'When Universities Fall, Futures Collapse:' Witnesses Describe Educational Destruction at Gaza Tribunal

'When Universities Fall, Futures Collapse:' Witnesses Describe Educational Destruction at Gaza Tribunal

Palestinians walk through the destruction left by the Israeli air and ground offensive on Khan Younis on 12 September 2024. (Photo: AP)

Witnesses at the Gaza Tribunal’s public hearings on Friday urged international jurists and governments to treat the destruction of Gaza’s schools and universities as more than collateral damage, calling it a deliberate assault on the territory’s future, reported Anadolu Agency.

“My name is Osama Alostta. I’m 23 years old,” one witness told the panel in testimony that traced the trajectory of a young life interrupted by years of war, siege, and displacement.

Identified in the tribunal program as Osama Alostta, the student described losing homes, neighborhoods, and his university within weeks of Oct. 7 and ultimately being forced to choose between safety abroad and family left behind in Gaza.

“Five minutes later, I received a message from the university administration saying, ‘For your safety, the school will be closed until further notice,’” he told the tribunal. “I thought maybe it would be a week, just 10 days... On Oct. 19, they destroyed my neighborhood. I was living 3 kilometers away due to the explosion.”

Alostta spent a year and a half in Türkiye. “I missed home deeply and wanted to repatriate since… I started a new semester just 10 days before the 7th of October. I stayed in Gaza for another six months, and eventually I went to the UK. But this time, I left my family behind without knowing whether they would survive or not.”

Osama’s account captured the personal costs behind the statistics the witnesses cited: mass displacement, the deaths of faculty, and the near-total destruction of campuses, libraries, and laboratories.

He also highlighted the collapse of basic services and the struggle for survival, saying: “Although we tried to make our state a better place to live, I remember going 14 days without showering, so I decided there was no point in my being in that year, and it was no longer safe…”

“When they destroy a university, it’s not only a view that falls; it’s the future that comes crashing down,” he said. “This was no accident... But we refuse to disappear. We are not numbers.”

“This story is not just mine. This case is not special to me as a person. There is an entire generation of students who were killed, silenced, and displaced,” he added.

'Our Society Is Not a Body_Abstract World'

Malek Alsweirki, a Palestinian student and scholar who testified online under the heading “Scholasticide in Gaza: A Witness to the Systematic Destruction of Education,” recounted schools and university buildings turned to rubble and basements and shelters converted into precarious classrooms.

Alsweirki urged the tribunal to recognize the human consequences behind the statistics.

“The jury now should be mindful that our society is not a body abstract world,” she said, describing schools that once hosted classrooms, libraries, and community life reduced to rubble and basements turned into provisional shelters.

Alsweirki described how teachers and students were frequently displaced and how the loss of school buildings disrupted social networks and opportunities for generations.

“All the students in the class had to attend the class because it was too dangerous for students to travel to other classes because of their constant involvement. Meanwhile, most houses and apartment buildings have been stopped and destroyed by these schools that is basically for non-Basic families who didn't support their children.

“This mess, basically, is supposed to give shelters for lost resources. And even these shelters were abandoned. The basements, too dangerous for children, became the only places for their families to hide.”

'Learning amid Genocide'

Wesam Amer, a former dean of the Faculty of Communication and Languages at Gaza University in Palestine, testified about the broader intellectual toll and told the panel that Gaza’s academic community is bearing a crushing burden.

Amer framed what is happening in Gaza as more than episodic damage.

“What I describe today is not just a body abstract; it's an experience. It's not only my experience, my personal experience. It's an experience for hundreds of academics and students in the world,” he said.

“Learning amid genocide,” he said, summarizing what he and colleagues have tried to preserve in the face of sustained attacks on educational infrastructure, including libraries, laboratories, and archives.

“Learning amid what is, I'm calling it, what my generation has suffered. History is repeating itself,” Amer added.

“We will continue to teach, to learn, and to dream,” Amer added, calling for international support to preserve what remains of Gaza’s academic life and to save “the generations of students, academics, and researchers.”

Gaza Tribunal

The four-day public session marks the culmination of a yearlong effort by international jurists, scholars, and civil society figures to document alleged crimes committed against Palestinians.

The tribunal featured Friday expert presentations

UN Warns of Forced Displacement & Annexation Threat by Israel in West Bank Refugee Camp

The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) has raised the alarm over escalating destruction, forced displacement, and settler violence across the northern occupied West Bank, warning that entire refugee camps have been emptied and residents barred from returning.

According to Roland Friedrich, UNRWA’s Director of Affairs for the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, the refugee camps of Jenin, Tulkarm, and Nur Shams have been completely evacuated, with Israeli forces actively preventing displaced residents from returning to their homes.

“Destruction and forced displacement persist,” Friedrich said, describing a deteriorating situation in which “settler violence and settlement expansion have spiralled, pushing vulnerable Palestinian communities from their lands amid increasingly coercive conditions – paving the way for annexation.”

UNRWA also condemned recent Israeli legislative actions targeting the agency, noting that anti-UNRWA laws have forced the closure of UN-run schools and led to the de facto eviction of international staff from the West Bank. These measures, the agency warned, are undermining humanitarian operations and jeopardizing access to education for thousands of Palestinian children.

Friedrich stressed that the fates of Gaza and the West Bank are inseparable, warning that any drawdown of military operations in Gaza “should not become an opportunity to tighten the grip of occupation elsewhere.”

Despite mounting challenges, he reaffirmed that UNRWA “has remained on the ground to stay and deliver throughout this escalation, as we have throughout multiple crises before.”

As discussions over a fragile ceasefire in Gaza continue, UNRWA expressed readiness to work with all stakeholders to secure “a comprehensive outcome that can form the cornerstone of peace and stability for the entirety of the occupied Palestinian territory, and for the region, for generations to come.”

Short Link : https://prc.org.uk/en/news/7636