UPDATED ON:
Saturday, January 24, 2009
16:45 Mecca time, 13:45 GMT
 
FOCUS: CRISIS IN GAZA
Gazans pledge to rebuild

Gazans have vowed to rebuild after the Israeli offensive destroyed their homes [GALLO/GETTY]

The survivors of the Israeli offensive in Gaza have slowly begun to restore a semblance of normalcy to their daily lives. 

Public facilities are operating once again, the streets are being cleared, tractors are at work removing piles of rubble, power lines are being fixed and electricity and water services are being restored to homes in Gaza. 

Government employees went back to work on January 21 and arrangements are being made for those whose offices have been destroyed. 

Palestinian ministries are recommencing their work despite the destruction of some of their facilities. 

Schools reopened on January 24 but many classes were overcrowded as they attempted to accommodate students from buildings which had been destroyed by Israeli air raids.

Meanwhile, the police have pledged to return to the streets in full uniform in a matter of days.

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However, the return to a sense of normalcy in Gaza, despite the siege and threat of renewed Israeli attacks, has been slow in coming.

In the first 24 hours following the Israeli announcement of a unilateral ceasefire many Gazans exercised caution and did not venture out. 

Those who did leave their homes, headed to the nearest store or moved from one home to another in order to reunite with their families; the majority stayed put and decided to wait. 

The city looked and felt deserted. It was not until the next day that people began to slowly emerge and examine their immediate surroundings. 

Residents of neighbourhoods that were occupied by Israeli forces during the ground offensive feared returning to their apartment buildings and houses in case the ceasefire failed to hold.

They only visited their homes in the daytime to survey the extent of the damage. 

Garbage and debris

It was no small shock to see the state of destruction levelled on Gaza City. The streets were filled with garbage, rubble and debris. Pavements seemed like they had been pulled out of the ground. 

The roads were strewn with overturned cars, fallen lampposts, trees, windows and bricks that had been blown out of homes. 

Driving through the city centre, where several government buildings had once been, was like driving through a junkyard. Every street, every alley, every corner bears evidence of mayhem and upheaval.

While the central areas of Gaza City were badly affected, the scale of the destruction in the outlying areas and towns is incomparable. 

Beit Lahya a town with orange and olive groves, factories and residential areas was laid waste.

You could not walk more than a few metres without passing a home, school, warehouse, public service building or mosque that had been flattened. In some parts of the town, entire clusters of houses had been demolished. 

Other houses which were left still standing are now uninhabitable because they had their windows blown by shrapnel and artillery shells which fell nearby. 

The orange groves were not spared the destruction; tens of trees had been uprooted and some fields were bulldozed - leaving no trace of local agriculture.

On the mounds

Many Palestinian homes and facilities were destroyed during the Israeli offensive [AFP]

I passed by a group of men sitting on a large mound of rubble and metal, talking and drinking tea. 

The mound was all that remained of a steel factory and the owner was among the group of his employees. 

"And where else are we supposed to go this morning?" he replied when asked why he was sitting outside in the cold. 

He pointed to a number of nearby factories that had met the same fate as his own.

This carnage was repeated in the former industrial districts of Beit Lahya and Jabaliya. 

Some families have set up tents by the ruins of their homes. Families with access to a warehouse, store, shack or any other structure that provides shelter from the cold are staying there. 

There is no estimate yet of the number of homes that have been destroyed, but tens of thousands of people are still displaced and homeless.  

Nowhere to go

Many families chose to remain by their former homes because they have nowhere else to go. 

They spend their days digging through the rubble, looking for any items and belongings that may have endured the Israeli attacks. 

Displaced homeless families who have been staying with friends and family feel that they cannot burden their relatives any longer. 

"At this point we go to my sister's house to sleep at night," one elderly man said. 

He sat with his wife, seven children and son-in-law on some wooden planks next to the ruins of their home. They had made a small fire. 

"But we spend the whole day here. I can't burden my sister with our expenses and they don't have that much room. UNRWA said that they would distribute tents and blankets.

"When they do we'll set it up here, we're hoping to get one soon," he said.

Another family in Jabaliya had set up their own tent, using the remains of carpets they had pulled out from the rubble and putting them over a few rods that were still standing. 

"It gets cold at night, but they made us leave the school and we have nowhere to go," said the mother of six, who was sitting with her husband, children and father-in-law in the small, make-shift shelter they had built.

Day by day

Palestinians have been sheltering in tents set up on the ruins of their homes [AFP]

The question of where the displaced families will go, whether in Rafah, Gaza City or further north, remains unanswered. 

Many say that they are living day by day, coping with the challenges as they come.

They would rather live in tents all their lives than have to live in constant fear. 

The people of the Gaza Strip seem like they are still in the process of regaining consciousness, getting accustomed to the new realities of the aftermath of the Israeli offensive.

Hamas spokesmen and a number of resistance fighters clad in civilian clothing and looking after their families continue to insist that they are stronger for having survived the Israeli attacks.

They are claiming victory, which is somewhat ironic given the devastation that has now become the Gaza Strip.

 Source: Al Jazeera
Feedback Number of comments : 13
 
max
Afghanistan
25/01/2009
Who is responsible?
The responsibility lies entirely with us muslims ,,,coz .. we are divided , ruled by western puppets , have no military or economic strength ,,,WE ARE WEAK AND WEAKNESS INVITES AGGRESSION

Suha
France
25/01/2009
in a war like in a war
Electing hamas who's agenda is no state of israel and most of it's actions gear to accomplish that is expected to provoke israel. as much as it would provoke Egypt when gazen sneeze toward Sini not to mention rockets and alike. If gaza can contain hamas they will need no fear israel. But they cannot expect anything from israel before the sign on peace.

Zanco Asaad
Iraq
25/01/2009
World Arab leaders?
All Arab nations should support Gazans and help them to rebuild their territory that devastated by Israel, they must do that by deeds not words. Now, where are the Arab leaders? May be the Arab leaders another time divided into two groups to how rebuild Gaza. I hope that all Palestine Parties unite so as to stand against their enemy.

Bill
Canada
24/01/2009
Each of Us is the Author of his Own Book
The Gazans are victorious. They did no harm. All they did was to make a paltry gesture against the people who arrived there 60 years ago to grab their homeland away from them. The Israelis are murderers and now that is the Israelis' problem, as surely as it is the Americans' problem. For when you shoot someone or murder someone, the action belongs only to you. The person you kill has nothing to do with it. You have demonstrated your own personal choice to do this thing you own it forever.

gary pollock
United States
24/01/2009
rebuilding of Gaza
One thing that stands out in my mind is that the destruction and denial of a life to all Gazans. Gaza must be rebuilt. Europe was rebuilt, Japan was rebuilt, Vietnam rebuilt. I guess I am dreaming when I think that the Israelis would recognize that with the destruction must come the return to life. It is Israels responsibility to PAY for the rebuilding of Gaza. If the yever hope to have a neighbor who will not hate them, they nust do this. They must swear to be a good neighbor in act and kind

Ukn
Afghanistan
25/01/2009
The people in Palestin should learn by now that they should stop suporting the people that caused what happened to their homes and try to fiend a peacefull solution for Palestin and thinking that they can beat a big power with small arms and stones will not bring peace to them

Ernest
United States
25/01/2009
Gazans pledge to rebuild, Part 1
I'm so sorry for the Gazans to have to have gone through this. I do believe that Hamas was very wrong for firing the missles into southern Israel. You need to have faith in God and have people represent you that will be productive, not destructive. People that can defend your interests and human rights, in speech, not the firing of missles. Even during the Israeli bombings, Israel pledged to stop if the missles would stop being fired into southern Israel, the missles irresponsibly continued.

Ernest
United States
25/01/2009
Gazans pledge to rebuild, Pt 2
Israel declared a unilateral cease fire after examining the consequences and the diminished capability of Hamas. Hamas even fired more rockets. Gaza will be rebuilt and I'm sure you don't want to see this happen again. Be wise in who you chose to lead you. Seeing the films and the pictures of the situations in Gaza can make a man cry. We all speak of protecting women and children (even some men are included). Wise women can help a man make wise choices.

rafi
United States
26/01/2009
YOU MUST BE KIDDING
Palestinians shoot rockets they were warned they would kill their sister over honor they would kill every jew if they could what they got was merciful what they got they deserved what they will get in the future depends upon whether they act as stuid as they did now

gary albert
Canada
26/01/2009
Gaza
Send people money, give them a life, if a guy is busy selling imported italien Icecream , he not have time to fire missles etc, if a guy has an hotel on the beach, no missles, build, the un has to stop with the handouts, keep people on welfare. Its all about money , Ecconmy,. Build they will stop bombing and firing missles. The west, Europe, Rich Arab sheiks need to do something. Build an Economy. Peace with Ice Cream. Tell the Hamas they have blood on there hands as well

Diarmuid
Ireland
27/01/2009
Rebuilding Gaza
I feel so much for the people of Gaza but can't believe the ignorance of some of the commentators. Israeli Zionists not only caused the whole Palestinian issue in the first place but also punished the people of Gaza for democratically electing Hamas. Then Israel itself broke the ceasefire in November. Anyway, how can firing of home-made rockets that had killed no Israeli by the time of the assault justify the killing of at least 1,300, including more than 410 and making 100,000 homeless?

Sara
Sri Lanka
28/01/2009
Crisis in Gaza
History repeats people! Israel appeals to the whole world and still appeal for sympathy for 2nd world war! Holocaust. The world answered by presenting them with some one else's home. how Generous! The Arab world did not do enough to stop it. Now this is just a result of what we reaped. There will be more and the Arab world will stand by and watch. when it's them next they will know who is the enemy.

Abdul
United States
02/02/2009
THIS TIME AROUND, PLEASE REBUILD WITH BOMB SHELTERS FOR YOUR WOMEN AND CHILDREN. STOCK IT WITH FOOD AND WATER SO THEY DO NOT GO HUNGRY. LEARN AND ADAPT. I WOULD LIKE TO THINK THAT THIS HAS ENDED BUT THIS STRUGGLE WILL AND MUST CONTINUE UNTIL YOU ARE ACKNOWLEDGED TO BE HUMAN AND LET OUT OF YOUR PRISON. YOU ARE A PEOPLE CONVICTED BY AN INSANE WORLD FOR NOT BEING STRONG ENOUGH TO DEFEND YOURSELF. BUT THE HUMAN SPIRIT IS SUCH THAT YOUR STRUGGLE WILL FORCE THEM TO YIELD.

 
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