



The brother of an award-winning Palestinian poet in the Gaza Strip said his sibling was arrested by Israeli troops and his whereabouts are unknown.
Mosab Abu Toha has been contributing pieces to Western media since the start of the Israel-Hamas war last month, painting a dire image of its toll on civilians through his personal experience.
His brother, Hamza Abu Toha, posted on X (formerly Twitter) on Monday that Mosab had been arrested while evacuating to southern Gaza. Hamza said his brother’s wife and children were allowed to continue south, but “the military detained my brother.”
War erupted on October 7 when Hamas led a cross-border attack into Israel that killed over 1,200 people, mostly civilians. Terrorists also abducted at least 240 people who are being held captive in Gaza.
Israel responded with a military campaign aimed at toppling Hamas from power in Gaza and releasing the hostages. It has urged residents in the northern Gaza Strip to evacuate to the south as it strikes terror infrastructure in the north.
Mosab Abu Toha last posted on X on November 15, writing “Alive. Thanks for your prayers.”
The literary and free expression organization PEN said it was concerned about the arrest and demanded to know Abu Toha’s whereabouts and the reason for his arrest. The New Yorker magazine, to which Abu Toha has contributed multiple articles, called for his safe return.
The IDF said it was looking into the reports.
The UK Guardian newspaper cited family and friends as saying that US officials had informed Abu Toha that he and his family could exit Gaza into Egypt via the Rafah crossing as one of his children, born in America, has US citizenship.
The family was on its way to the crossing when Abu Toha was stopped at an IDF checkpoint, the report said.
Abu Toha and his family relocated to Jabaliya in north Gaza after the war started. They later heard that their home in Beit Lahia had been bombed.
In a November 6 article published by The New Yorker, he described life in Jabaliya amid the war, referring to the outbreak of fighting only as “the escalation.”
Abu Toha has kept up a steady stream of posts to his X account since the war began, repeatedly saying that Israel has “massacred” civilians.
On October 7, the day of the Hamas attack, he posted twice about casualties in Gaza from Israeli strikes “since the early hours of the morning,” but made no mention of the Hamas assaults and massacres in Israel.
Abu Toha wrote an English-language collection, “Things You May Find Hidden in My Ear,” published last year.
The collection was a finalist in this year’s National Book Critics Circle’s poetry award and won an American Book award.
At the beginning of the month, Egypt began allowing foreign nationals and dual citizens to exit via Rafah into the Sinai Peninsula.
On October 7, Hamas led over 3,000 terrorists to breach the border with Gaza and then rampage murderously through southern Israeli communities slaughtering those they found. Entire families were butchered as they huddled in their homes. Some victims were raped, tortured, or mutilated, including dozens of babies who were beheaded. At an outdoor music festival, 260 people were killed.
Among the hostages held in Gaza are elderly people and small children.
According to Gaza’s Hamas-run health authorities, more than 13,000 Palestinians have been killed, two-thirds of them women and minors. Those figures cannot be independently verified, and Hamas has been accused of inflating them and of designating gunmen in their late teens as children. It is not known how many among its total are combatants, and how many among the dead were victims of misfired rockets aimed at Israel.