"Sarah Saadeh, a 15-year-old artist from Beit Lahia in northern Gaza, uses her artwork to portray the hardships faced by residents of the Gaza Strip, including hunger, disrupted education, and limited resources. She creates her works using brushes, paints, and charcoal. Footage filmed on Friday captures Sarah creating artworks that reflect the suffering of the local population. The footage also includes shots of her holding a sketchbook filled with charcoal drawings, as well as scenes with her family members and images of the tents of displaced people. "I paint the experiences I lived and the things I saw. I paint the camp, our daily life. I have paintings about famine; during the days of famine, I used to draw a lot about it, creating works that express the reality we were living," Sarah said. Sarah also expressed her wish to meet the UN Special Rapporteur on Palestinian Territories, Francesca Albanese, for whom she painted a special artwork, saying, "I painted her because she is a rare person who speaks about the Palestinian cause and about the people of Gaza and their suffering, despite all the pressures and criticisms she has faced because of her positions and what she says in our defence. Yet she has not retreated or given up." Despite the severe lack of basic living resources, artists of all ages in Gaza find art as a way to express their suffering and convey their reality to the world. Hamas and Israel reached a ceasefire agreement that came into effect on Friday, October 10, under the framework of the 'Trump Plan', which consists of 20 points. Its key provisions include an immediate halt to the fighting, the release of all hostages - both living and deceased - and the entry of humanitarian aid."