I don’t know what to say, and I find no meaning in the upcoming words, because they are useless—just like us, without any notable benefit, with no role in this ruined world. A world of money, influence, and excessive power that humans should not possess.
Engineer Yousef Abu Rabee has departed from our degraded world to a better place to meet his Lord, for Allah, the Exalted, has informed us: {And do not think of those who have been killed in the way of Allah as dead. Rather, they are alive with their Lord, receiving provision.} [Quran 3:169].
Perhaps I never met Engineer Yousef face to face, either because of my misfortune or because I am not worthy of knowing the most virtuous among people. But I was fortunate enough to conduct an interview with him. The interview took place through Facebook Messenger; I was in my room, hiding from the horrors of the world, while he was sheltered amidst the rubble of a school, trying to reach me to spread the idea of his project, one that he had long wished to benefit his fellow countrymen.
Engineer Yousef, may Allah forgive and have mercy on him, was not just someone who loved his land, but he was a true human being in every sense of the word. He tried as much as he could to replant his barren land, moving from place to place to gather a few seeds to rebuild what had been destroyed by a handful of swine.
Yousef belonged to the city of Beit Lahia in the northern Gaza Strip. After a long period of displacement, he returned to his land to revive it and help feed his brothers and sisters.
After the success of his project, which was discussed on various platforms, the swine returned to his city, surrounded it, starved its people, and bombed it, destroying what remained of it.
Ever since I learned of the swine's return and the destruction they caused, I feared that Yousef would be harmed. He was my optimistic agricultural expert friend, whom I never had the chance to meet in person.
Today, I learned of his martyrdom. My friend has been martyred, and few good people remain on this earth, alongside many swine and their allies, and those who remain silent about their actions.
May God curse every silent, submissive, and false claimant of religiosity. May God have mercy on Yousef, Mahasen Al-Khatib, and the rest of the sons and daughters of Gaza, my brothers and sisters whom I have always failed.
Pray for them all, and for yourselves.
In the following lines, you will find the last piece I published about Youssef. The last piece ever!
Originally published in SciDev Net.
[CAIRO] When Youssef Abu Rabie, a young agricultural engineer, returned to northern Gaza in March, his home had gone and his once flourishing farmland was completely destroyed.
After the fighting broke out in October, he had sought refuge from Israeli forces in Jabalia camp, north of Gaza City, and then near Al-Shifa Hospital, in western Gaza.
“The occupation forces ordered us to go to the south, but some of us returned to the north, motivated by the pursuit of renewed of hope in life,” says Abu Rabie, one of 20 farmers now working together to grow food amid the rubble of decimated homes, schools and hospitals in the city of Beit Lahia.
Famine is imminent in the northern part of the Gaza Strip, where around 300,000 people are trapped, the UN has warned. In Gaza as a whole, 1.1 million people are struggling with catastrophic hunger having completely exhausted their food supplies, according to a food security report published in March.
The food aid that reaches the Gaza Strip through checkpoints and airdrops is “nothing but a morsel”, according to Abu Rabie.
Residents in Beit Lahia go out early in the morning searching for food in the hope of “snatching a meal” before others, he says.
It’s a dangerous quest and he himself came under attack of gunfire during one such attempt. Despite no longer being occupied by Israeli forces, the city nevertheless remains under constant threat of aerial and artillery bombardment, he explains.
However, one day Abu Rabie noticed some small plants that had grown from pepper and aubergine pods falling into the soil, which had been watered by the winter rains.
That’s when he realised there may be another solution.
Recycling seedlings
“We collected these small seedlings and created what looked like incubators for them using plastic containers that were available on top of what was left of the rubble of our house, and we tried to take care of them as much as possible so that they could grow, with the aim of replanting them on agricultural land.”
One of the many challenges he faced in doing this was the need for “artificial soil”.
Natural soil, rich in nutrients that promote plant growth, has been destroyed by the war, Abu Rabie explains. The land in Gaza has been subjected to bulldozing and bombardment with missiles and phosphorus bombs, according to agricultural specialists in the country.
In a trip Abu Rabie says was “fraught with danger” he travelled to various parts of the enclave to obtain this artificial soil, returning with five bags of a soil made from tree waste, treated to make it suitable for agricultural use.
He and his brother and neighbours also collected ten different types of seeds, including peppers, aubergine, pumpkin and red squash to plant in the makeshift nursery.
Fearing reprisals from Israeli forces, Abu Rabie was reluctant to draw attention to the initiative, but eventually he publicised his work on Facebook in the hope of spreading the idea and feeding more people.
Three days later, the nursery, established above the remains of his bombed home, was subjected to artillery shelling.
Seeking protection
Abu Rabie and the other farmers are now trying to prepare agricultural land to receive new seedlings, grown in another small nursery.
“We plant despite all the risks and we ask all officials and stakeholders to protect farmers who can only live and provide food, especially the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), which previously contributed to developing the agricultural sector in Gaza.”
SciDev.Net spoke to a number of agricultural officials to find out whether they thought the initiative was viable.
Mahmoud Fatafta, director general of International, Public Relations and Information at the Palestinian Ministry of Agriculture, said they would encourage partner institutions such as the FAO and the Union of Agricultural Work Committees in Palestine to support it.
Azzam Saleh, director of the FAO programme in Gaza and the West Bank, says the organization is currently giving priority to distributing animal feed to help save livestock and produce milk and meat.
“In the near future, we hope to distribute other production inputs when conditions permit,” he adds.
Khaled Ghanem, professor of organic agriculture and head of the Department of Environment and Biodynamic Agriculture at the Faculty of Agriculture at Al-Azhar University in Egypt, says the initiative could help provide some basic food for Gaza residents.
Ghanem points out that a similar experiment was successful in the US during World War I, and received support from the government, intellectuals, and scientists, resulting in the planting of about 18 million gardens.
More recently, a project known as “Victory Gardens” was successful in Ukraine during the Russia-Ukraine war.
“However, the success of the experiment in Gaza requires the solidarity of the relevant organizations locally and internationally,” says Ghanem.
A Palestinian agricultural expert, who wishes to remain anonymous, warned, however, of major challenges.
“From a technical standpoint, it may be difficult, to some extent, to germinate the seeds we obtain from crops, which are called the second generation, and we do not yet know the extent of the readiness of Gaza’s agricultural soil,” he says.
He fears that the arrival of summer and shortage of water could jeopardize the project.
“The initiative is inspiring, but its success is conditional on the cessation of the occupation’s attacks on life in general in the Gaza Strip,” Ghanem adds.
This article was produced by SciDev.Net’s Middle East and North Africa edition and edited for brevity and clarity.







This is so utterly tragic. Another Substack user and I predicted his death at the hands of Israel. It is ruthless and targeted. These bloodthirsty Israeli monsters went after him precisely because he was keeping people alive.
https://substack.com/@luisavinuesa/note/c-69894733?r=47znr2&utm_medium=ios&utm_source=notes-share-action