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Mother’s Day in the U.S. Highlights Gaza’s Unrelenting Grief

As Americans mark Mother’s Day with flowers, brunches, and family gatherings, the occasion offers a striking contrast to the realities facing families in Gaza. While May 11 is not observed as a holiday in Palestine, its arrival in the U.S. highlights the deep divide in how motherhood is experienced across the globe. In Gaza, mothers are not celebrating—they are mourning. Many have lost children to war, and countless children now face life without their mothers. What is a day of appreciation in the United States is, in Gaza, another day of grief, survival, and profound loss.
This year, U.S. Mother’s Day arrives amid one of the most devastating humanitarian crises in recent memory. Since October 2023, Israel’s military campaign in Gaza has resulted in the deaths of over 52,800 Palestinians, the majority of whom were women and children. Entire families have been wiped from civil records in what humanitarian organizations and experts have described as a campaign of collective punishment.
Motherhood in Gaza is no longer just about nurturing—it is about survival. Women are giving birth in makeshift tents, with limited medical care and under constant threat of airstrikes. According to UN Women, over 50,000 pregnant women are currently in Gaza, many of whom are malnourished and unable to access even basic prenatal services. Their trauma is deepened by the grim reality that their children may not survive infancy—or war.
Meanwhile, children orphaned by Israeli airstrikes try to survive in overcrowded shelters, often without knowing if any family members remain. UNRWA reports that over 17,000 children in Gaza are now unaccompanied or separated from their families.
The loss in Gaza is not only personal—it is cultural, generational, and ongoing. Grief is not momentary but ambient. It echoes in lullabies that can no longer be sung, in empty cribs, in bombed-out homes, and in the silence between attacks.
This Sunday, while some of us embrace our mothers, others—on the same day—will bury theirs.
That should matter. It must matter.
Amnesty International has documented Israeli airstrikes that killed entire Palestinian families, effectively erasing them from civil registries. Notably, the al-Dos family—spanning three generations—was among those wiped out. Between October 7 and 28 alone, over 500 civilians from 47 families were reportedly killed, with the toll potentially rising to 825 families by late October. Children accounted for over 40% of the 7,703 fatalities during that period. Amnesty has called for investigations into potential war crimes.
An Associated Press investigation further revealed that some families have lost up to 270 members. At least 60 Palestinian families lost 25 or more members each between October and December 2023. These staggering losses have prompted legal action against Israeli leaders and intensified global calls for accountability.
This Mother’s Day should be more than a celebration—it should be a moment of reckoning. A reminder of the human cost of war. A call to stand in solidarity with Palestinian mothers and children enduring unimaginable loss. And a collective insistence that no family, anywhere, should be reduced to statistics or collateral.
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