Over 625,000 children in Gaza have been denied educational access for more than a year, marking what UNICEF describes as a “demolition of childhood” amid systematic destruction of schools and educational infrastructure. The collapse represents one of the world’s largest ongoing educational emergencies, with 85% of schools damaged, 60% severely compromised, and 25% completely destroyed.
Beyond physical infrastructure loss, the educational crisis compounds documented health risks. Research in international health journals demonstrates that prolonged educational disruption during formative developmental years correlates with significant cognitive delays and psychological trauma. The World Health Organization has identified educational continuity as essential for child psychological resilience during humanitarian crises. With teaching staff displaced and families repeatedly relocated, formal and informal education has become virtually impossible, creating cascading effects on child development and mental health that will require years to address even with stabilized conditions.
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