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Three Palestinian girls hold pink point-and-shoot cameras directly at the person taking their photograph. Two of them are wearing colorful striped shirts.

Issue 009 Fall 2025 Essays

Gaza, 5:45 a.m.

A Photo Diary

By Eman Mohammed

All images courtesy of Eman Mohammed.


The sun hit the citrus trees like it forgot we were under siege.

It was Ramadan, but the exhaustion wasn’t just from fasting; it lived in our bones, in our breath, in our spirit.


An older Arab man wearing a keffiyeh carries hay in both hands, while a young boy holding a rake nearby shields his face from the dust.
All images courtesy of Eman Mohammed.

The siege had stripped even hunger of meaning. Still, that morning was absurdly gentle. A breeze slipped through shattered windows. My mother served carrot cake for my eldest’s birthday with no candles, no sprinkles, just chocolate over vegetables and quiet pretending. 

I left for work. South, toward Khan Younis, where locals warned a strike was coming. Forty-five minutes passed. Nothing. A distraction. They hit another home—the Kaware family. Nine killed after a grandmother was told she had 30 seconds. She called out. They came.

Then the missile.


A woman in a blue polka dot hijab and a young boy wearing a teal shirt and sandals sit in the concrete ruins of their decimated home.
All images courtesy of Eman Mohammed.
Four hijabi women walk alongside each other with their heads hung. Three of them hold babies in their arms.
All images courtesy of Eman Mohammed.

Strikes lit Sheikh Redwan, Al-Nasr, Jalaa. I came home after athan, still fasting. Another explosion shattered the neighborhood. Glass rained. Chaos. I ran upstairs.

My eldest was in my mother’s arms. But my baby, I found her not by sight but by feeling. The room was dark, blood soaked the sheets. My flashlight caught her body. Breathing. Bleeding. I carried her to the bathtub filled with water saved for outages and washed the blood from her face. She cried, but I heard nothing. I was somewhere above myself, watching.

Three weeks later, she was evacuated. One of the “lucky” ones. A decade later, I still ask, like it’s a secret: “Did she survive?” Because some injuries don’t bleed. Some wounds just . . . remain.

I carry it with me like a stubborn ember, imagining Gaza still there, with the breakfast table waiting and my family’s laughter unfinished.


Arab women wearing headscarves and children are standing on a beach waiting to get on a boat. The boat has two Palestinian flags hanging high on poles.
All images courtesy of Eman Mohammed.

No siege can crush it, no massacre can erase it, no erasure can finish the job. What we carry . . . stays.

Gaza remembers. I remember. And I’m not done telling you.


A massive gathering of Palestinian children and young people fly colorful kites in Gaza.
All images courtesy of Eman Mohammed.