Consider This from NPR - A harrowing journey to find food in Gaza
Episode Date: July 10, 2025Israel bans international journalists from independent access to Gaza. But NPR's Anas Baba is from Gaza, and in the 21 months he has been reporting on the war, he's also been living it. Over the cours...e of the war, he has lost a third of his body weight, and until his food supplies ran out several weeks ago, he was getting by on just one small meal a day.Israel still tightly restricts the entry of food into Gaza. The food it does allow in is mostly distributed through new sites run by private American contractors with a group called the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation. GHF operates under protection from the Israeli military, and the U.N. Secretary General António Guterres said this new system "is killing people."According to health officials and international medical teams in Gaza, hundreds of people have been killed by Israeli troops as they approach these food sites. U.S. officials have accused American media of spreading Hamas misinformation. In this episode, Anas Baba takes us on the perilous journey he made to one of these new GHF distribution sites, in an attempt to secure food.For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Email us at considerthis@npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
For months, Anas Baba and Piar's producer in Gaza has been talking to people like Nadia
Al-Masri, whose families were facing starvation amid Israel's blockade on the territory.
Hunger, she says, is when your children cry themselves to sleep.
They are too hungry.
Her family of 12 was living in a shelter of worn tarps, and Baba found her making bread
out of crushed lentils and pasta.
Tell me, what is the sin of all these people?
Two and a half million for Hamas.
Why are you punishing everyone?
She asks.
What do we have to do with Hamas?
It's not right to make the entire population more than two million people suffer, she adds.
Israel bans international journalists from independent access to Gaza.
But Baba is from Gaza, and in the 21 months he's been reporting on the war, he's also
been living it.
He was eating just one small meal a day and rationing his food supplies until those supplies
ran out several weeks ago.
I cannot find the basics, just like flour, cooking oil, lentils.
Over the war, he has lost a third of his body weight,
and he's been observing what severe hunger does to a person's body.
Women faint in the street, children faint in the street.
Hunger is a little bit of an addiction.
Once you feel that your stomach, your brain, your body is craving something,
you will not be afraid of anything, and you can do anything
to bring food for your children and for yourself.
Israel still tightly restricts the entry of food into Gaza.
The food it does allow in is mostly distributed through new sites
run by private
American contractors. The group is called the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, or GHF. It operates
under protection from the Israeli military. The UN Secretary General has said this new system,
quote, is killing people. According to health officials and international medical teams in Gaza,
hundreds of people have been killed by Israeli troops as they approach these food sites.
U.S. officials have accused American media of spreading Hamas misinformation.
After Anas Baba ran out of food, he had to make the perilous journey himself
to one of these new GHF distribution sites.
It's truly a day in my life that I will never, ever forget.
Consider this.
One Israeli lawmaker has openly said he wants Gazans to starve.
Now, getting food has become a deadly venture for many Palestinians.
From NPR, I'm Ari Shapiro. later and less than past generations. But I would say that they are in general, not less horny.
But wait, then why aren't they having sex?
Fear around sex really doesn't leave people to want to have it.
Why might Gen Z be scared of sex? Listen to the It's Been A Minute podcast today.
It's Consider This from NPR.
Getting food in Gaza today requires putting your life on the line.
It's a trek NPR's producer in Gaza, Anas Baba, experienced himself on the evening of
June 23.
The account you're about to hear is rare reporting by a journalist from inside a new food distribution
site that the US and Israel set up in Gaza,
cites the United Nations, calls death traps.
Before we start, a warning that in this story you will hear the sounds of gunfire and descriptions
of violence.
Here's NPR's Daniel Estrin.
Strict Israeli controls on food entering Gaza have driven widespread hunger. On the evening of June 23rd,
Anas Baba and his cousin walked for hours to get food
at one of the new food distribution sites
run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.
It's truly a day in my life that I will never, ever forget.
We packed a small backpack, water, bandages, first aid kit.
Others tuck a large empty sack under their belt on one hip and on the other.
And the other side is a knife to protect themselves from the looters and the bandits.
Around midnight, Baba joined large crowds waiting to approach the food site.
GHF has changing hours and opens and closes the site at very short notice,
they say to prevent crowd surges.
But to get there, you have to pass through an Israeli military zone.
Baba says some edge close to get to the front of the crowd before the site opens,
despite the risk of Israeli
soldiers perceiving them as a threat.
This is the moment where everyone here says that the GSF site is open, and now it's 1.30
after midnight.
So, we can see that.
All of the cars turns on the engine and they started to race each other motorcycles.
And between them there is people running between the cars.
I see some people that are being crashed.
I see some people that they were literally underneath the cars.
He ran with the crowd, but when they got close to the site, they were shocked to find an
Israeli tank.
The crowd was wrong.
The food site was not yet open.
Every single person started to retreat and run, and the tank did not even wait a second.
Baba recorded the gunfire from a distance.
He and his cousin threw themselves to the ground.
And I heard the gunshots and the people screaming that they are injured and other
they're saying that my brother died and other were screaming my friend died.
It's still at the meantime, 1.48 and the gunfire didn't stop and they can see in front of me that
people are still awaiting.
They're not leaving.
The Israeli military told NPR people gathered near the site
and adjacent to Israeli IDF troops.
Quote,
reports of injured individuals as a result of IDF fire in the area were received.
The details are under review.
At 2 a.m., the gunfire just stopped,
and we told ourselves maybe this is a sign from them
that we were going to go for another run.
I stepped in, buddies, and they didn't stop.
This is another run?
This time, the GHF site was open.
Baba watched large crowds tear down a fence
to reach boxes of food sitting on wooden pallets. The HF site was open. Baba watched large crowds tear down a fence
to reach boxes of food sitting on wooden pallets.
I grabbed my cell phone and started to record what I'm seeing in front of me.
And people enter fighting each other to take as much as possible.
A woman in her 40s with her son and that woman, Switi, with an angry face.
She was holding two knives in her own hands
and she was screaming at everyone,
do not even touch my son or the food.
It didn't used to be this kind of free for all.
For most of the war, there were hundreds
of aid distribution centers across Gaza.
UN agencies would send a text message when it was your turn to pick up food, and everyone
got some.
Israel and the US accused Hamas of diverting that aid, so they set up the GHF to keep Hamas
away.
But at the GHF site, Baba saw people he believes were Hamas members, based on their looks,
taking food for their families.
GHF told NPR, it's impossible to screen for individuals affiliated with Hamas,
but said it was preventing Hamas from controlling the flow of aid.
GHF also said it forbids Palestinians from filming U.S. contractors at the site.
People came to me telling me, look at your forehead.
There is three laser points, green laser points, on my head from the American contractors.
And one of them say out loud with the speaker, no filming is allowed.
Asked about this reporting, GHF acknowledged the concern that the changing hours could
expose people to potential Israeli military
fire.
The military says it's opened new roads and created new signage.
GHF says Hamas has wounded and killed people en route to their sites, and has killed and
threatened Palestinians working with them.
One hundred and seventy rights groups and aid groups have called for the GHF system
to be dismantled.
At the distribution site, Baba grabbed whatever food he could find tossed on the ground.
I bought 5 kilograms of rice.
It was open with some sand in it, but I didn't care.
It's food, I can wash it.
His cousin got trampled on the ground by the crowds, and he helped pull him up.
Then they fought upstream through a river of people trying to leave with their bags
of food.
Walking back, they were stopped by four masked thieves.
They were having big knives and they told us, you do have two options.
Give us half of what you had, okay?
Or we're going to harm you.
When the thieves refused to negotiate, Baba and his cousin threw two bags of food at the
thieves and ran away with enough food to give their relatives.
Baba was left with about a week and a half of supplies for himself.
Help us now!
Later that morning, Baba went to the hospital.
Health officials said more than 200 people were wounded and 26 killed outside the food site.
There is no white shrouds in the hospitals in the meantime.
The dead bodies that were lying on the ground were covered
by the same sacks that they were taken to fill it up with food.
Every day, GHF has opened its food distribution sites, including today.
Gaza health officials say hungry people seeking food have been killed.
And many people returned from the sites empty-handed.
That was reporting from NPR's Daniel Estrin and Anas Baba.
This episode was produced by Janaki Mehta and Matt Ozug.
It was edited by Christopher and Tal Yada, Nadia Lancy, and James Heider.
Our executive producer is Sammy Yenigan.
It's Consider This from NPR.
I'm Ari Shapiro.
