Coach Ehab Abu Jazar' mother serves as his main inspiration.
Coach Ehab Abu Jazar guides a national team that carries on its shoulders all the hopes and sorrows of Palestinian football, but his mother, whom war has forced to live in a Gaza tent, serves as his main inspiration and motivation. Photo: BASHAR TALEB / AFP) Credit: AFP

Coach Ehab Abu Jazar guides a national team that carries on its shoulders all the hopes and sorrows of Palestinian football, but his mother, whom war has forced to live in a Gaza tent, serves as his main inspiration and motivation.

The war that broke out following Hamas’s attack on Israel on October 7, 2023 ended Palestinian league matches and left athletes in exile fearing for their loved ones in Gaza.

Abu Jazar’s mother refuses to let the conflict overshadow the sporting dreams of her son, to whom she feeds tactical advice from the rubble of the Palestinian territory by phone.

“She talks to me about nothing but the team. She wants us to focus solely on the tournament,” the 45-year-old manager told AFP.

“My mother asks me about the players, who will play as starters and who will be absent, about the tactics, the morale of the players and the circumstances surrounding them.”

War has now displaced the coach’s mother Huda Mahmoud Abu Jazar, 62, in Gaza’s Al-Mawasi camp, near Khan Yunis, where she lives in a tent with her other son, his wife and their children.

“My feelings are indescribable from the amount of happiness I feel for my son and his amazing team,” she told AFP.

She beamed with pride about him and the Palestinian squad, saying her entire camp cheered when the team beat Qatar in an Arab Cup match last week.

“You could hear ululations everywhere. They brought back a joy we had forgotten in Gaza,” she said.

“He made us all proud. It is a great honour for us.”

Young Palestinian football fans sit in a dispalcement camp west of Khan Yunis.
Young Palestinian football fans sit in a dispalcement camp west of Khan Yunis, in the southern Gaza Strip on December 7, 2025, as they watch the FIFA Arab Cup 2025 group stage, Group A, football match between Syria and Palestine in Qatar, wich ended in a 0-0 draw. (Photo: BASHAR TALEB / AFP) Credit: AFP

The manager, himself a former left-back, says he wants his players to convey the spirit of his mother and Gazans like her.

“We always say that we are a small Palestinian family representing the larger family,” he said.

“Undoubtedly, it puts pressure on us, but it’s positive pressure.”

The Palestinian team rank 96th in the FIFA rankings, and their hope of playing in their first World Cup vanished this summer.

The squad, most of whom have never set foot in Gaza, remains within reach of the Arab Cup quarter-finals, keeping their message of resilience alive.

Palestine play Syria in their final Arab Cup group match Sunday, where a draw would suffice to achieve an unprecedented feat for the team.

He said progress would show the world that the Palestinians, if they receive the right conditions, can “excel in all fields”.

Abu Jazar finished his playing career in 2017 before managing the Palestinian U-23 team and eventually taking the top job last year.

After the war broke out, conflict destroyed his family home, displacing his mother in Gaza, like most of the territory’s population during the height of the fighting.

Ehab abu Jazar reacts to Syria's Abdulrazzak al-Mohammad
Palestine head coach Ehab abu Jazar reacts to Syria’s Abdulrazzak al-Mohammad during the FIFA Arab Cup 2025 group stage, match between Syria and Palestine Photo: by Mahmud HAMS / AFP Credit: AFP

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He now feels pressure to deliver for them after witnessing from exile the horrors of the war, which a fragile US-backed ceasefire halted in October.

“At one point, it was a burden, especially at the beginning of the war,” he said.

“We couldn’t comprehend what was happening. But we possess the genes of resilience.

“If we surrender and give in to these matters, we as a people will vanish.”

In her maternal advisory role, Abu Jazar can only contact his mother when she has power and signal.

She managed to send a message to the team before their match against Syria.

“I send my words to my son and his team and pray for them every moment — may God guide their shots, and God willing, they will achieve victory today,” she said.

She and her family will find a way to watch the team’s match against Syria from her camp, praying for another victory.

“From between the tents we will watch it on a TV screen. Everyone is waiting for the moment the match begins,” she said.

Her determination pushes Abu Jazar to give Gazans any respite from the reality of war.

“My mother and siblings… struggle greatly to watch our matches on television. They think about how to manage the generator and buy fuel to run it and connect it to the TV,” he said.

“This is what keeps us standing, and gives us the motivation to bring joy to our people.

“All these circumstances push us to fight on the field until the last breath.”

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