Rafah, Gaza Strip, Palestine – Palestinian farmer Abd al-Sattari owned two homes in Gaza’s Rafah. For the 9 months since Israeli forces invaded the southern metropolis, he has been compelled into displacement. The 53-year-old had lived with the hope that if one home obtained hit in one of many Israeli assaults, which have flattened greater than 70 p.c of the territory, the opposite one would keep standing to take his household again in when the battle lastly ended.
On Sunday, even earlier than the ceasefire got here into impact, Abd took his eldest son Mohammed and left the remainder of their household of their displacement tent in al-Mawasi, on Gaza’s southwestern coast. They rushed to at least one property, then the following, to face the grim actuality: each his homes – one within the space of Shaboura and the opposite in Mirage – had been lowered to rubble. Abd’s hopes of returning to normalcy have been shattered.
The much-anticipated ceasefire settlement got here into impact on Sunday morning, bringing what Palestinians hope will probably be an finish to a grotesque battle that has killed more than 46,900 people, demolished a lot of the besieged enclave and pushed greater than 2 million folks into displacement. Even earlier than the ceasefire started, a whole lot of households had been speeding again to Rafah, having fled after the Israeli invasion, with their few belongings packed into automobiles, animal-pulled carts and bikes.
Israeli forces continued their assaults on Gaza, killing extra Palestinians simply earlier than the ceasefire started. However that didn’t cease some households who had already headed to their previous neighbourhoods and arrange camp on the ruins of what had been as soon as their houses, keen to maneuver previous the darkest months of their lives.
As they crossed the cratered roads that crisscross Rafah, some households chanted: “We are going to rebuild. We are going to reside.”
‘Rafah is gone’
However for a lot of, pleasure turned to anguish as they returned to devastation.
As he surveyed his first house, spanning 200 sq. metres (2,000 sq ft), and his second two-storey home of 160 sq. metres (1,700 sq ft), Abd discovered solely destruction. Visits to the houses of his three brothers revealed comparable devastation. With no roof to shelter his household, his desires of ending their seven-month displacement collapsed.
Sitting amid the ruins, Abd known as his spouse, who had been ready within the al-Mawasi camp with the household’s belongings packed onto a truck. Over the telephone, he broke the information: their houses had been uninhabitable, with no partitions, water or fundamental providers. His spouse wept bitterly, pleading to return regardless of the devastation, however Abd insisted it was not possible.
Their eldest son, Mohammed, took the telephone to influence his mom to remain put, reassuring her that they might discover methods to arrange for a future return.
“The Rafah we knew is gone,” Abd lamented. “The streets the place we grew up, the locations we labored—they’re now unrecognisable.”
For Abd’s household of six youngsters, at the present time was meant to mark an finish to the distress of displacement. As a substitute, they face the grim actuality of rebuilding from nothing.
Abd mirrored on their dashed hopes. “We thought we’d lastly escape the tents and reside inside partitions once more. However now, it looks like a brand new type of annihilation – this time, not from bombs however from the sheer absence of life’s necessities.”

A determined homecoming
Within the days main as much as the ceasefire, Palestinians in Gaza have been bracing for what they hoped could be an finish to their distress – greater than 1.8 million folks suffered from extreme starvation and a whole lot of 1000’s had been dwelling in feeble tents that hardly shielded them from a winter that has killed infants because of hypothermia.
Households like Nasim Abu Alwan’s, who introduced his 9 youngsters again to seek out their house obliterated, resolved to reside among the many ruins. “We’ll haul water from afar if we should,” Nasim stated. “We’re carried out with tents. We’re staying in Rafah, it doesn’t matter what.”
In keeping with United Nations figures, greater than 60 p.c of buildings and 65 p.c of roads throughout Gaza have been destroyed since October 7, 2023, when the battle began.
“Greater than 42 million tons of particles has been generated, inside which is buried human stays and unexploded ordinance (UXO), asbestos and different hazardous substances,” the UN’s humanitarian company’s (OCHA) report stated.
Different residents of Rafah, like Amjad Abdullah, opted to remain in Khan Younis, unwilling to endure life amid the rubble. “It’s not possible to reside right here,” he stated after discovering his neighbourhood inaccessible even by foot. “Rafah has grow to be a graveyard of buildings. With out water, roads, or fundamental infrastructure, life right here is unimaginable.”

In keeping with Mohammed al-Sufi, Rafah’s mayor, the size of destruction in Rafah is “staggering”.
“Town is uninhabitable,” he informed Al Jazeera.
Al-Sufi stated that “70 p.c of its services and infrastructure are destroyed”.
“Key areas just like the Philadelphi Hall, which constitutes 16 p.c of Rafah’s space, stay off-limits, whereas massive swaths of japanese Rafah are equally inaccessible,” he added. The Philadelphi Hall is a strip of land that extends alongside Gaza’s border with Egypt.
Municipal employees are racing towards time to clear roads, restore water and tackle the risks of unexploded ordnance. However the municipality is warning towards hastened returns.
“We want a gradual, cautious strategy. With out fundamental providers, life can not resume,” one of many employees stated.
Regardless of the devastation, Rafah’s residents stay defiant. Households cling to their reference to town, decided to reclaim what little stays. As one father put it, “We’ve suffered an excessive amount of in exile. Rafah is house, and we’ll rebuild – even when it takes a lifetime.”
This piece was revealed in collaboration with Egab.