Palestinians displaced to the southern part of Gaza attempting to return to the north on Oct 10.PHOTO: REUTERS

‘Full of sorrow’: Gazans head back to ruined homes as truce begins

· The Straits Times

KHAN YOUNIS, Palestinian Territories – Full of grief after two years of war but glad to be going home, thousands of displaced Palestinians set off across the Gaza Strip on Oct 10, as a truce between Israel and Hamas took hold.

Timidly at first, then in a huge column, thousands walked northwards in a line at least a kilometre long from the safer areas of central Gaza towards Gaza City, the scene of a gruelling Israeli offensive.

People chanted “God is great”, cheering and whistling in their joy as they walked on a recently opened Mediterranean seafront road.

Mr Ibrahim al-Helou, a 40-year-old man from Gaza City displaced in the central refugee camp of Al-Maghazi, said he was excited, but remained cautious.

He said that when he began heading home, “the situation was dangerous, with gunfire, so I waited for a while”.

“Now, the road has been opened, and we have all continued on our way back to Gaza to check on our homes and assess the situation,” he said.

Mr Ahmad Azzam, a 35-year-old who was also displaced to central Gaza from Gaza City, said he moved as soon as he heard of the troops pulling back.

“When I heard news of the Israeli withdrawal and that the road would be opened in the coming hours, my family and I immediately headed to Al-Rashid Street to return to Gaza,” he said.

He added that, like Mr Helou, he found the situation dangerous at first, and initially chose to wait on a hill overlooking the coastal road.

“Only a few people are risking moving forward,” he said, speaking at noon, the time the troops’ pullback officially began.

Israel’s military said on Oct 10
that troops “began positioning themselves along the updated deployment lines in preparation for the ceasefire agreement and the return of hostages”.

It said in a separate statement in Arabic that Gaza’s main north-south axis, Salah Al-Din road, has also been reopened, but warned Gazans against approaching army troops still stationed inside the Palestinian territory.

Israel government spokeswoman Shosh Bedrosian told journalists on Oct 9 that Israel’s military would redeploy to the so-called Yellow Line, as they gradually withdraw under a plan proposed by US President Donald Trump
.

During this first part of the withdrawal process, the military will still hold about 53 per cent of the Gaza Strip.

Grim future

Despite the widespread celebrations that greeted news of the ceasefire
, many Palestinians were keenly aware that little remained of the lives they knew before the war.

“Okay, it is over. Then what? There is no home I can go back to,” Balqees, a mother of five from Gaza City who has been sheltering in Deir al-Balah in central Gaza, said.

“They have destroyed everything. Tens of thousands of people are dead, the Gaza Strip is in ruins, and they made a ceasefire. Am I supposed to be happy? No, I am not.”

Her sentiments were echoed by Mr Mustafa Ibrahim, an activist and human rights advocate from Gaza City who also took refuge in Deir al-Balah, one of the few areas in the enclave not overrun and levelled by Israeli forces.

“Laughter has vanished and tears have run dry,” he said. “The people of Gaza are lost, as if they are the walking dead, searching for a distant future.”

Palestinians displaced to the southern part of Gaza attempting to return to the north on Oct 10.PHOTO: REUTERS

Some former Gaza City residents have already started making their way back even before the ceasefire went into effect, some making it as far as the north-west suburb of Sheikh Radwan.

Among them was Mr Ismail Zayda, a 40-year-old father of three, who went to check on his house early on Oct 10 and was amazed to find it still intact, albeit amid a “sea of rubble”.

“Thank God, my house is still standing,” he said. “But the area is destroyed. My neighbours’ houses are destroyed. Entire districts are gone.”

‘Running’

In the southern city of Khan Younis, dozens walked back to their homes on paths cleared through piles of rubble accumulated from over two years of war and air strikes.

Destroyed and damaged buildings, their facades torn off by blasts or crumbling upon their foundations, stood on all sides as the returnees walked in the morning sun, shortly after news spread that Israeli forces had withdrawn from parts of Khan Younis.

A boy resting in Khan Younis on Oct 10, following Israeli forces' withdrawal from the area.PHOTO: REUTERS

“We’re happy. Even if we return to ruins with no life, at least it’s our land,” Mr Ameer Abu Iyadeh, a returnee, said.

“We’re going back to our areas, full of wounds and sorrow, but we thank God for this situation,” he said smiling, a pink school backpack strapped to his chest, holding a jerrycan full of water in one hand and his young daughter in the other.

“God willing, everyone will return to their areas,” the 32-year-old said, while his two other daughters walked by his side, holding hands.

Ms Areej Abu Saadeh, a Palestinian woman who lost a daughter and a son during the war, said she could not wait to get home.

“We’ve been displaced for two years now, living on the sidewalks with no shelter and nowhere to stay,” she said.

“We’re now on our way to Bani Suheila, running. I just want to reach my place,” she said, referring to her town east of Khan Younis.

Israel previously said all parties have signed the first phase of a ceasefire agreement at talks this week in Egypt, adding that Hamas freeing its remaining Israeli captives alive and dead would “bring the end to this war”. AFP, REUTERS