Gaza fishermen stay afloat with dinghies made from doorframes
Article excerpt
Fishermen in Gaza have improvised a fishing fleet from the ruins of war, constructing dinghies from salvaged fiberglass, wood, and doorframes pulled from rubble. With traditional boats destroyed and commercial fishing largely paralyzed, these makeshift vessels represent both ingenuity and desperation, a way for families to feed themselves and earn income in a territory where economic activity has collapsed. The dinghies are crude but functional, allowing men to venture into waters that once supported a thriving fishing industry. Their resourcefulness underscores how ordinary people adapt when infrastructure disappears.