Amid the devastation of Gaza, 15-year-old oud player Youssef Saad brings solace to disturbed children. Despite losing his home and witnessing widespread destruction, he remains determined to help heal the community.
Youssef sings for children who have endured daily horrors in 11 months of conflict, trying to offer them a little joy or distraction.
“The homes in my city were once full of dreams,” Youssef said, gazing at the rubble of the decades-old urban refugee camp, which before the war was built-up and heavily populated.
“Now, they’re gone,” he says.
Youssef was studying at the Edward Said National Conservatory of Music in nearby Gaza City before it was reduced to ruins in the war that has devastated much of the enclave. Now, living with relatives after his own home was destroyed, he is one of five siblings whose futures have been upended.
His father, a government employee with the Palestinian Authority, always supported Youssef’s dream of becoming a musician. But now, Saad’s focus has shifted. He spends his days at a Jabalia day centre, playing his oud and singing for children traumatised by war.
Israel’s attacks on Gaza leave families severely broken
The latest bloodshed in the decades-old Israeli-Palestinian conflict was triggered on October 7 when Palestinian Islamist group Hamas attacked Israel, killing 1,200 and taking about 250 hostages, according to Israeli tallies.
Israel’s subsequent assault on Hamas-governed Gaza has since killed more than 40,800 Palestinians, according to the Hamas-run health ministry. Almost the entire population has been displaced and laid the besieged enclave to waste.
“Every house holds a tragedy,” Youssef said. “Some have lost their mother, others their father, their neighbour, or their friend.”
Despite the danger, he is determined to continue his mission.
“We try to help improve their mental health, even if it means putting myself at risk,” he said. “This is my duty to the children.”
And he refuses to give up on his dreams for the future: “We, the children of Palestine, strive to stay resilient, even in the face of genocide.”
Youssef says he lives by a saying that carries him through the darkest days: “If you live, live free, or die standing like trees.”