
The trophy lifted by Gaza’s Shabab Khan Yunis players was not merely a sporting triumph; it seemed to be raised in defiance of two years of silence and loss. At the Al-Nuseirat Services Club hall, the crowd was not so much watching a match as witnessing the return of something that had been missing for a long time: life, spoken a little louder.
Two years ago, the scene was completely different.
The stadiums, once filled with the roar of crowds, had fallen into a heavy silence, and some no longer existed at all. Sports names that had been part of the scene suddenly vanished, leaving a huge void in every team and competition.
During that period, the martyrdom of 1,007 athletes was officially announced, many of them footballers who could have been among the tournament’s participants today, dreaming of the very moment the Gaza crowd is now experiencing.
Gaza: ‘A moment of normality in an abnormal reality’
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Yet the idea did not disappear. Football remained present in conversations, in memories, and in sporadic attempts to keep some semblance of rhythm alive, even if far from the spotlight. Players went their separate ways, training sessions were halted, and clubs faced a reality heavier than they could bear. Yet the desire to return remained latent.
When the revival tournament kicked off, it was not merely a competition but a test of this scene’s ability to stand once more. The spectators who attended were not just looking for a winner but for a moment of normality in an abnormal reality. The cheering, the clapping, the tension – all details that seemed to be retrieved from a recent memory, despite the great pain of the absence of teammates and rivals who could have taken part.
At that moment, the coronation was not the end of the story but its beginning. The start of a journey in which sport is trying to reclaim its role, despite the losses, despite the stadiums in need of rebuilding, and despite the names no longer there to complete the journey.

The Khan Yunis youth team lifted the cup, but the scene was about more than just a team celebrating. It was closer to an unspoken message: the game may be halted, it may be damaged but it is hard to erase, and sporting spirit can always rise from the rubble.
Featured image via the Canary
By Alaa Shamali
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