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Palestinian residents of Rafah are convinced that the Israeli incursion in their city is not aimed at searching for and destroying tunnels, as Israeli officials claim. The aim is to destroy the southern area of the city, completely.

In the face of international silence and Israeli threats to return and finish off the rest of Rafah, residents have found themselves left with no other choice than to leave their homes to save their lives. As a result, there has been a rush to save whatever belongings possible in case more homes are demolished.

The streets of the Yubna and Shauth refugee camps have been swarming with people fleeing. Here, one man carries furniture on his back. There, another hails a taxi and begins loading his belongings. Others scramble to salvage valuable belongings from their homes.

For Haj Abu Ata Shaqfa, 70, the scene is reminiscent of the Nakba of 1948, the memories of that exile and the pain and suffering that accompanied it. "Since 1948, we have lived in misery and refuge. I built this house," he says, pointing to what is now a pile of bricks and debris. "I thought things were settling down and exile would remain just a memory that we would tell our children and grandchildren about."

He falls silent for a moment, then continues, "The occupation [forces] does not only want to make us flee, it wants to get rid of us altogether. It wants the land without the people."

For Rizq Abbsi, the Nakba is tangible only as stories told by his mother and grandmother. But he too has dreamed of returning to his original home in Falouja, which fell in 1948. When his family fled, he was an infant.

"I long for my birthplace and the land of my forefathers. I have lived all my life dreaming of returning to it one day," Abbsi says. "I never thought that one day we would relive the bitterness of exile here."

Abbsi, like thousands of others, has also been left homeless. "The occupier demolished the house and displaced our family of 23 members. We don't know where to live or where to turn. I now know the pain of my parents and grandparents when they said, after they left Falouja that 'we didn't know where to go.' Little did we know that the occupier would return to finish off what it started in 1948 and that our destiny would be like that of our fathers and forefathers."

Despite the desperation, a clear tone of defiance is discernible in the voices of all the young men who have been forced to flee their homes. Mohammed, another camp resident whose home was demolished, is uncowed. "They destroy the house, we will rebuild it. They kill our sons, we will give birth to others and we will continue to do so until we achieve independence.

"By these acts, Israel wants us to forget our land, our homes and villages from which we were expelled in 1948. But this will not happen. It is true that we have suffered a great catastrophe and the occupation was able to take away our homes, but it can never take away our will and determination," he insists.

Source: Palestine Report

 
 
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