets. She married off her 13- and 14-year-old daughters to men who promised safety and support.
“I thought I was protecting them,” she said. “Fear was slaughtering me.”
The devastation of two years of war — sparked by Hamas’s October 7, 2023, terror onslaught — has wreaked havoc in Gaza and helped fuel an increase in marriages of young girls, according to experts and official data.
With almost the entire population driven from their homes, most living in squalid camps and dependent on aid, some parents have sought some financial stability for their teen daughters by giving them away in marriage.
For the girls, it meant a loss of their childhood and future — and, often, dangerous pregnancies.
For Majda’s daughters, it meant horrific physical abuse.
Child marriage was declining before the war
Before the war, child marriage had been slowly declining in Gaza, according to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics. In 2022, the last tally released by the bureau, 17.8 percent of marriages involved a girl under the age of 18, down from more than 22% in 2015.
The minimum legal age for marriage in Gaza is 17, with some exceptions allowed; the UN and most humanitarian groups categorize marriages of girls under 18 as early marriage.
That trend appears to have reversed.
After an Associated Press request, the Supreme Shariah Court in Gaza, where marriages are registered, gathered data from court employees. According to its figures, 20.6% of the 35,474 marriages recorded in 2024 and 2025 involved a girl under 18, including 627 marriages of girls under 15.
The real rate could be much higher because many marriages went unregistered during the chaos of the war, said Amal Siyam, director of the Women’s Affairs Center in Gaza. The number of marriage contracts recorded by the court dropped 35% in 2024.
The AP spoke to six girls in Gaza who married between the ages of 13 and 16, as well as their parents, all on condition that they not be identified by their full names because of the deep sensitivity of the issue. The AP does not identify rape victims. Majda agreed to be identified by only her first name.
All of the parents said that if not for the war, they would have never resorted to marrying off their daughters so young.
One mother is paralyzed by grief
After her husband and son were killed in separate strikes in April 2024, Majda descended into severe depression.
She begged the doctors for sedatives, which kept her asleep for days at a time. She couldn’t care for her girls in their patched-up........