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War on Gaza: Some of the Prominent Palestinian Academics and Scientists Killed by Israel

19-2-2024 < Global Research 35 1494 words
 



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After more than 130 days of war on Gaza, many of the coastal enclave’s universities and educational institutions lie in ruins.


At least 28,700 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces since the start of the war on 7 October and around 70 percent of the Strip’s buildings have been damaged or destroyed.


Palestine has one of the highest literacy rates in the world, but the war on Gaza has devastated the education sector, killing thousands of students, and leaving hundreds of thousands out of school for almost five months.


According to the Euro-Med Monitor, Israel’s army has so far killed 94 university professors, along with hundreds of teachers, in what the rights group describes as “deliberate and specific air raids” on the homes of academic, scientific or intellectual figures.


“The targeted academics studied and taught across a variety of academic disciplines, and many of their ideas served as cornerstones of academic research in the Gaza Strip’s universities,” the rights group said. 


Here, Middle East Eye looks at some of the academics and scientists killed in the war on Gaza.


1. Amin al-Bahiti, al-Azhar University


Amin al-Bahiti, a 24-year-old from Gaza, was a dentist and assistant lecturer at al-Azhar University. 


Al-Bahiti was killed on 5 November, after leaving his home to find food for his mother and nine siblings. 


Israel cut off all supplies from the besieged enclave, including food, water, electricity, fuel and aid on 9 October, forcing many Palestinians to leave their homes amidst heavy bombardment to find food.


Al-Bahiti’s body was found two days after he left his home.


He graduated from university in 2021 and one of his biggest ambitions was to open his own dental surgery. 




Tributes online described him as “talented, smart and hardworking”.


2. Adham Hassouna, professor at Gaza and al-Aqsa universities 


Adham Hassouna was a professor at the Gaza and al-Aqsa Universities, as well as a freelance journalist. 




Hassouna was killed alongside several members of his family in an Israeli air strike, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.


The air strike targeted his home on 1 December.


3. Jihad al-Masri, al-Quds Open University


Jihad al-Masri was a historian and university professor, as well as the director of al-Quds Open University’s Khan Younis branch. 


He was killed on 17 October, after succumbing to wounds sustained in Israeli shelling on Khan Younis.


According to reports, he was on the way to join his wife and daughter when the attack happened. 


Al-Masri was known for publishing research papers on Islamic history and Palestinian oral traditions in both regional and international journals.   


4. Tariq Thabet, University College of Applied Sciences 


Tariq Thabet was a fellow at Michigan State University in the US as well as a professor in Gaza.


He was a Fulbright scholar, studying economic development and entrepreneurship in developing countries as part of the Humphrey Fellowship Program in Michigan. 


He was killed in November in Gaza, along with 15 members of his extended family.


Thabet’s research focused on empowering small business owners in places like Gaza, where he was born.


According to Kyle Hess, the programme manager for the Humphrey Program, Thabet hoped to take what he learnt in the US and bring it back home to Gaza to help improve the local economy.


His fellowship programme issued a statement saying: “While at MSU, he built on his extensive experience in the nonprofit sector and entrepreneurship by taking courses in finance and marketing, networking extensively with his local counterparts, and speaking to local community groups and youth.”




The community in East Lansing, Michigan, where he spent a year while studying, mourned his loss, remembering his positive impact.


“For a person coming from a territory which is effectively under siege by Israel, he had a very positive and upbeat attitude to life,” said Thasin Sardar, a member of the board of trustees at the Islamic Centre of East Lansing. 


“He came here with a mission to learn, and he was trying to make use of his time very effectively and give back to his country,” he added.


According to Sardar, multiple generations of his family were killed in the bombing. 


Thabet was remembered as a “warm and bright” person who regularly attended Friday prayers at the Islamic Centre of East Lansing. 


5. Sufyan Tayeh, scientist 


Sufian Tayeh, the president of the Islamic University of Gaza, was a leading researcher in physics and applied mathematics.


He was killed in an Israeli air strike on the al-Faluja neighbourhood northeast of Gaza City on 2 December. 


His death was announced by the Palestinian Higher Education Ministry. The air strike also killed several members of his family. 


Tayeh was born in 1971 in Gaza’s Jabalia refugee camp, going on to gain a bachelor’s degree in physics from the Islamic University of Gaza.


He won the Palestine Islamic Bank Award for Scientific Research for the years 2019 and 2020, among many other awards. 




According to reports, Tayeh was considered to be in the top two percent of scientific researchers worldwide in 2021.


He had also been appointed Unesco’s chair for physics and space sciences in Palestine. 


6. Sirin Mohammed al-Attar, Islamic University of Gaza


Born in 1984, Sirin Mohammed al-Attar was a gynaecologist working for the UN agency Unrwa as well as a professor at the Islamic University of Gaza.


She was killed in an Israeli air strike on the al-Bureij camp on 11 October.


According to Unrwa, she was a highly accomplished medical professional, holding Arab, Jordanian, and Palestinian board certifications in obstetrics and gynaecology. 


Al-Attar graduated from al-Quds University’s Faculty of Medicine and was the mother of three daughters.


Unrwa remembered her for her “generosity, deep love for her work and the care and affection she extended to her patients, offering unwavering support to them”.


“She was one of the best, most wonderful and most humane doctors I have met and dealt with,” said Ghada al-Jadba, chief of the agency’s field health programme in Gaza.


7. Raed Qaddoura, academic


Raed Qaddoura, who held a PhD from the National University of Malaysia, was killed on 19 November alongside 29 other members of his family.


According to reports, his twin children were born two weeks before he died. Qaddoura was described as a “smart and talented writer and thinker”.


In 2022, he published an article in Mondoweiss on his grandfather’s expulsion from the city of Jaffa in 1948. 


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