Fear & desolation in Gaza's ruins
Manal Al-Harsh, a resident of Jabalia, Gaza, faces immense difficulties as she returns to her destroyed home post-ceasefire. She has set up a makeshift tent amid the ruins, fearing rats and stray dogs, and struggles to find clothing for her childr...

Even trying to find her children's clothes amid the rubble of their house in Jabalia is a forlorn task. Al-Harsh has erected a makeshift tent from salvaged blankets to provide shelter for her and her children. "We are staying here, but we are afraid of rats and everything around us. There are dogs. There is no place to settle. We have children. It is difficult," Harsh, 36, said as she stepped cautiously over the debris.
She said she had returned from the south of the Palestinian enclave when the ceasefire began but found her house destroyed.
Much of the rest of Gaza City also lies in ruins after 15 months of fighting and waves of Israeli airstrikes and artillery barrages that left it a shell of the bustling urban centre it was before the war.
"We are practically sleeping here, but we don't sleep. We are afraid someone might come upon us. We are sleeping and scared," she said. "I want to retrieve some clothes for the children to wear. We came with nothing. Life here is expensive, and there is no money to buy anything."
Many of those returning had trekked 20 km or more along the coastal highway north.
Like many displaced Palestinians, Al-Harsh faces uncertainty as she tries to salvage what remains. She had managed to pick some clothes from the rubble but they were in a sorry state. "It's all torn. Nothing is good. As much as we do, as much as we retrieve, it is all stones," she said. "Death is better," she said with despair.
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