Gazans begin to restore historic fort damaged in war

Gazans begin to restore historic fort damaged in war
Workers from the Center for Cultural Heritage Preservation carry out restoration work at the historic Pasha Palace in Gaza City on Thursday. (AP)
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Updated 29 sec ago

Gazans begin to restore historic fort damaged in war

Gazans begin to restore historic fort damaged in war
  • Pasha Palace Museum is one of the most important sites destroyed during the recent war

GAZA CITY: One bucket at a time, Palestinian workers cleared sand and crumbling mortar from the remains of a former medieval fortress turned museum in Gaza City, damaged by two years of fighting between Israel and Hamas.

A dozen workers in high-visibility jackets worked by hand to excavate the bomb-damaged buildings that remain of the Pasha Palace Museum — which once housed Napoleon Bonaparte during a one-night stay in Gaza — stacking stones to be reused in one pile and rubble to be discarded in another.
Overhead, an Israeli surveillance drone buzzed loudly while the team toiled in silence.
“The Pasha Palace Museum is one of the most important sites destroyed during the recent war in Gaza City,” Hamouda Al-Dahdar, the cultural heritage expert in charge of the restoration works, said, adding that more than 70 percent of the palace’s buildings were destroyed.
As of October 2025, the UN’s cultural heritage agency, UNESCO, had identified damage at 114 sites since the start of the war in Gaza on Oct. 7, 2023, including the Pasha Palace.
Other damaged sites include the Saint Hilarion Monastery complex — one of the oldest Christian monasteries in the Middle East — and Gaza City’s Omari Mosque.
Issam Juha, director of the Center for Cultural Heritage Preservation, a nonprofit organization in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, who is helping coordinate the castle’s restoration at a distance, said the main issue was obtaining materials for the restoration in Gaza.
“There are no more materials, and we are only managing debris, collecting stones, sorting these stones, and have minimal intervention for the consolidation,” said Juha.
Israel imposed severe restrictions on the Gaza Strip at the start of the war, causing shortages of everything, including food and medicine.

HIGHLIGHTS

• As of October 2025, the UN’s cultural heritage agency, Unesco, had identified damage at 114 sites since the start of the war in Gaza on Oct. 7, 2023, including the Pasha Palace Museum.

• Other damaged sites include the Saint Hilarion Monastery complex — one of the oldest Christian monasteries in the Middle East — and Gaza City’s Omari Mosque.

After a US-brokered ceasefire deal came into effect in October, aid trucks began flowing in greater numbers, but each item crossing into Gaza must be approved by strict Israeli vetting, humanitarian organizations say.
Juha said the ceasefire had allowed workers to resume their excavations.
Before, he said, it was unsafe for them to work and “people were threatened by drones that were scanning the place and shooting.”
Juha said that at least 226 heritage and cultural sites were damaged during the war, arguing his number was higher than UNESCO’s because his teams in Gaza were able to access more areas. Juha’s organization is loosely affiliated with the Ramallah-based Palestinian Authority’s Ministry of Antiquities, he said.
“Our cultural heritage is the identity and memory of the Palestinian people,” Dahdar said in Gaza City.
“Before the war, the Pasha’s Palace contained more than 17,000 artifacts, but unfortunately, all of them disappeared after the invasion of the Old City of Gaza,” he said.
He added that his team had since recovered 20 important artifacts dating back to the Roman, Byzantine, and Islamic eras.
Gaza’s history stretches back thousands of years, making the tiny Palestinian territory a treasure trove of archeological artifacts from past civilizations, including Canaanites, Egyptians, Persians, and Greeks.
“We are ... salvaging the archeological stones in preparation for future restoration work, as well as rescuing and extracting any artifacts that were on display inside the Pasha Palace,” Dahdar said.
As the pile of excavated rubble already several meters high grew, one craftsman carefully restored a piece of stonework bearing a cross mounted with an Islamic crescent.
Another delicately brushed the dust off stonework bearing religious calligraphy.
“We are not talking about just an old building, but rather we are dealing with buildings dating back to different eras,” said Dahdar.


Israel quizzed at UN over torture of Palestinian detainees

Israel quizzed at UN over torture of Palestinian detainees
Updated 12 sec ago

Israel quizzed at UN over torture of Palestinian detainees

Israel quizzed at UN over torture of Palestinian detainees

GENEVA: Israel was questioned at the UN this week over multiple reports alleging the torture of Palestinian detainees, in particular since the Hamas attacks of Oct. 7, 2023.
Israel was undergoing its periodic review before the UN Committee against Torture.
“The committee has been deeply appalled by the description we have received, in a large number of alternative reports, of what appears to be systematic and widespread torture and ill-treatment of Palestinians, including children,” the body’s rapporteur, Peter Vedel Kessing, said.
“It is claimed that torture has become a deliberate and widespread tool of state policy ... from arrest to interrogation to imprisonment.”
The Committee against Torture comprises 10 independent experts who monitor the implementation of the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment by member countries.
Citing reports before the committee, Kessing said that since the Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel, which sparked the retaliatory war in Gaza, torture and ill-treatment have escalated, reaching “unprecedented levels” and carried out with impunity.
Those reports, he said, came from various UN bodies, Israeli, Palestinian, and international nongovernmental organizations, and other sources.
“Many of those detained and subsequently released have reportedly been subject to torture and other ill-treatment,” said Kessing.
“Severe beatings, including on the genitals; electric shocks; being forced to remain in stress positions in prolonged periods; deliberate inhuman conditions and starvation; waterboarding; and widespread sexual insults and threats of rape,” he said, giving examples.
In July 2024, the UN human rights office published a report stating that Palestinians detained by Israel during the Gaza war have largely been held in secret and in some cases subjected to treatment that may amount to torture.
Similar accusations have been levelled against Hamas regarding its treatment of hostages held in the Gaza Strip.
Israel’s ambassador to the UN in Geneva, Daniel Meron, rejected the allegations, branding them “disinformation,” particularly, he said, on the part of the UN-mandated Commission of Inquiry, and Francesca Albanese, the UN’s independent special rapporteur on rights in the Palestinian territories.
Meron said Israel was “committed to upholding its obligations in line with our moral values and principles, even in the face of the challenges posed by a terrorist organization.”
Kessing said “the fact that one of the parties to the armed conflict violates and disregards obligations under these rules cannot be used as an excuse for the other party” to do likewise.
He told the Israeli delegation that the committee was aware of allegations of acts of torture and war crimes committed by Hamas against Israeli soldiers and civilians.
“This is, of course, very disturbing and something we will take up ... with the state of Palestine” in a future session.
The committee’s 83rd session, running from Nov. 10 to 28, is conducting periodic reviews of Albania, Argentina, Bahrain and Israel’s efforts to implement the convention’s provisions.
The committee is set to publish its findings on Israel on Nov. 28.