Makeshift Gaza university offers chance to resurrect academic studies
The new academic semester kicked off in Gaza in late March.
But the mornings no longer carry the familiar vibrance of students waiting for buses, crossing cities towards universities and colleges.
That feeling has instead been replaced by the hardship of displacement.
Israel’s destructive campaign has reduced Gaza’s academic institutions to rubble, many now repurposed as crowded shelters for displaced families.
With campuses gone, in-person education has largely disappeared, forcing universities to shift to online learning.
But for students living in tents, struggling to secure food, water, electricity, and internet, attending a lecture, even online, has become a privilege. Amid this chaos, a glimmer of hope has materialised.
In the densely crowded area of al-Mawasi in southern Gaza’s Khan Younis, a new academic initiative is taking shape.
Scholars Without Borders, a US nongovernmental organisation, has established what it calls “University City”, a makeshift academic space designed to bring students back into lecture halls.
Built from wood, metal sheets, and whatever materials could be sourced locally, the site stands as a modest reconstruction of what Gaza’s academic life once looked like.
“Despite the hardships, our mission is to bring education closer to students in a better environment,” said Hamza Abu Daqqa, the organisation’s representative in Gaza.
“We designed this space to serve multiple academic institutions and as many students as possible,” he added.
“There are six halls here, accommodating up to 600 students a day. It may look simple, but it creates a sense of normal academic life, something students have been deprived of.”
The space includes internet access powered by solar panels, improvised green areas, and even a small business incubator aimed at helping students engage on their own prospects.
According to the organisation, University City operates on a rotating weekly schedule, with each day allocated to a different academic institution.
This system allows multiple institutions to share the limited space, ensuring the widest possible access for students.
Given the constraints, universities prioritise courses that require in-person instruction the most, such as practical and discussion-based classes.
Gaza’s prominent universities, such as the Islamic University and Al-Azhar University, have begun using the site, alongside other colleges like the Palestine College of Nursing.
But behind this modest structure lies a far heavier reality.
Across Gaza, universities have been systematically damaged or destroyed since Israel began its genocidal war in October 2023. In the south, all institutions have been rendered inoperable.
A limited number of campuses in northern Gaza have been partially restored, but their capacity remains extremely restricted.
The Palestine College of Nursing, for example, has been surrounded by ruins after falling within the “yellow line” where the Israeli military continues to be based since the October ceasefire, cutting off students from their classrooms entirely.
For a generation of students, university life has simply not existed, as they instead battled to survive.
Each academic year is usually marked by new beginnings, especially for freshmen stepping into a new phase of independence and discovery.
But for two consecutive years, thousands of Gaza’s students have been denied that experience.
Now, inside University City, they are encountering it for the first time.Mariam Nasr, 20, a first-year nursing student displaced from Rafah, sat in one of the makeshift halls, reflecting on what the space meant to her.
“Before the genocide, everything we needed to study was available; our homes, electricity, materials, and most importantly, safety,” she said.
“But for more than two years, our lives have been completely disrupted.”
Mariam began her final year of high school just as the war started. It took more than a year to complete her exams under difficult conditions before she could finally enrol in the university.
