Gaza, humanitarian aid obstructed – Exclusive interview with Xavier Lauth, Director of Operations at Solidarités International

Bombing in Gaza © UNRWA Ashraf Amra

Alain Boinet: Xavier, you were recently in Gaza, what humanitarian situation did you witness on the ground?

Xavier Lauth: I was in Gaza at the beginning of July 2025, I found a humanitarian situation absolutely exceptional in its scale, a terrible situation, difficult to put into words and figures for a humanitarian. A shocking situation, hardly comparable. People have been displaced not once but sometimes three, four or five times since 2023. These women and men live with the constant fear of being killed in a bombing, they have not been able to offer their children access to a single safe place for two years. Two years of fear that generates a palpable psychological distress.

An exceptional humanitarian situation also due to the famine and the number of people who are hungry. Exceptional also because the territory left to the Palestinians (territory outside the evacuation order zones) is so narrow that the concentration there is immense and people have a feeling of entrapment. Exceptional also because of the number of civilian deaths, including the sad record of humanitarians killed and the level of destruction. Exceptional due to the famine.

Un enfant de sept ans souffrant de malnutrition aiguë sévère et de déshydratation dans le sud de la bande de Gaza en avril.
A seven-year-old child suffering from severe acute malnutrition and dehydration in the south of the Gaza Strip in April. © WHO – A seven-year-old child suffering from severe acute malnutrition and dehydration in the south of the Gaza Strip, April 2025

Alain Boinet: How do people live in Gaza when access to relief is extremely limited?

Xavier Lauth: People do not live in Gaza but survive there. There are almost no schools left for children, no jobs for adults, so people spend their day looking for food and water, seeking medical care, and trying to stay alive. Foodstuffs and all the objects and goods necessary for daily life are rare in Gaza. The drastic entry restrictions imposed by the Israeli army deprive the population of these goods and also prevent finding spare parts to repair or maintain basic services. The Gazans cope by reusing everything possible but the dignity they show cannot diminish the indignity of this situation. Some no longer even have the strength to get up, I met several men, women and elderly people in various places across the Strip, unable to stand because they no longer eat and leave the little food to their children.

Alain Boinet: The work of the “Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF)” is highly controversial, what do humanitarians on the ground think?

Xavier Lauth: Humanitarians in their vast majority consider that the work done by the GHF does not respect the principles that form the basis of our values nor the modus operandi that govern and guide us. The food distribution operations create uncontrolled gatherings of people in a militarized zone. These sites are protected by armed men who shoot at the population as soon as they believe there is a disruption, which inevitably happens, when it is not the crowd movements themselves that cause deaths. I met many people and always heard the same message from the Palestinians: we know it’s dangerous, that it’s not humanitarian aid, but some of us take the risk to go because our families have nothing left to eat. Unfortunately, there are also deaths during looting of humanitarian convoys, but it must be remembered that Israel bears the greatest responsibility, due to the limited quantities allowed in, the control of the truck routes, and the disappearance of civil order caused by the conflict.

©Solidarités International – Water distribution by Solidarités International

©Solidarités International – Water distribution by Solidarités International

Alain Boinet: What exactly is Solidarités International doing in Gaza, with what team and what means of action?

Xavier Lauth: Solidarités International supports and operates desalination stations (owned, with a partner and with private suppliers) which produce drinking water. SI then organizes the distribution of this drinking water by truck throughout the Gaza Strip (in accessible areas). Tens of thousands of liters of water are thus distributed every day in tent sites or destroyed neighborhoods. In addition to this work on drinking water, teams draw and distribute domestic water from various private wells so that people can use it for other purposes. Another part of the intervention also involves securing full latrines and organizing hygiene awareness sessions with the community to establish barriers to the transmission of waterborne diseases. Finally, our teams were starting small agriculture activities on very limited spaces but with the offensive on Gaza City and the renewed displacement of hundreds of thousands of people, there is no more space. Solidarités International has also distributed hygiene items when available, but it is no longer possible to procure any.

To summarize, we make do with what is available on the ground, we do a lot in terms of water supply and for the rest we adapt, we are far from our standards, there is no safe place for our teams but we continue to deliver aid and that’s what matters.

Alain Boinet: On August 22, the UN declared a famine in Gaza based on a report from the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), what reality did you observe on the ground and what can be done?

Xavier Lauth: I don’t have any statistical data to add, the IPC work is rigorous. On my level, I can only testify. Testify to visible hunger. People too thin lying down and without strength, women crying because they cannot feed their babies, elderly people collapsing from the shame of admitting they are hungry. It is a very harsh situation, especially since the food is only a few kilometers away…

©Solidarités International – Water distribution by Solidarités International

Alain Boinet: What are the consequences of the ongoing Israeli offensive on the city of Gaza and what more can humanitarian organizations do to help the population?

Xavier Lauth: The consequences are terrible because Gaza City was home to a large part of the population who now find themselves on the roads again, having to find new makeshift shelters further south. Having to move again as they did in 2024 is unbearable. The available space is so limited that it is not possible to deploy minimal humanitarian services. Many hospitals are in Gaza City and will no longer be accessible. Humanitarian organizations will adapt again: new locations for water supply points, new sources of supply, support for people’s resettlement… but without materials, with our own teams forced to evacuate… the humanitarian response is not up to the level of the situation.

Alain Boinet: What specifically characterizes for you the situation and humanitarian action in Gaza compared to emergencies like those in Sudan, Haiti, Ukraine, Yemen, or elsewhere?

Xavier Lauth: I have described above some of the elements that make this situation exceptional but as for humanitarian action, it is surely its level of obstruction that is most specific. The obstacles are numerous in all the crises you mention and humanitarians are very exposed but collectively we generally manage to overcome them or mitigate the consequences. In Gaza, funding levels are overall good for humanitarian actors who therefore have financial means but they cannot deliver aid at scale due to the obstructions and blockades. Such a level does not seem to have ever been reached before.

Alain Boinet: How would you like to conclude?

Xavier Lauth: This war will mark, beyond any political consideration, a turning point in the history of humanitarian work. We must continue, try everything to bring everything we can to Palestinians in distress, it is a moral duty. But this effort will remain derisory as long as the fighting does not stop.


Xavier Lauth:

 

Xavier Lauth has been Director of Operations at Solidarités International (SI) since June 2023. He has worked in the humanitarian sector since 2010. After holding several field positions, he was head of emergency responses at SI for four years and director of operations at SOS Méditerranée for 18 months before rejoining SI.

 

 

 


To learn more about the situation in Gaza and humanitarian work on the ground:

 

The great transmission: a historic opportunity for the public interest

A Silent but Massive Dynamic

Ernest-Barthélémy Michel, Sketch for the Church of Saint-Nicolas-des-Champs: Saint Martin sharing his cloak

Saint Martin sharing his cloak: a symbol of generosity and solidarity. Today, this image invites us to reflect on how the transmission of heritage can serve the collective interest.

For the past twenty years, France has been undergoing a quiet yet significant transformation: that of wealth transmission. Between 2000 and 2020, it is estimated that between €2,600 billion and €3,000 billion have been transferred through inheritances and donations.

In 2022, according to data from France Générosités, charitable bequests and donations amounted to €1.271 billion, representing just under 0.7% of total transmissions for that year.

Hypothesis: If this 0.7% ratio remained relatively stable over the past two decades, then bequests and donations to associations, foundations, and churches would have represented approximately €20 billion over this period. While this is a substantial sum in absolute terms, it remains marginal when compared to the overall volume of wealth transmitted.

Recent work by Jérôme Fourquet and Marie Gariazzo Sylvain Manternach, published by the Jean-Jaurès Foundation, signals an unprecedented “great transmission” event: nearly €9,000 billion in wealth is expected to change hands by 2040, primarily from baby boomers to their heirs. This wealth pool has no equivalent in the contemporary history of our country.

If the 0.7% share remains unchanged, this would equate to approximately €63 billion for associations and foundations over the next twenty years. In other words, a tripling compared to the previous twenty years. This is significant, but still very modest relative to the total wealth being transmitted.

We attempted the projection exercise, undoubtedly a risky endeavor, but a necessary one to visualize the stakes. The chart below presents a plausible distribution of this transmission to organizations with a public interest, considering demographic dynamics: 30% of the wealth will be transmitted between 2022 and 2031, and 70% between 2032 and 2041. This non-linear assumption reflects the inevitable acceleration of deaths among the baby boom generation and the concentration of wealth over the next two decades.

This scenario leads to a gradual increase in flows, from €1.271 billion for organizations of general interest in 2022 to over €2 billion per year at the start of the 2030s, and then exceeding €4 billion by 2040.

Projected bequests and donations to non-profit organizations (2022–2041)

This projection paints a contrasted landscape. On one side, a predictable and rapidly growing resource. On the other, a relatively small share in relation to the total wealth transmitted. The challenge for public interest actors is therefore twofold: to capture their share of this transmission and, more importantly, to convince people that a bequest is not a secondary gesture, but a true societal choice.

Because beyond the numbers, the question is existential: how much of our collective wealth do we want to dedicate to the common future? Humanitarian, healthcare, social, and environmental challenges require greater funding. Bequests could become one of the major levers for this financing if an effort is made in education, trust, and recognition.

To achieve this, several conditions are necessary:

  1. Value the social impact of bequests, showing that everyone, regardless of their wealth, can inscribe their name in a history greater than themselves.

  2. Strengthen the culture of giving in France, still marked by family discretion and the low public valuation of testators.

  3. Support baby boomers in their wealth reflection, through clear, respectful, and professional dialogue between associations, notaries, and families.

  4. Ensure the transparency and effectiveness of beneficiary organizations, so that trust translates into tangible commitments.

The “great transmission” is not just a demographic phenomenon. It is a cultural and political event, in the noble sense of the word: the allocation of our collective wealth between private interests and the common good.

By 2040, it will be too late to realize that the opportunity was missed. Action must be taken today to ensure that the share of public interest in inheritances is not doomed to remain marginal. Making bequests a reflex is preparing a future where our solidarities will meet the scale of the challenges.

[1] https://www.francegenerosites.org/chiffres-cles/

[2] https://www.jean-jaures.org/publication/la-roue-de-la-fortune-constitution-et-transmission-des-patrimoines-dans-la-france-contemporaine/ 

Antoine Vaccaro :

He holds a PhD in Organizational Sciences – Management of Non-Market Economies from Paris-Dauphine University. After a career with major non-governmental organizations and communications groups, such as the Fondation de France, Médecins du Monde, and TBWA, he now chairs Force For Good and Cerphi (Center for Study and Research on Philanthropy).

He also holds various administrative positions within associations and has co-founded several professional organizations promoting private funding for causes of general interest, including the Association Française des Fundraisers, Euconsult, and the ESSEC Chair of Philanthropy. He has also contributed to the drafting of the code of ethics for organizations that appeal to public generosity.

Finally, he is the author of several books and articles on philanthropy and fundraising.