Gaza sisters win prize for turning rubble into reusable bricks

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Danny Aeberhard,BBC World Serviceand

Maia Davies

The Earth Prize Tala and Farah Mousa, two teeanged girls. Both have their heads covered in hijabs, wear glasses and navy zip-up jackets, and are smiling at the camera in front of a large green tree.The Earth Prize

Tala and Farah Mousa said they had "refused to see rubble only as a symbol of destruction and loss"

Two teenage sisters from Gaza have won an environmental award for turning rubble into reusable bricks, saying they wanted to "turn destruction into something useful".

Farah and Tala Mousa, who live in a tent and have been repeatedly displaced since their home was bombed, have been named the Middle East regional winners of the youth-focused Earth Prize.

"After our entire city turned into rubble, everything around us pushed us to think about a solution," 17-year-old Tala told the BBC.

The sisters plan to use their $12,500 (£9,245) prize to teach others to produce the bricks and "participate in reconstruction themselves, instead of waiting only for outside help," 15-year-old Farah said.

The UN estimates 1.9 million people in Gaza - nearly 90% of the population - have been displaced since war began in 2023, triggered by the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on 7 October. Israel responded by launching a military campaign against Hamas in the territory.

Farah and Tala developed the blocks not far from a tent in which they were living after their home was destroyed in August.

Made through crushing the rubble and sieving the debris before mixing it with materials like clay, ash and glass powder, the girls tested the blocks by helping a neighbour hold down their tent in poor weather.

Low-cost and lightweight, they are designed for "non-load-bearing use, such as pavements, partitions and garden beds," Farah told the BBC World Service's Newsday.

The Earth Prize A close-up shot of the large, dark brown brick held by a pair of hands in blue surgical gloves.The Earth Prize

The brick is made through combining rubble with materials like clay and ash

The sisters - who lost their prototype when they were last displaced - said they had been motivated by the "destruction" around them.

"Even the view from our tent window became the main motivation," said Tala.

"We transferred something negative into something positive by refusing to see rubble only as a symbol of destruction and loss."

She added: "Instead of seeing it as the end, we tried to see it as the beginning of something new."

They plan to use the prize money to hold workshops to train some 100 young people to create the bricks themselves - aiming to produce at least 200 of them.

The Earth Prize - awarded for solutions to environmental challenges - has already named its regional winners for Europe and Africa.

An 18-year-old in Ireland won for creating a biodegradable plastic that breaks down safely, and two 17-year-olds in Kenya received the award for developing a low-cost vehicle exhaust system that captures emissions using filters made from natural ingredients.

The war in Gaza was triggered by the Hamas-led attack in October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.

During Israel's military campaign in Gaza since then, more than 72,700 people have been killed, including 856 since a ceasefire came into force in October 2025, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry.

The ceasefire, part of US President Donald Trump's plan to end the war, also pledged the territory's reconstruction "for the benefit of the people of Gaza". Humanitarian agencies have said such large-scale action has not yet begun.


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