On a windswept beach in southern Gaza, Ahmed Muin Abu Amsha stands on higher ground to catch a signal, his phone pointed toward the Mediterranean Sea below. Behind him, a parachute marks his makeshift home- one tent among thousands that line the shore of Zawaida, where displaced families huddle together with nowhere else to go.
"This is my camp," Ahmed says, panning his camera across the beach. "That parachute over there is my tent. We do activities there."
The music teacher from Beit Hanoun has become an unlikely symbol of resilience in Gaza, his viral video of children singing along to drone sounds capturing both the horror and the defiant spirit of life under siege. But behind the million views lies a stark reality: hunger, disease, displacement, and a future that grows more uncertain with each passing day.
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Fleeing at 3 AM, Losing Everything
Ahmed's journey to this beach began with a phone call at 3 o'clock in the morning. "We received a call that said 'leave immediately,'" he recalls. "We ran away without shoes, without taking anything. After five minutes, they blew up the block. There were people who died. I lost my home. I lost my studio. I lost everything."
The displacement from Beit Hanoun to Zawaida took ten days of deliberation and $500 for transport alone- a fortune in a place where money has lost much of its meaning.
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