Displaced Gazans pine for home

Published January 18, 2025
Displaced Palestinians walk at a tent camp where they shelter, following heavy rains, amid the Gaza conflict, in Deir Al-Balah, in the central Gaza Strip, December 30, 2024. — Reuters
Displaced Palestinians walk at a tent camp where they shelter, following heavy rains, amid the Gaza conflict, in Deir Al-Balah, in the central Gaza Strip, December 30, 2024. — Reuters

NUSEIRAT: In a sprawling tent city in central Gaza, Palestinians displaced to other parts of the territory are all waiting for one thing: a ceasefire so they can go home.

Most of Gaza’s 2.4 million people have been displaced at least once by the Israel-Hamas conflict to other parts of the territory.

With a long-awaited truce deal due to take effect on Sunday, they may finally be able to return to their neighbourhoods.

Umm Khalil Bakr has been living with her family in the Nuseirat camp, where displaced Palestinians have tried their hardest to lead a semblance of normal life.

There, they bake flatbread on clay ovens, play cards to pass the time when there are no bombings, and sweep the streets as an act of dignity.

If the ceasefire takes hold, people will start moving back to their neighbourhoods, though they are under no illusions as to what they might find.

“I will take my tent, remove the rubble from the house and place my tent on the rubble, where I will live with my 10 children,” Umm Khalil said.

“We know the weather will be cold, and we won’t have blankets for the bedding, but what matters is that we return to our homeland.”

Around her, young children gathered to watch their mother speak, bouncing idly on the tent sides.

Her determination to rebuild her life despite the utter devastation was shared by her fellow camp residents.

Whatever the state of their homes, the hardships of life in the camp were far worse, said Umm Mohamad al-Tawil.

“We will return, and whatever hardships we might face, we will return,” she said. “This is not life, and it is not our life.”

A few kilometres to the south, in Deir el-Balah, the Moqat family was packing their few belongings into cardboard boxes, ready to go back to Beit Lahia in the north of the Gaza Strip.

The family were looking for a truck to take them home, said Fatima Moqat.

“We will take the tent with us … and live in it just as we stayed here inside the tent,” she said.

“There we will live in the tent until they find us a solution for reconstruction.”

With the truce not yet in effect, there has been no let-up in the violence.

On Friday, Gaza’s civil defence agency said at least 113 people had been killed by Israeli bombardment of the territory since Qatar and the United States announced the deal.

The scale of the destruction in Gaza wrought by month after month of air strikes, shelling and street-to-street fighting means reconstruction could last well into the next decade, international agencies have said.

Published in Dawn, January 18th, 2025

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