
Climber Carries Gaza Kids' Letters to Everest Summit
A Palestinian-Jordanian mountaineer is climbing Mount Everest carrying handwritten letters from children in Gaza. His mission aims to amplify their voices on the world's highest peak.
Mostafa Salameh is taking the hopes and dreams of Gaza's children to the top of the world.
The Palestinian-Jordanian mountaineer is climbing Mount Everest with a precious cargo: handwritten letters from children living through one of the most challenging humanitarian situations on Earth. Each letter represents a voice seeking to be heard beyond the conflict zone.
Salameh's mission transforms a personal athletic achievement into something far bigger. By carrying these messages to the 29,032-foot summit, he's creating a platform for children whose daily lives have been shaped by hardship and loss.
The letters themselves offer a window into resilience that most of us will never fully understand. These aren't just words on paper but testaments to hope surviving in the most difficult circumstances.
Mountaineering has long been used as a vehicle for raising awareness, but this expedition carries unique emotional weight. When Salameh reaches the summit, those children's words will have traveled from one of the world's most contested places to its most iconic peak.

The Ripple Effect
This climb does more than raise awareness. It validates the experiences of children who often feel invisible to the world outside their borders.
The expedition sends a powerful message: your story matters, your voice deserves to be heard, and someone is willing to carry your words to the highest point on Earth. For young people living through trauma, that kind of acknowledgment can be transformative.
Salameh's journey also reminds us that individual actions can bridge seemingly impossible distances. One person, one mountain, and dozens of handwritten letters create connections that policy statements and news reports sometimes cannot.
The mountaineer's dedication illustrates how personal passion projects can serve broader humanitarian purposes. His climbing skills become tools for amplification, turning athletic achievement into advocacy.
When those letters reach the summit, they'll represent more than just a successful climb. They'll stand as proof that even in our divided world, human compassion can still scale the highest barriers.
Based on reporting by Al Jazeera English
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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