Gaza has become a moonscape in war. When the battles stop, many fear it will remain uninhabitable
BY ISABEL DEBRE
November 23, 2023
JERUSALEM (AP) — Israel’s military offensive has turned much of northern Gaza into an
uninhabitable moonscape. Whole neighborhoods have been erased. Homes, schools
and hospitals have been blasted by airstrikes and scorched by tank fire. Some
buildings are still standing, but most are battered shells.
Nearly 1 million Palestinians have fled the north,
including its urban center, Gaza City, as ground combat intensified. When the
war ends, any relief will quickly be overshadowed by dread as displaced
families come to terms with the scale of the
calamity and what it
means for their future.
Where would they live? Who would eventually run
Gaza and pick up the
pieces?
“I want to go home even if I have to sleep on the
rubble of my house,” said Yousef Hammash, an aid worker with the Norwegian
Refugee Council who fled the ruins of the urban refugee camp of Jabaliya for
southern Gaza. “But I don’t see a future for my children here.”
The Israeli army’s use of powerful explosives in
tightly packed residential areas — which Israel describes as
the unavoidable outcome of
Hamas using civilian sites as cover for its operations — has killed over 13,000
Palestinians and led to
staggering destruction.
Hamas denies the claim and accuses Israel of recklessly bombing civilians.
“When I left, I couldn’t tell which street or
intersection I was passing,” said Mahmoud Jamal, a 31-year-old taxi driver who
fled his northern hometown of Beit Hanoun this month. He described apartment
buildings resembling open-air parking garages.
Israel’s bombardment has become one of the most
intense air campaigns since World War II, said Emily Tripp, director of
Airwars, a London-based conflict monitor. In the seven weeks since Hamas’ unprecedented
Oct. 7 attack,
Israel unleashed more munitions than the United States did in any given year of
its bombing campaign against the Islamic State group — a barrage the U.N
describes as the deadliest urban campaign since World War II.
In Israel’s grainy thermal footage of airstrikes
targeting Hamas tunnels, fireballs obliterate everything in sight. Videos by
Hamas’ military wing feature fighters with rocked-propelled grenades trekking
through smoke-filled streets. Fortified bulldozers have cleared land for
Israeli tanks.
“The north of Gaza has been turned into one big ghost
town,” said Mkhaimer Abusada, a political scientist at Al-Azhar University in
Gaza City who fled to Egypt last week. “People have nothing to return to.”
About half of all buildings across northern Gaza have
been damaged or destroyed, according to an analysis of Copernicus Sentinel-1
satellite data by Corey Scher of the CUNY Graduate Center and Jamon Van Den
Hoek of Oregon State University. With the U.N. estimating 1.7 million people
are newly homeless, many wonder if Gaza will ever recover.
“You’ll end up having displaced people living in tents
for a long time,” said Raphael Cohen, a senior political scientist at the RAND
Corporation, a research group.
The war has knocked 27 of 35 hospitals across Gaza out of operation, according to the
World Health Organization. The destruction of other critical infrastructure has
consequences for years to come.
“Bakeries and grain mills have been destroyed,
agriculture, water and sanitation facilities,” said Scott Paul, a senior
humanitarian policy adviser for Oxfam America. “You need more than four walls
and a ceiling for a place to be habitable, and in many cases people don’t even
have that.”
Across the entire enclave, over 41,000 homes — 45% of
Gaza’s total housing stock — are too destroyed to be lived in, according to the
U.N.
“All I left at home was dead bodies and rubble,” said Mohammed al-Hadad, a
28-year-old party planner who fled Shati refugee camp along Gaza City’s
shoreline. Shati sustained nearly 14,000 incidents of war damage — varying from
an airstrike crater to a collapsed building — over just 0.5 square kilometers
(0.2 square miles), the satellite data analysis shows.
Southern Gaza — where scarce food, water and fuel has
spawned a humanitarian crisis — has been spared the heaviest firepower,
according to the analysis.
But that’s changing. In the past two weeks, satellite
data shows a spike in damage across the southern town of Khan Younis. Residents
say the military has showered eastern parts of town with evacuation warnings.
Israel has urged those in southern Gaza to move again,
toward a slice of territory called Muwasi along the coast. As of Thursday, Israel and Hamas were still working out the details
of a four-day truce that would allow more humanitarian aid to enter Gaza and
facilitate an exchange of Palestinian
prisoners for Israeli hostages.
Displaced Palestinians said four days won’t be enough.
“This is our nakba,” said 32-year-old journalist Tareq
Hajjaj, referring to the mass displacement of an estimated 700,000 Palestinians
during the 1948 war surrounding Israel’s creation — an exodus Palestinians call
the “nakba,” or
“catastrophe.”
Although publicly Palestinians reject the idea of
being transferred outside Gaza, some privately admit they cannot stay, even
after the war ends.
“We will never return home,” said Hajjaj, who fled his
home in Shijaiyah in eastern Gaza City. “Those who stay here will face the most
horrific situation they could imagine.”
The 2014 Israel-Hamas war leveled Shijaiyah, turning
the neighborhood into fields of inert gray rubble. The $5 billion
reconstruction effort there and across Gaza remains unfinished to this day.
“This time the scale of destruction is exponentially
higher,” said Giulia Marini, international advocacy officer at Palestinian
rights group Al Mezan. “It will take decades for Gaza to go back to where it
was before.”
It remains unclear who will take responsibility for
that task. At the recent security
summit in Bahrain,
Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi vowed Arab states would not “come and
clean the mess after Israel.”
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu wants the
army to restore security, and American
officials have pushed the
seemingly unlikely scenario of the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority taking
over the strip.
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, regarded by many
Palestinians as weak, has dismissed that idea in the absence of Israeli efforts
toward a two-state solution.
Despite the war’s horrors, Yasser Elsheshtawy, a
professor of architecture at Columbia University, hopes reconstruction could
offer an opportunity to turn Gaza’s ramshackle refugee camps and long
deteriorating infrastructure into “something more habitable and equitable and
humane,” including public parks and a revitalized seafront.
But Palestinians say it’s not only shattered
infrastructure that requires rebuilding but a traumatized society.
“Gaza has become a very scary place,” Abusada said.
“It will always be full of memories of death and destruction.”
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