The Gazans reject the displacement plans ... "The homeland is not built by leaving"
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Amid the rubble and destruction left by the war, and between the walls that were left only as ruins, the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip stand in the face of a new challenge, not less dangerous than bombing and displacement: attempts to displace them on the pretext of reconstruction.
The residents of the Strip, who used to face endless crises, reject any plan forcing them to leave their land, adhering to their right to stay despite the harsh suffering.
Life above the rubble .. No to go out
The Sky News Arabia camera monitored the reality of the Gazan families in the Shujaiya neighborhood, where many live over the ruins of their destroyed homes, rejecting the idea of leaving them despite the lack of the lowest elements of life. For them, the house is not just walls and ceiling, but rather a homeless country.
In one of the corners from which only a small corner of his home is left, Abu Muhammad sits under a tent on the rubble, wondering with the pain of the Sky News Arabia correspondent: “Why do we leave? They allow us to return.
In the neighborhood, another man stands and tired it, but he insists on staying despite everything, saying: “We will stay tents and live in them, all we ask is to provide us with aid so that we can live.”
"We will not go out ... we will re -reconstruction"
The position of men alone was not decisive in this categorical rejection. Women also emphasized that the option to stay is the only one before them. One of the women says firmly: "We will be patient and we will return the reconstruction, and we do not want Trump any reconstruction ... We will not get out of our land, we will remain steadfast here."
As for the children, who lived the scourge of war and lived for many months between tents, they have learned the meaning of steadfastness from a young age. One of the boys told Sky News Arabia: "How do we migrate from our homes after all this patience that we have been patient for about a year and a half? Live in a tent here is better than the life that Trump promises us.
What Gaza residents live today is not just a housing crisis, but rather a real battle. For more than a year, the steadfastness of the Gazans was tested with fire, and many of them were forced to redefine the concept of the homeland, so the house is no longer a place, but rather a symbol of stability in the face of continuous attempts to uproot them from their land.
Despite the lack of the most basic elements of life, the Great continues to live amids destruction, clinging to the words of the poet Mahmoud Darwish: “On this earth what deserves life.”
And if this land is without water, electricity, or houses that harbor them, but it remains for them the only homeland that they will not bother with the promises of reconstruction conditioned by leaving