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Diverse funeral rituals across Latin America from Cuba to Bolivia celebrate life and memory.

From sitting dead men to festive parades, explore 6 incredible funeral rituals across Latin America. Discover how cultures honor life through unique, celebratory farewells.

Related: European Union Postpones Vote on MERCOSUR Trade Agreement



6 Unforgettable Funeral Rituals Redefining Goodbyes Across the Americas

Funeral rituals across Latin America are undergoing a remarkable transformation, shifting from somber mourning to vibrant, personalized celebrations of life. This evolution reflects a deeper cultural dialogue about death, memory, and legacy. From Puerto Rico to the Andes, communities are embracing practices that honor the deceased’s personality in stunningly creative ways, challenging conventional grief narratives and offering new forms of closure.

In Puerto Rico, the Marin Funeral Home has gained international attention for its highly unconventional services. Known for organizing the famous “standing dead” wake, the funeral home caters to families wishing to present their loved ones in lifelike, often active poses. Their most striking request came in 2016 for a young man whose family wanted him seated with legs crossed, wearing a cap, glasses, and a cigar, with one crucial detail: his eyes wide open.

“It’s something people have really come to appreciate,” explained Damaris Marin, president of the funeral home, in an interview with Caracol Channel. She cited market demand as a key driver, announcing potential expansion into Colombia and the Dominican Republic. “We’re looking to expand… to take a bit of our culture to other countries.”

This trend manifests in deeply personal tributes. The neighborhood didn’t miss the “superhero” burial of Renato García, who spent his final days dressed as the Green Lantern and was laid to rest in character. Similarly, the bar frequented by Jomar Aguayo Collazo remained open on the day of his wake; he was venerated right beside the jukebox, posed for a game of dominoes. Meanwhile, photos of the late David Morales Colón circulated on social media as if he were still speeding through the streets of San Juan on his beloved Honda motorcycle.

Marín’s services, with modest prices starting around $2,000, have attracted global media coverage from Latin America to Russia and England. Viral videos of these eccentric wakes showcase a business capable of fulfilling the most unconventional final wishes, as noted by local press. This phenomenon, while perceived by some in the Caribbean as extravagant, finds a superlative parallel in stories like that of Thailand’s Chadil, who famously married his girlfriend’s corpse in a ceremony that blurred the lines between wedding and funeral.


A Discussion in Absence
“We either fear death immensely or trust it completely. Death is profoundly unjust. It is the only question with a definite answer, the one thing we know awaits us all. But then, we will no longer be here to speak of it,” wrote Gabriel García Márquez for El Nacional in 1988. The Colombian literary giant confessed his fear of death, clarifying, “but more than fear of death itself, it is fear of the transition.”

García Márquez demonstrated how death can be a beginning, at least in literature. His masterpiece One Hundred Years of Solitude opens with Colonel Aureliano Buendía facing a firing squad, a narrative genesis from an endpoint. The Nobel laureate, who passed in April 2014, was himself farewelled in a heartfelt tribute, his ashes surrounded by yellow roses—a fitting homage for a man who wove mortality into magical tales.

The cultural diversity of funeral rituals in Latin America serves as a powerful means to honor the departed while preserving ancestral traditions and beliefs. This isn’t a monolithic practice but a tapestry of regional customs, each with its own philosophy toward the afterlife.


The Cultural Tapestry of Latin American Funeral Rituals

Indigenous and Community-Based Practices
Across the continent, indigenous and local communities maintain profound connections with their dead through specific rituals. In the Peruvian highlands, Aymara communities carefully prepare the deceased, burying them with personal objects, offerings like eggs and coins, and toys for children. Burials often occur in frequently traversed places—crossroads or apachetas (stone cairns)—so the departed are remembered. They are considered guardians, frequently interred near homes in a slow, unhurried ritual to ensure the soul doesn’t grow weary on its journey.

In Brazil, funerals are often celebrations of life rather than purely lugubrious occasions. The rite is dedicated to remembering earthly life’s finitude, offering homage and reflection. Typically, an open casket allows attendees to touch the body and offer final words. While black attire and chrysanthemums are common, characteristic gatherings involve sharing stories, abundant food, and the deceased’s favorite music. Protestant ceremonies might feature white attire, biblical readings, and hymns.

Among Brazil’s indigenous peoples, the Kuarup ceremony in the Xingu reservation stands out. Held a year after a death, it involves ceremonial dances. During the ritual, shamans and family must remain calm, refraining from tears to properly pay homage. The tribe prays aloud, receives guests from other villages with fish and manioc, decorates tree trunks, and uses body paint and feathers for dances and combats. Researcher Heloisa Da Costa explains this ceremony symbolizes the end of one cycle and the start of another, inviting ancestors to welcome the new spirit while the living reflect on life’s harmony.

Ecuador blends indigenous, African, and Catholic customs. In Otavalo, a Kichwa community, a purification ritual involves bathing the deceased in water with rosemary and carnations. The used water is thrown far away, symbolizing eternity and new beginnings. Funeral soups are essential, and the gathering doubles as a fundraiser for the family. Family members narrate the year’s major events so the departed knows all that transpired. The Taita Maestro leads Catholic prayers in Kichwa.

A unique tradition here is the Chunkana, or funeral games, held on the last night of an adult’s wake. This ludic ritual, the main game of Imbabura province, involves winners and losers who must perform a penance. Researchers from the Technical University of the North in Ibarra have recorded about 70 variants of these playful atonements, most tied to daily tasks. Practitioners cite nine sacred reasons for the ritual, believing it ensures the soul’s transition to Chayshuk pacha (Paradise).

Bolivia presents some of the region’s most distinctive traditions. During the Festivity of All Saints, families believe the dead return to spend a day with loved ones, offering flowers, sweets, t’antawawas (bread figurines of the deceased), and special dishes—sometimes with mariachi visits. More uniquely, the ñatita (venerated skull) tradition blends indigenous and Catholic beliefs every November 8th. Families who keep a ñatita consider it a protective, miraculous household member, decorating it with flowers, lit cigarettes, and other offerings. This practice asserts that death is not an end but a spiritual continuity.


Historical Evolution and Social Dimensions

Funeral rituals also mirror social structures and historical change. In Argentina, the custom evolved significantly. In 1908, a push began to have the state recognize November 2nd as a day to remember the “Fallen for the Fatherland,” layering national memory onto the religious date. This holiday was suspended during the military dictatorship to prevent gatherings in cemeteries that could turn into anti-regime protests, a fate similar to Carnival, as noted by journalist Gerardo Di Fazio.

Social stratification is often evident in burial grounds. The location of a tomb—central vaults for the wealthy, periphery for the humble—sends a clear post-mortem social message. In some areas, discriminatory practices excluded those who died by suicide from consecrated ground, burying them face down in unmarked graves. Notably, Rosario features a “Cemetery of Dissenters” for non-Catholics.

Argentine mourning customs, influenced by Spanish and later English protocols, were rigid. Widows faced up to two years of strict mourning, limited to church and direct family visits, adorned only in black or with mourning jewelry like lockets containing the deceased’s hair. The famed Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires, inaugurated in 1910, even included special grilles for women in mourning to attend performances unseen.


The Cuban Spectrum: From Satire to Business

Cuba’s relationship with death encompasses satire, syncretism, and commerce. The tradition of Pachencho’s Wake in Santiago de las Vegas, west of Havana, is a prime example. For three decades, residents have performed a mock funeral for a mythical character named Pachencho, who “resurrects” to the rhythm of conga and swigs of rum. The farcical procession, complete with a fake widow and priest, is a joyous, satirical festival with death.

The representation is based on a 1901 Cuban theatrical piece titled “El velorio de Pachencho,” which humorously staged the vicissitudes of a man who pretended to be dead. After the real death of ‘Blanco,’ a well-known shoemaker who long played Pachencho, other residents assumed the role masterfully. To infectious Cuban music, Pachencho sits up in his coffin, especially if he spots an acquaintance, smiling and waving.

Some trace the tradition to the 1882 founding of a cultural center, others to the popular 1970s play. Locals insist it dates to 1937 with the Piquete Santiaguero carnival group, which would end festivities with a symbolic, joyous burial procession. The celebration concludes with a dance, drums, rum, and flowers tossed into a symbolic grave, followed by the satirical phrase, “Pachencho, we are nothing.”

Historically, Cuban wakes blended Spanish and African influences. In Andalusia, a child’s death was a “happy ascent to heaven” celebrated with a party, a practice reinforced by enslaved Africans. Historian Emilio Roig noted that wakes in earlier times could become “true orgies,” turning a mournful fact into a reinforced festive event.

The funeral business itself became a competitive enterprise in Cuba. Agents scouted hospitals and neighborhoods for imminent deaths. There were tales of burials being withheld until payment was secured. The Rivero family dominated the mid-20th century trade, owning funeral homes, flower shops, wreath factories, and nearly a thousand property titles in Havana’s Colón Cemetery. Their empire replicated the city of the living within the necropolis, with luxurious pantheons mirroring affluent neighborhoods like Miramar and Vedado.


The Enduring Mystery

The Cuban historian Emilio Roig once mused about the “doctor of the dead,” the best physician who never lost a patient, merely certifying the obvious. He wondered if this doctor had discovered death’s mystery, winking at corpses in complicity. “Do the corpses answer him?” Roig pondered in a 1917 article, suggesting it’s better the secret remains kept, for “what would we do with the truth?”

An 1804 Havana newspaper excerpt captures the paradoxical spirit: facing a wake, a friend encouraged another to enter, saying, “Go on in and have fun, there’s enough for everyone and more to come.” Lexicographer Esteban Pichardo later defined a wake in Cuba as a vigil that, for a poor child, could become pure diversion, and even mentioned “wakes” for stews or roast pork—pretexts for late-night eating and dancing.

Ultimately, from the sitting dead of Puerto Rico to the dancing pallbearers of Cuba and the venerated skulls of Bolivia, Latin American funeral rituals embody a vibrant, profound spirituality. They assert that death is not a cold end but a transition woven into community, memory, and celebration. As Chilean writer Isabel Allende wrote in The House of the Spirits, through the spirit of Clara: “Do not invoke death; she will come in her own time…” Until then, these rituals ensure the departed live on in the stories, laughter, and unique customs of those they left behind.



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The U.S. has the resources, knowledge and skills to adopt universal health care right now. Socialism would redirect our resources towards people’s health, not profits!


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The former prisoners described systematic beatings, sexual assault, and torture while held in the Israeli regime’s custody.


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Molino said that Panama, under the status of Mercosur Associate State, can become a premier air hub for the the regional bloc, therefore added that there are 576 weekly flights connecting 42 cities, which also ease connections with the Caribbean, Central America, and North America.

He further emphasized the logistical strength of the Panama Canal and the rapidly growing ports, noting that it is common knowledge that two of the four largest terminals in Latin America are located in Panama, and that the nation is highly competitive in the logistics and transportation sector.

“We are a complement to all of you, so that your products can reach the most diverse markets, increasing the competitiveness of foreign trade for all Mercosur members,” he remarked.

He also referred to Panama’s trade agreements with Central America and the United States, which make it the ideal partner for adding value to the raw materials produced by these countries and entering new markets more competitively.

Mulino also invited dignitaries from Brazil, Uruguay, Paraguay, and Argentina to participate in the CAF (Development Bank of Latin America and the Caribbean) Forum, to be held in Panama in January of next year, as a space for economic, financial, and regional development dialogue.

He also extended an invitation to the celebration in mid-2026 of the bicentennial of the Amphictyonic Congress of Panama, evoking Simon Bolivar’s dream of an America united by dialogue, cooperation, and mutual respect.

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At a press conference, Ochoa, of the ruling Liberty and Refoundation Party (Libre), asserted that he will not validate an electoral process interfered with and overseen by the United States, because in Honduras the will of the people is sovereign, as stated in the Constitution, he emphasized.

The official clarified that there is no circumstance that would compel him to sign a “fraudulent” declaration, alluding to the moment when the CNE is required to release the official election results, the deadline for which is December 30.

He insisted that his role is to represent the Honduran people and not the interests of foreign governments or actors.

He questioned pronouncements and sanctions from the USA, calling them direct interference in the process, and maintained that the president of Honduras must be elected exclusively by the people.

Ochoa pointed out that “The fraud has been plain for all to see, even though international observer missions want to hide or cover it up,” and added that the levels of manipulation and inconsistencies detected even surpass those that occurred in the 2017 election, then questioned by the Organization of American States.

He reiterated his demand for a recount of every single vote in the 19,167 presidential ballot boxes, given the evident discrepancies between the number of registered voters and the figures recorded on the voting tally sheets.

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The discovery was made in the departments of Boyaca, Santander, and Cundinamarca thanks to the application of scientific methods such as field surveys and excavations with computed tomography scans, three-dimensional modeling, and comparisons with international collections.

The first fossil, found in Villa de Leyva, (Boyaca department), corresponds to a long-snouted pliosaur, now named Boyacasaurus sumercei.

It is estimated to have lived approximately 114 million years ago, and according to Cristian Benavides-Cabra, the SGC’s paleontological research leader, this specimen has an anatomical feature that distinguishes it from other similar specimens: the parasphenoid bone of the palate has an extremely long projection.

The second finding, of a mosasaur, took place in Lebrija, Santander department, was named Oneirosaurus caballeroi, which dates back 89 million years.

The third fossil is a large ichthyosaur found in the Siquima Riverbed, in the central department of Cundinamarca.

At about 110 million years old, it represents the first record of a tunosaurian ichthyosaur from the Late Albian in Colombia and South America, according to study co-author Daniel Pomar.

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Addressing the major event, the libertarian leader echoed Donald Trump’s diatribes against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, calling him a narco-terrorist who heads “an atrocious and inhumane dictatorship that casts a dark shadow over our region.”

In this regard, he emphasized that his government “welcomes the pressure from the United States and Donald Trump” and hinted at his desire for the Bolivarian government to be overthrown, stating that “the time for a timid approach on this matter has run out,” and invited the other Mercosur members to support this position.

He reiterated his support for opposition leader Corina Machado, who has repeatedly called for military intervention in her country, and called for the release of Argentine gendarme Nahuel Gallo, who was detained a year ago by Venezuelan authorities as he attempted to cross from Colombia and was accused of participating in a subversive plot against the government.

He also asked that the bloc’s members provide permanent and unwavering support for “the sovereign rights of the Argentine Republic over the Malvinas Islands, South Georgia, the South Sandwich Islands, and the surrounding maritime areas illegally occupied by the United Kingdom since 1833.”

As he did at the meeting of the mechanism in Buenos Aires, Milei reiterated his criticism of the group, arguing that institutions must be evaluated on their results and recalling that Mercosur was created with the mission of “promoting trade, increasing prosperity, integrating markets, and raising the competitiveness of our societies.

And none of those central objectives have been met,” he asserted. He criticized the bloc for being held back by protectionism, bureaucracy, and complacency, saying they “have sunk us into stagnation,” and demanded a change in its rules to allow for greater flexibility, enabling its members to agree to bilateral trade pacts like the one it is negotiating with the United States outside the bloc.

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Brazilian President Lula da Silva issues a Mercosur summit 2025 Venezuela warning against military intervention, calling it a hemispheric humanitarian catastrophe.

At the Mercosur summit 2025, Brazilian President Lula da Silva warns that military intervention in Venezuela would trigger a hemispheric humanitarian catastrophe.

Related: European Union Postpones Vote on MERCOSUR Trade Agreement


At the Mercosur summit 2025, Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva delivered a stark and urgent warning: any military intervention in Venezuela would unleash a humanitarian catastrophe with devastating ripple effects across the entire Western Hemisphere. Speaking on December 20, 2025, in Foz de Iguazú, Brazil—the host city of the 67th Mercosur Summit—Lula framed the issue not as a regional dispute, but as a fundamental test of sovereignty, peace, and South American unity in the face of rising imperial pressures.

“An armed intervention in Venezuela would be a catastrophe for the hemisphere,” Lula declared. “It would be a humanitarian catastrophe and a dangerous precedent for the world.”

His remarks come amid escalating U.S. military activity in the Caribbean, including naval deployments, surveillance flights, and public threats against the Venezuelan government—actions widely condemned by international legal experts as flagrant violations of the UN Charter and international law. From the perspective of the Global South, Lula’s statement is more than diplomacy; it is a defensive line drawn against neocolonial aggression.


Mercosur Summit 2025 Venezuela Warning: A Defense of Regional Sovereignty

In a passionate address that drew standing ovations from fellow South American leaders, Lula emphasized that Venezuela’s sovereignty is non-negotiable and deeply intertwined with the stability of the entire continent. “The Venezuelan people love their sovereignty,” he said. “To threaten it is to threaten us all.”

He pointed to the current geopolitical climate as the most tense in South America since the 1982 Falklands (Malvinas) War. “For over four decades, our continent had not been this tense,” Lula warned. “South America is now under strain due to the military presence of an extraregional power that is testing the limits of international law.”

This “extraregional power” is widely understood to be the United States, whose Southern Command has recently expanded operations near Venezuela’s Exclusive Economic Zone under the guise of counter-narcotics missions—a justification rejected by UN agencies and regional governments alike.

Read the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights on threats to Venezuelan sovereignty

Lula’s warning is grounded in historical memory and strategic realism. Latin America has long suffered from foreign interventions—from CIA-backed coups in the 20th century to economic blockades and regime-change campaigns in the 21st. Each time, the consequences spilled beyond borders: refugee crises, economic collapse, and prolonged violence. A military strike on Venezuela, home to 28 million people and vast oil reserves, would dwarf those outcomes.

Moreover, Lula linked the Venezuela issue to broader challenges facing Mercosur, particularly the stalled Mercosur–European Union trade agreement. He noted that external pressures—especially from European capitals echoing U.S. rhetoric on Venezuela—have deepened internal divisions and undermined genuine regional integration. “True economic unity cannot be built under the shadow of imperial agendas,” he implied.

Explore the European Parliament’s stance on Mercosur-EU negotiations and human rights clauses

The Brazilian president called instead for a vision of “a prosperous and peaceful South America” rooted in dialogue, mutual respect, and South-South cooperation. “Here, we want integration,” he said. “Renouncing sovereignty is renouncing ourselves.”


Geopolitical Context: The Global South’s Red Line

The Mercosur summit 2025 Venezuela warning carries profound implications far beyond Latin America. It reflects a growing assertion of autonomy by the Global South, which increasingly rejects unilateralism and demands a multipolar world order. In this context, Venezuela has become a litmus test: will powerful nations abide by international law, or will they impose their will through force?

The U.S. posture toward Venezuela—combining sanctions, diplomatic isolation, and military posturing—mirrors strategies used in Iraq, Libya, and Syria. Yet Latin America, having endured decades of such interventions, is now pushing back collectively. Mercosur, the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC), and the Group of Friends in Defense of the UN Charter have all issued statements rejecting external interference.

Lula’s stance also signals Brazil’s return to a leadership role in regional diplomacy after years of right-wing isolationism under Jair Bolsonaro. Under his administration, Brazil is once again championing non-intervention, peaceful conflict resolution, and economic sovereignty—principles enshrined in the 2014 CELAC “Zone of Peace” declaration.

Critically, this position resonates across the Global South. From South Africa to Indonesia, nations are watching whether Latin America can resist coercion and uphold international law without Western approval. A successful defense of Venezuelan sovereignty would embolden similar resistance elsewhere—from the Sahel to Southeast Asia.

Review the CELAC Havana Declaration on Latin America and the Caribbean as a Zone of Peace

For teleSUR, as a media voice of the peoples of the South, Lula’s message is a reminder that true peace is built from below—not imposed from the North. In an era of resurgent militarism, the unity of Mercosur—and its commitment to non-intervention—stands as a bulwark against empire.

As the summit concluded, leaders reaffirmed their support for dialogue between Venezuela’s government and opposition, but categorically rejected any external solution. The message was clear: the future of Venezuela must be decided by Venezuelans alone. Any other path, Lula warned, leads not to democracy—but to hemispheric disaster.



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TYEP - Used With Permission

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Over the last several years, many red states have banned gender-affirming care for transgender youth. Since Trump returned to power, that campaign has shifted to blue states, with the administration threatening hospitals and healthcare systems with the loss of federal funding unless they stopped providing care. This week, those threats escalated sharply: a new federal rule, now in its public comment period, would bar any hospital that provides transgender healthcare from receiving Medicaid funds—a move that would effectively force most major hospital systems to end that care altogether. In response, an organization that has already helped families navigate care bans in red states is stepping in again. The Trans Youth Emergency Project (TYEP), spun up by leaders at the Campaign for Southern Equality, says it has capacity to help parents of transgender youth locate independent clinics that may be less vulnerable to the administration’s current and incoming policies and can provide, in some cases, travel assistance.

TYEP’s latest outreach follows the release of a sweeping new federal rule that would bar any hospital system—and any clinic affiliated with those systems—from providing gender-affirming care if they accept Medicaid. The rule contains no carveouts for patients already receiving care, meaning many transgender youth would be forced into abrupt medical detransition unless they can quickly secure alternative providers, should the rule take effect. It explicitly claims to preempt state shield laws in places like California, Minnesota, and New York. The proposed rule further destabilizes an already fragile healthcare landscape for transgender youth, as hospitals and clinics continue to shutter services in preemptive compliance with the administration’s escalating threats.

The rule does leave one narrow avenue for transgender youth to continue accessing care: private, independent clinics and physicians who do not accept Medicaid. Earlier this year, as hospital systems began shutting down services, advocates spoke about spinning up independent clinics to meet the need. Massachusetts advanced a measure intended to funnel funding toward that kind of care, and in New York City, mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani pledged millions to help preserve treatment capacity. But for many families, the talk of these clinics have felt like vaporware—plans discussed publicly that have yet to translate into accessible appointments. There may, however, be a quieter reality beneath the surface: clinicians and small practices that are not advertising openly but remain prepared to provide care. That is where TYEP steps in, working behind the scenes to connect patients with providers who are still able and willing to treat them.

When asked whether TYEP has the capacity to absorb a surge of families seeking alternatives in the wake of the new rule, organizers said unequivocally that they do. They noted that the organization has repeatedly scaled up during previous waves of clinic and hospital closures without issue. Adam Polaski explained, “At every turn, we have been able to pivot and scale up and show people the reason that this is important. Folks have stepped up with their dollars, and also folks have requested support and spread the word. So right now, I don’t want folks to feel like they shouldn’t reach out because they ‘don’t really need it’ or someone else ‘needs it more than them.’ Everyone needs the support right now, and it’s ok. We have the capacity to take it on.”

Polaski compared what the group is doing to efforts that spun up for abortion access in the wake of recent restrictions and bans. “A lot of folks are recognizing that this kind of, you know, practical support network that the abortion access movement has crafted so powerfully is going to be necessary for trans folks.”

The group is likely to face real stress testing in the coming weeks. While the rule change has not yet taken effect—the process will include a 60-day public comment period, additional time for the administration to review comments and finalize the rule, and near-certain litigation that could delay or block implementation entirely—we have already seen that the mere threat of new anti-trans rules is often enough to prompt hospital systems to fold. Even now, EITM is aware of hospital systems actively discussing the proposed rule and weighing preemptive closures in anticipation of compliance pressures. That means independent clinics may begin seeing an influx of patients well before any rule is finalized. In that environment, organizations like the Trans Youth Emergency Project will be essential in helping families navigate a rapidly shrinking and increasingly opaque care landscape.

Families wishing to contact the TYEP about their situation can do so here by filling out their intake form. The national project offers family navigation through one-on-one phone calls to help identify providers unimpacted by restrictions, as well as travel grants of $500.

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Israeli attack on Gaza school in At-Tuffah neighborhood killed at least six, including children, in violation of international humanitarian law.

An Israeli attack on Gaza school sheltering displaced families killed at least six, including a child—denounced as a grave breach of international humanitarian law.

Related: US Weighs Port Restrictions on Spain Over Israel Arms Transit Ban


An Israeli attack on Gaza school sheltering displaced Palestinian families claimed the lives of at least six people—including a young child and a woman—during the night of Friday, December 19, 2025, according to Gaza’s Civil Defense agency. The strike targeted a school in the At-Tuffah neighborhood, east of Gaza City, reducing part of the building to rubble and sending rescue teams scrambling through debris to recover bodies and wounded civilians.

The Civil Defense, coordinating with the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), confirmed that six bodies were extracted from the ruins, while an undetermined number of injured were rushed to overwhelmed local hospitals. Many of the victims were children who had sought refuge in what was supposed to be a safe haven.

“Attacking schools and shelters providing refuge to displaced Palestinians constitutes a grave violation of international humanitarian law,” the Civil Defense stated, demanding immediate protection for civilians and humanitarian personnel from further bombardment.

The school in At-Tuffah had been designated as a temporary shelter for families displaced by Israel’s ongoing military offensive—now in its second year. Like hundreds of similar facilities across Gaza, it housed people who had already lost homes, livelihoods, and loved ones, only to face death once again under the cover of darkness.


Israeli Attack on Gaza School: A Pattern of Systematic Violence

This latest strike is not an isolated incident but part of a relentless pattern of attacks on civilian infrastructure since Israel launched its military campaign in October 2023. According to Gaza’s Ministry of Health, more than 70,660 Palestinians have been killed, and over 171,165 injured, many suffering life-altering wounds such as amputations and spinal trauma. Among the wounded, nearly 44,500 are children, as reported by UNICEF.

Palestinian armed group Hamas condemned the bombing as a “brutal crime against innocent civilians” and a “flagrant, repeated violation” of the ceasefire agreement that officially took effect on October 10, 2025. Despite the truce, Israeli forces have continued daily killings in Gaza, with health authorities reporting 395 Palestinians killed since the ceasefire began—a figure that underscores the fragility of the peace and the persistence of lethal operations.

View OCHA’s latest humanitarian report on Gaza (December 2025)

Footage shared by local journalist M. Shebrawy showed Israeli tanks continuing to fire toward the school and surrounding homes even after the initial strike. “The situation now in Al-Tuffah neighborhood… Israeli tanks are continuing to fire toward the school and nearby homes,” read the post, accompanied by harrowing images of smoke rising over shattered concrete.

International law is unequivocal: schools, hospitals, and shelters are protected civilian sites under the Geneva Conventions. Deliberate attacks on such facilities—especially when they house displaced persons—may constitute war crimes, as affirmed by the International Criminal Court and multiple UN human rights bodies.

Yet accountability remains elusive. Despite repeated condemnations from UN rapporteurs and global civil society, no meaningful consequences have been imposed on Israel for its systematic targeting of protected zones. Meanwhile, humanitarian access grows more restricted, and Gaza’s medical system—already decimated—struggles to treat the wounded without electricity, clean water, or surgical supplies.

Read UNICEF’s 2025 report on child casualties in Gaza


Geopolitical Context: Impunity and the Erosion of International Law

The Israeli attack on Gaza school must be understood within a broader context of institutionalized impunity and the erosion of the rules-based international order. For decades, Israel has operated with near-total immunity from legal consequences, shielded by powerful allies—primarily the United States—which consistently veto UN Security Council resolutions calling for ceasefires or accountability.

This dynamic has enabled a doctrine of collective punishment against 2.3 million Gazans, confined to one of the world’s most densely populated territories with no safe escape. The use of heavy weaponry in urban areas, the targeting of food and water infrastructure, and the repeated bombing of schools and hospitals reflect not tactical errors, but a deliberate strategy of dehumanization and displacement.

Regionally, the attack further destabilizes an already fragile ceasefire and risks reigniting full-scale hostilities. While Egypt and Qatar work to mediate, Israel’s continued violations undermine trust in the truce and fuel resentment among Palestinian factions. Globally, the incident highlights the hypocrisy of Western powers that champion “rules-based order” while tolerating, and often arming, one of its most flagrant violators.

Moreover, the timing is significant. As the International Court of Justice considers South Africa’s genocide case against Israel, and as the ICC investigates potential war crimes, such attacks serve as real-time evidence of ongoing violations. Yet diplomatic silence—particularly from European capitals—sends a clear message: civilian lives in Gaza are expendable.

Review the ICJ provisional measures order in the South Africa v. Israel case

For the Global South, this moment underscores the urgent need for alternative mechanisms of justice and protection outside Western-dominated institutions. From the African Union to the Non-Aligned Movement, calls are growing for stronger support of Palestinian statehood, arms embargoes on Israel, and recognition of the State of Palestine at the UN General Assembly.

Until then, schools in Gaza remain targets. Children remain casualties. And the world watches—again—as international law is trampled in real time.

Breaking | Israeli occupation artillery shells areas east of the Al-Tuffah neighborhood, east of Gaza City. pic.twitter.com/aN7SITKc0t

— Quds News Network (@QudsNen) December 19, 2025



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Francesca Albanese says a $35 billion Egypt-Israel gas deal breaches international law amid Tel Aviv’s genocidal war in Palestine.


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