
Huda Abed Maarouf will never forget the moment when airstrikes forced her and her three young children from their home. The 25-year-old mother had to evacuate her family alone, her husband trapped far away in the south.
"My feelings were intense. I had my three children with me. I didn't know whether to carry them or their belongings," she shares. "The situation was very difficult."
With baby Farah still an infant and her two other children under six, Huda made the only choice possible: she grabbed her children and ran. What followed were months of displacement and hunger. Farah watched as her seven-month-old daughter wasted away from severe malnutrition, eventually losing the ability to sit up.
Huda's story is playing out across Gaza, where families wake each day searching desperately for food and finding nothing. Her experience illustrates a critical truth about places on the brink of famine: by the time the situation makes international headlines—as is happening in Gaza and Sudan—and certainly by the time famine is declared, thousands of people have died.
All thresholds of famine—catastrophic hunger, acute malnutrition, and mass death—have officially been surpassed in Gaza City. By the time famine conditions have been met, it is already too late for too many. It’s not the start of a crisis but proof that preventable tragedies have already taken place.
The difference between action and inaction can mean the difference between life and death for millions of vulnerable people in Gaza.

Understanding famine
Famine doesn’t simply refer to severe hunger—it is at the extreme end of a scientific scale with clear thresholds designed to measure food insecurity and malnutrition.
Famines are classified by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), an internationally-recognized initiative that brings together governments, regional bodies and international agencies, to scale and assess food insecurity and malnutrition crises globally.
To be classified as a famine by the IPC, three critical criteria must be met:
- At least 20% of households face extreme food shortages
- Acute malnutrition rates in children are 30% or higher
- Mortality rate of over 2 deaths per 10,000 people per day because of starvation or the interaction between malnutrition and disease.
All of these conditions have been met in Gaza City.
When famine conditions have been met people have already starved to death. During the devastating drought in Somalia in 2011, over 250,000 people had already died of starvation when famine was officially declared.

What does famine look like in Gaza?
Every day, Palestinians are being pushed to the brink of survival, struggling to secure basic necessities like food, clean water, and essential medical care. This stark reality underscores how quickly food security collapses when humanitarian access is restricted and how political barriers, rather than logistical limitations, determine the fate of those in need.
According to an IRC assessment in April in Deir al Balah, Gaza City and North Gaza, nearly three in five families report being unable to find bread or fresh food, while over 60% struggle to access safe drinking water. On the ground, IRC staff witness heartbreaking scenes: Families forced to share a single piece of bread among five or six members, and children regularly going to bed hungry.
David Miliband, President and CEO for the International Rescue Committee (IRC), says, "Children in Gaza are not just hungry; they are starving to death. IRC staff and our Palestinian partners are exhausted, delivering nutrition, health, and water and sanitation — all while facing the same hunger and relentless threats to their lives and that of their families..”
“Without immediate, unhindered humanitarian access and a ceasefire, more lives will be lost to starvation and disease. This is not a natural disaster, it is a man-made catastrophe, unfolding in full view of the world and entirely preventable.”

How Gaza went from hunger to famine
Since May, the Government of Israel has imposed a near-total blockade on aid flows, denying the population of Gaza access to food, water and medical care. Now, families are starving, children are wasting away from severe acute malnutrition, and people are dying.
Tragically, the crisis has claimed the lives of thousands of people from starvation-related causes, with children making up the majority of these preventable deaths.
For families like Huda's, the consequences are immediate and life-threatening. Baby Farah's condition became critical—at seven months old, she required urgent treatment for severe acute malnutrition. With local medical facilities bombed and destroyed, Huda had to walk to central Gaza to reach an IRC-supported clinic.
"I remember the first time I went to the medical facility that is supported by the IRC. I was very satisfied and happy because I had finally found an organization that cares for my daughters and children and which takes care of their health," Huda says.

What needs to happen now in Gaza?
The confirmation of famine in Gaza demands immediate action, and the window to prevent further catastrophic loss of life is rapidly closing. The IRC emphasises that "only full, safe, and sustained humanitarian access granted immediately—through land routes, at scale—can avert a catastrophic loss of life."
Current relief efforts are wholly inadequate. "Airdrops and brief humanitarian pauses offer only symbolic relief and cannot meet the scale or urgency of need," the IRC warns. The restrictions on aid that have created these famine conditions must be removed immediately to allow for the massive scale-up in assistance that the situation demands.
The humanitarian community is calling for immediate access to flood Gaza with aid. With some families reported to be surviving on lentil water and wild herbs, and children too weak to seek help as their bodies shut down from lack of food, there is no time for delays or half-measures.
How is the IRC helping
Despite soaring costs of local goods and a near-total blockade and severe fuel shortages that are compounding the challenges of aid delivery, the IRC continues to deliver nutrition, clean water, sanitation and hygiene services, along with child protection in some of the hardest-hit areas of Gaza.
The IRC has 5 tons of life saving medical stock ready and waiting to enter Gaza, which can treat thousands of people and offer critical support to a health system already collapsing. Yet with Israel's current almost total blockade on access into Gaza, it remains uncertain as to when we will be able to deliver these supplies. This is at a time when already overstretched medical facilities are struggling to cope with this latest escalation in the conflict and there are no fully functioning hospitals across the strip.
Essential services in Gaza are also at risk. Despite the volatile situation, the IRC has been able to continue offering vital nutrition, child protection, health and hygiene services, with the support of our Palestinian partners.

How to help Gaza
Donate
Despite restrictions on aid delivery, the IRC continues to reach Palestinians with lifesaving health care, cash, and emergency support. Your donation today can help deliver critical aid where it's needed most.
£60 can provide medical care for a malnourished child throughout the course of treatment.
£190 can provide a family with the most essential necessities for survival for a month.
Share stories like Huda's
Help ensure that human stories reach decision-makers before statistics become headlines. Personal accounts create the political pressure needed for early action.
What is the IRC?
The International Rescue Committee (IRC) helps people affected by humanitarian crises to survive, recover and rebuild their lives. We deliver lasting impact by providing health care, helping children learn, and empowering individuals and communities to become self-reliant, always with a focus on the unique needs of women and girls. Our work spans more than 40 crisis-affected countries, and we provide resettlement, asylum, and integration services in communities across the United States and Europe, including supporting refugees rebuilding their lives in the UK.