Ursano, Fullerton and Norwood [1] described the war as "the oldest catastrophe caused by man". And A. Stein and Bruce M. Russett [2] describe war as a major agent of change and an ignored one. Furthermore, Richardson [3] describes war as a disease, and all who have suffered from it are immune to future infections. It is obvious that the war that erupted in Bangladesh, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Indonesia, Iraq, Syria, South Sudan, Rwanda, etc., is evidence of these ideas. War destroys communities and families and often adversely affects the social and economic fabric of nations [4]. And it has also long-term physical and psychological harm to children and adults [5–6]. War affects all people living in the warzone and alters life dramatically, as its effects can be both physical injury of varying degrees of severity and the dangerous invisible wounds caused by psychological trauma and stress. The two years war (from November 4, 2020 up to November 2, 2022) between Ethiopian federal forces and its aliens (Amhara Region militias, Fano, Police, Ethiopia’s neighbor and former enemy Eritrean armed force) and the Tigray Regional Stat farce has caused unimaginable suffering to the people of Tigray. As different national and international medias reported, including athletes over 600,000 Tigrean civilians have been killed [7], more than 2 million people were internally displaced [8], around 70,000 people have fled to Sudan remains cut off from food, water, and medical aid [8], more than 120,000 women were faced to single and group sexual violence and 5.2 million people in need of humanitarian assistance [9]. In line with this families were separated for long period of time, many children lost their parents and thousands face to malnutrition, periods of hunger become long and very common for the whole population of Tigray. In Tigray Region all most all the health centers, schools, business companies (Governmental and non- governmental), sport infrastructures and equipments, social and cultural institutions which connects Tigreans history, identity and lived values were destroyed and looted, leaving seven million people without access of any kind. Consequently, thousands of children missing a significant period of education, athletes forced to pass a long lasting sedentary behavior, hundreds of thousands civil servants forced to pass more than two years without salary and millions remain without health care facilities. The war has become notorious for the war crimes at stake, including ethnic cleansing, rape and crimes against humanity [10]. Therefore, the past couple of years have been hell for the Tigray people. In the Tigray region, millions of people, including athletes, get traumatized. As many scholars proved that, anyone who has experienced war, genocide or torture, is often severely traumatized [11], and such people are considered to be particularly at risk to develop psychiatric disorders such as anxiety, depression and PTSD [12–13]. Studies evaluating psychiatric disorders have identified depression, PTSD, and anxiety disorders as the most common disorders diagnosed due to a war situation [14]. It is a fact that women and children are the most vulnerable group to the psychological consequences of war and conflict. Even though there is no any literature that shows the impact of war and armed conflicts on athlete’s mental health and psychological well-being, due to the nature of sport (socialization) athletes are also vulnerable group to the negative psychological consequence of war such as stress, anxiety and depression. To this end, psychologically the Tigrean athletes are severely affected by the war because of the absence of organized training and competition, lack of communication between athletes and coaches, inability to move freely, frequent death of loved once and colleague, long lasting sitting which leads to sedentary behavior etc. So the main objective of this study was to assess the psychological impact of the Northern Ethiopia civil war on Tigray athlete. And this study may provide researchers with some empirical understanding of the impact of civil war on the psychological well-being of athletes.