Giving Compass' Take:
- Mohamed Solaimane spotlights the Phoenix Library of Gaza, an effort to preserve Palestinian culture amidst the U.S. and Israel's genocidal war on Gaza.
- What is the role of philanthropy in supporting the Palestinian people amidst genocidal efforts to eradicate them and their culture from the Gaza Strip?
- Search for a nonprofit focused on preserving Palestinian culture.
- Access more nonprofit data, advanced filters, and comparison tools when you upgrade to Giving Compass Pro.
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More than a year ago, a donkey cart wound its way through heaps of rubble in Gaza. Three young men brushed ash from burned book covers and stacked salvaged volumes onto the cart, racing to save them from Israeli airstrikes and neighbors trying to burn them for fuel, unable to access cooking fuel due to the Israeli blockade, culminating in the establishment of the Phoenix Library of Gaza.
Omar Hamad, 30, is a pharmacy graduate who never stopped being a reader. He has helped collect and preserve more than 5,500 books since 2025. Recently, his war-torn book drive has materialized into an unlikely new library in the Gaza Strip, where he and his friends have been organizing the books into a library management system, still being completed.
He gathered these volumes along with his friends, Hussam Hamad, 42 and Ibrahim al-Masri, 31, for what they’ve dubbed the Phoenix Library of Gaza. The books were gathered by any means possible: pulled from rubble, purchased, or reprinted. The library opened on April 21st.
Israeli airstrikes have buried Gaza under 61.5 million tons of rubble, or the equivalent of roughly 170 Empire State Buildings. It amounts to more than 169 kilograms of debris per square meter of the Strip’s surface.
Libraries, personal collections, and vast institutional archives lie under that mass—including the books these three young men raced to rescue before they could be burned for cooking fuel, the tragic result of a blockade that has made traditional cooking gas canisters critically short and prohibitively expensive.
The name of the library speaks for itself, O. Hamad told Shareable: “The Phoenix, rising from the ash.” Their efforts are part of a larger, community-driven pattern spreading across the Strip to save books and public libraries from the destruction of the US/Israeli genocidal war on Gaza.
The genocide’s toll on books and other valuable written materials has been catastrophic.
Since October 2023, at least 87 libraries in Gaza have been damaged or destroyed.
“Their efforts are part of a larger, community-driven pattern spreading across the Strip to save books and public libraries from the destruction of the U.S./Israeli genocidal war on Gaza.”
Read the full article about preserving Palestinian culture by Mohamed Solaimane at Shareable.