logo
She fed 100K Gazan families for free – now terrorists and local merchants want her dead

She fed 100K Gazan families for free – now terrorists and local merchants want her dead

Fox News2 days ago
FIRST ON FOX - In a war-torn part of the Middle East, where corruption and violence often determine who gets to eat and who goes hungry, one woman chose to challenge the system.
When much of the world had written off northern Gaza as unreachable, 30-year-old east-Jerusalem resident Sarah Awaidah and her team carved out a lifeline. Under the umbrella of Mena Aid, a regional partner coalition operating through the Multifaith Alliance (MFA), and in coordination with Israeli authorities, she built a system that moved hundreds of trucks of food and supplies into Gaza – bypassing Hamas and private contractors who had turned hunger into a business.
The result: more than 100,000 families fed. The cost: her own safety. "I never imagined that creating a safe, independent humanitarian route would become the reason my life might end," Sarah Awaidah told Fox News Digital in an exclusive interview that took place in a safe house in Israel.
"After delivering 346 trucks of aid between September 2024 and February 2025, we reached 100,622 families," Awaidah said. "We decided to scale up distribution on June 30, 2025, at a time when no one was able to get anything into Gaza because of looting, chaos and multiple layers of obstruction on the ground."
Operating through Mena Aid, Awaidah's team designed an alternative route to deliver food and essential supplies.
In Israel, a trusted logistics company transported the goods from the port of Ashdod to the Kerem Shalom and Zikim crossings. Inside Gaza, another logistics partner handled transport, while Awaidah's own staff – coordinating in real time with Israel – shadowed every shipment.
"Once the aid crosses into Gaza, it's picked up by another trusted logistics partner and escorted by our own team members.
"Our teams are present during offloading and accompany the aid from the crossing to secure warehouses. Inside the warehouses, we begin distribution immediately – aiming to deliver everything the same day, and at most within two to three days. Nothing is allowed to sit idle."
That level of control allowed them to achieve what few others could: reaching northern Gaza, where people had not seen a staple supply of food for months.
Her breakthrough exposed a darker reality – an economy where hunger itself has become a business.
"There's a lot of private sector businessmen – some associated with Hamas and other political groups – who try to use aid to make millions," she said. "Because there's such a shortage of goods, and prices are so high, some steal aid and sell it in the market. Others try to take over the supply routes so they can resell it."
According to Awaidah, her team's success threatened those who profit from scarcity. By flooding the market with free goods, they not only fed families but also drove down the inflated prices charged for basics like sugar and flour.
"If there's no sugar in Gaza, and we bring it in for free, they can't keep selling it at outrageous prices," she said. "So we became their problem."
Israeli authorities also tried to cut off these private-sector schemes by shutting down routes that allowed commercial profiteering. While this helped curb some corruption, it also made the remaining humanitarian channels more dangerous.
"The private sector was blocked, and so those who lost their profits started trying harder to threaten and infiltrate the humanitarian route," she said. "They couldn't control it, so they tried to break it – and me."
The attacks on her came quickly. "I began receiving death threats – not just from Gaza, but from the West Bank… heartbreakingly, some came from people I once trusted."
One of the most painful betrayals came from someone close to her, she said, "I even discovered that I was in a relationship full of lies," she said. "That person was part of a gang that wanted to exploit the aid operation – and he tried to use me too. But I stood firm. I made sure he, and people like him, never got near it. And now, my life is at risk because I refused to let the private sector hijack aid for commercial gain, or let political actors bend it to serve their goals."
For Awaidah, the families she helps are the reason she refuses to quit. "We created a distribution model based on verified beneficiary lists, using ID checks to ensure fair and dignified access to food," she said. "People stood in line calmly, organized, even in impossible conditions. That's something the media rarely shows – the dignity and patience of the people."
In the past month alone, her group has delivered 75 trucks and has another 112 on the way from Ashdod. Each day, she focuses on the mission, even as the threats grow.
"What broke me most wasn't the threats from strangers – it was realizing that people close to me were part of it," she said. "It's easier to fight enemies from the outside. But when it comes from your own circle, it cuts deeper. Still, that only confirms we're doing something right. If they're losing their minds over this, it means the mechanism we built works. It means it's secure. It means they couldn't find a way to manipulate it, so they tried to break me instead."
She knows the risks. But for her, the alternative is worse. "I will not stop. And they will not stop me," she said, "I will continue delivering aid to the people who need it, no matter the threats. That's my promise."
For Awaidah, standing up to corruption has come at a steep personal cost. But for the families in Gaza who have stood in her food lines, she has already changed what once felt impossible: getting a fair share of help, without a price tag.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Israel euthanizes crocodiles after repeated escapes and inhumane treatment
Israel euthanizes crocodiles after repeated escapes and inhumane treatment

Yahoo

time6 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Israel euthanizes crocodiles after repeated escapes and inhumane treatment

PETZAEL, West Bank (AP) — A bask of crocodiles brought to an Israeli settlement in the West Bank decades ago is meeting its end, as authorities euthanize the aging reptiles after years of their repeated escapes from a long-neglected farm. Israeli authorities said Monday that government veterinarians had culled the crocodiles because they threatened the area's residents and were themselves suffering from inhumane treatment. The exact number of crocodiles euthanized and the method of culling were not immediately clear. "The Nile crocodiles at the farm were being kept in an abandoned compound under poor conditions that constitute animal abuse, with insufficient access to food, which had driven them to cannibalistic behavior,' COGAT, the Israeli defense body that administers civilian affairs in the West Bank, said. The crocodiles were initially brought to the town of Petzael as a tourist attraction — a business adventure derailed by violence between Israel and Palestinians in the occupied West Bank. They were later purchased by an entrepreneur who hoped to sell their skin. Their fate has been an open question since Israel in 2012 passed a law classifying the reptiles as protected animals and banned raising them for sale as meat or merchandise. 'I don't want to think of what will happen if a crocodile manages to escape and reaches the Jordan River, and then we'll have an international incident,' the head of the local community told The Associated Press in 2018, referencing the border with Jordan 4.2 miles (6.8 kilometers) away. COGAT said that authorities had spent hundreds of thousands of Israeli shekels (more than $29,000) to re-fence the dilapidated farm, which has been in a state of disrepair since it was shut down in 2013. It said that veterinarians were consulted on how to humanely exterminate the animals. The Associated Press

Canadian Forces airdrop humanitarian aid into Gaza for the first time
Canadian Forces airdrop humanitarian aid into Gaza for the first time

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Canadian Forces airdrop humanitarian aid into Gaza for the first time

The Canadian Armed Forces made their first humanitarian airdrop over Gaza on Monday using their own aircraft — delivering 9,800 kilograms of aid to Palestinians, according to Global Affairs Canada. CBC News had exclusive access to the Canadian effort, which delivered food supplies like lentils, oil, milk powder and pasta using a CC-130J Hercules aircraft that departed from a Jordanian airbase. The drop was part of an attempt by six countries to alleviate the hunger crisis in the Palestinian territory. "Canada is taking these exceptional measures with our international partners as access to humanitarian aid in Gaza is severely restricted and humanitarian needs have reached an unprecedented level," Global Affairs Canada said in a statement published Monday afternoon. "Despite the scale of need, humanitarian partners face severe challenges in delivering life-saving food and medical assistance by land due to ongoing restrictions imposed by the Israeli government." In an interview with CBC News, Maj. Cam MacKay with the 436 Transport Squadron said the team "is very motivated to do this mission." "There are people that are very much in need of that aid on the ground, and for us to be able to assist Global Affairs Canada and being able to deliver that aid, it feels very good," he said. The Israel Defence Forces (IDF) said on social media that "120 aid packages containing food for the residents of the Gaza Strip were airdropped by six different countries, including Canada, which joined the airdrop operations for the first time today." The other five countries were Jordan, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Germany and Belgium, the IDF said. France and Spain have also participated in other airdrops over the last four days. Palestinians plead for more aid Mohamed El Saife, a CBC News freelance videographer in Gaza, captured footage on the ground at the same time as the Canadian plane was over Gaza. It was a chaotic scene as Palestinians rushed to an aid drop site in the Nuseirat area in central Gaza. Upon arrival at the site, men and women pushed each other, and some children could be seen climbing over the desperate crowds to get closer to the humanitarian aid. "Look at the humiliation so I could get [aid]," 30-year-old Muhammad Ammar said in Arabic. "Everyone is cutting and killing people because they torment us. They don't want us to eat." Ahmad Ayesh, 26, was holding a can of food that was completely crushed as crowds rushed to pick up the aid. Ayesh told CBC News that "of course we feel humiliated. Open the [border] crossings and let aid through normally." Israel has slightly loosened its tight restrictions on food and medicine reaching the Gaza Strip in response to an international outcry over starvation in the Palestinian territory. Aid experts have said that airdrops are vastly less effective than truck convoys. Some of the pallets dropped by air earlier this week have fallen into the sea, and at least one has struck and killed Palestinians on the ground. Israel blames Hamas for the suffering in Gaza and says it is taking steps for more aid to reach its population, including airdrops, pausing fighting for part of the day in some areas and announcing protected routes for aid convoys. WATCH | Canada airdrops humanitarian aid in Gaza using its own aircraft: Karen Bongard, political counsellor of the Canadian Embassy in Jordan, told CBC News that "the level of humanitarian crisis in Gaza is intolerable, and Canada understands that airdrops are insufficient to meet the full needs of the people on the ground in Gaza." "However, when there's this level of human suffering, inaction is not an option.... Airdrops are a last resort, but Canada stands committed to peace and security in this region and will continue to intensify our efforts to reach our goals," Bongard said. Prime Minister Mark Carney said on social media on Monday afternoon that the Canadian Forces airdropped "life-saving aid into Gaza" and that Canada is working with international partners "to develop a credible peace plan and will ensure aid moves forward at the necessary scale." Canada plans to recognize Palestinian state The latest bloodshed in the decades-old Israeli-Palestinian conflict was triggered on Oct. 7, 2023, when Hamas-led fighters attacked southern Israel, killing about 1,200 people and taking 251 hostages, according to Israeli tallies. Israel's offensive has since killed more than 60,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza health officials. Last week, Carney cited Israel's aid restrictions and the need to preserve a path to a two-state solution as reasons for declaring that Canada would officially recognize the state of Palestine. He said the move is conditional on the Palestinian Authority undertaking serious reforms and holding an election next year for the first time in two decades. WATCH | PM Mark Carney says Canada will recognize Palestinian state: Canada has for years called for a two-state solution, which means the eventual creation of a Palestinian state that would exist in peace alongside Israel. Before last week's announcement, Ottawa had been suggesting this would come at the end of peace talks between Palestinian and Israeli leaders. But the federal government said last fall that recognition might come sooner because of the spread of Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank and the tens of thousands of Palestinians killed in Gaza since the start of Israel's military operation. Carney cited both concerns in his announcement on Wednesday. Iddo Moed, Israel's ambassador to Canada, told CBC's Power & Politics the same day that Canada's decision would "embolden" Hamas.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store