From ₹5 to ₹2,300: How a Simple Parle-G Biscuit Became Gaza’s Most Heartbreaking Luxury
🍪 The Biscuit That Crossed Borders and Broke Hearts
It’s a biscuit every Indian grew up with. Parle-G. That iconic yellow wrapper, the soft crunch with tea, and the childhood joy it brought for just ₹5.
But today, in war-torn Gaza, this little biscuit tells a much bigger story — of suffering, survival, and a father’s undying love. There, the same Parle-G packet is now being sold for a staggering ₹2,300 to ₹2,800.
Yes, a ₹5 biscuit has become a black-market luxury.
💔 A Father’s Love in the Middle of Chaos
Amid bombings, starvation, and aid blockades, a Palestinian father named Mohammed Jawad shared a video that tore through social media timelines. In it, his young daughter Rafif receives a single pack of Parle-G — a gift that cost him over ₹2,300.
His caption?
“After a long wait… even though the price jumped from ₹130 to over ₹2,300, I just couldn’t deny Rafif her favourite treat.”
This was no exaggeration. The child smiled. The world wept.
🚨 Gaza’s Food Crisis: The Real Numbers
What’s causing this absurd price tag? A collapsing system, a humanitarian blockade, and stolen aid supplies.
Let’s put it into perspective:
| Item | Price in Gaza (Black Market) |
|---|---|
| 1 kg Sugar | ₹4,914 |
| 1 kg Onions | ₹4,423 |
| 1 L Cooking Oil | ₹4,177 |
| Parle-G Biscuit | ₹2,300–₹2,800 |
Once these essentials entered Gaza through humanitarian aid, they should’ve been free. But hoarding, corruption, and sheer desperation have created a grim underground market — one where even biscuits become rare treasures.
🔍 The Hidden War Within the War
Beyond the airstrikes and military operations lies another silent war — the war for survival.
- Aid is not reaching those who need it most.
- Supplies are stolen, hoarded, or sold at outrageous prices.
- Parents must choose between starvation and paying bribes.
And in the middle of it all, children like Rafif pay the real price — robbed of normalcy, nutrition, and even the smallest joys.
🌍 The Global Reaction: Outrage, Empathy & Echoes of Change
Jawad’s video was a gut punch to many. From the streets of India to influencers across the globe, people asked:
- How did it come to this?
- How can something meant for free distribution become a black-market item?
- Where is the accountability?
Many tagged international organizations. Some asked Indian officials to intervene. But more than anything, it sparked a wave of global empathy.
Because when a biscuit becomes a symbol of war, it reminds us that no child should have to wait for food like it’s contraband.
🧠 A Biscuit With a Bitter Lesson
Parle-G has always been more than just a snack — it’s a symbol of affordability, resilience, and childhood joy. And now, it’s become something else:
- A symbol of global inequality
- A reflection of failed aid systems
- A reminder that human dignity is not a privilege
That a father has to fight and pay a ransom for a biscuit is not just heartbreaking — it’s criminal.
🔧 What Needs to Change — Now
- Transparent Aid Channels
Aid must go directly to the people. Period. No hoarding. No side deals. No black markets. - Media That Humanizes, Not Just Headlines
Let’s not reduce Rafif’s smile to a “viral moment.” Let it be a call to action. - Global Pressure on Warring States
Wars must end. But until they do, blockades that create famine must be dismantled.
✊ Final Thought: When Treats Turn Into Trauma
It’s just a biscuit — until it’s the only thing your daughter asks for and you have to pay the price of your monthly wage to get it.
Parle-G doesn’t just crunch anymore. It echoes.
Let Rafif’s moment remind us that injustice isn’t always loud. Sometimes it’s quiet, wrapped in yellow, and passed to a child like it’s gold.
Because when a ₹5 biscuit costs ₹2,300, it’s not inflation —
It’s a humanitarian failure.



