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No Feasts and No Joy: Gazans Mark a Dark Eid

  • On yesterday, Palestinians in Khan Yunis shopped for Eid al-Adha despite rubble from Israeli strikes, as new clothes, sacrificial sheep, and Eid biscuits remain either unaffordable or unavailable in Gaza this year.
  • Despite a US-brokered ceasefire since October 2025, Israeli air strikes remain common and 80 per cent of Gaza's buildings were damaged; Israel controls all entry points, restricting livestock to only 15,000 sheep for 2.1 million inhabitants.
  • Sheep prices have surged tenfold since the war: animals sold for around 1,000 shekels before now cost between 11,000 and 15,000 shekels, according to Gaza agriculture ministry spokesperson Raafat Asaliya, with former property dealer Abu Abdullah al-Mosadar pooling $4,570 to buy one sheep.
  • Gaza City resident Ahmed Abu Salem told AFP 'We have never heard of such prices in our lives,' while a 40-year-old displaced woman from Gaza's north said 'This year, Eid comes with none of the joy we once knew.'
  • Central to Eid al-Adha tradition is sacrificing a sheep to commemorate Prophet Ibrahim's faith and mark the Hajj pilgrimage to Mecca; despite hardship, one Khan Yunis family prepared maamoul biscuits under a makeshift UNICEF tarp shelter.
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Al-Monitor broke the news in Washington, United States on Tuesday, May 26, 2026.
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