The Fort Worth Press - Gazans lose tens of thousands in war, but have few chances to mourn

USD -
AED 3.672953
AFN 71.988544
ALL 95.36708
AMD 398.831079
ANG 1.794237
AOA 914.499688
ARS 1040.244954
AUD 1.61577
AWG 1.8
AZN 1.696933
BAM 1.898817
BBD 2.010058
BDT 120.959991
BGN 1.898941
BHD 0.376844
BIF 2945.171234
BMD 1
BND 1.363656
BOB 6.879545
BRL 6.055398
BSD 0.995515
BTN 86.155474
BWP 14.012349
BYN 3.257995
BYR 19600
BZD 1.999767
CAD 1.435775
CDF 2834.999836
CHF 0.91258
CLF 0.03648
CLP 1006.600846
CNY 7.331601
CNH 7.347685
COP 4286.45
CRC 501.735395
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 107.052359
CZK 24.537301
DJF 177.278111
DKK 7.243175
DOP 60.901434
DZD 135.907032
EGP 50.450999
ERN 15
ETB 126.303281
EUR 0.970885
FJD 2.330284
FKP 0.823587
GBP 0.819715
GEL 2.84026
GGP 0.823587
GHS 14.850149
GIP 0.823587
GMD 71.505112
GNF 8656.000208
GTQ 7.678566
GYD 208.279531
HKD 7.789205
HNL 25.324628
HRK 7.379548
HTG 129.96835
HUF 399.780213
IDR 16301
ILS 3.62405
IMP 0.823587
INR 86.567103
IQD 1304.162096
IRR 42087.499584
ISK 140.680124
JEP 0.823587
JMD 155.908837
JOD 0.709399
JPY 157.874498
KES 129.500038
KGS 87.450477
KHR 4040.999685
KMF 478.224978
KPW 900.000111
KRW 1460.594655
KWD 0.30857
KYD 0.829604
KZT 527.888079
LAK 21820.000169
LBP 89550.000351
LKR 293.237025
LRD 186.666278
LSL 18.88603
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 4.954974
MAD 10.019611
MDL 18.716323
MGA 4705.000296
MKD 59.7333
MMK 3247.960992
MNT 3398.000107
MOP 7.983612
MRU 39.919944
MUR 47.040195
MVR 15.397218
MWK 1736.000137
MXN 20.529301
MYR 4.5075
MZN 63.902255
NAD 18.88603
NGN 1547.980186
NIO 36.639887
NOK 11.38623
NPR 137.84714
NZD 1.784935
OMR 0.385002
PAB 0.995524
PEN 3.764332
PGK 4.0533
PHP 58.676496
PKR 277.406944
PLN 4.141293
PYG 7844.507874
QAR 3.628703
RON 4.830299
RSD 113.705406
RUB 102.001573
RWF 1385.209097
SAR 3.753616
SBD 8.443177
SCR 15.028155
SDG 601.000184
SEK 11.18216
SGD 1.368115
SHP 0.823587
SLE 22.650079
SLL 20969.49992
SOS 568.91823
SRD 35.104958
STD 20697.981008
SVC 8.710595
SYP 13001.999985
SZL 18.869537
THB 34.770008
TJS 10.881351
TMT 3.51
TND 3.209289
TOP 2.342105
TRY 35.5071
TTD 6.759158
TWD 33.040499
TZS 2525.00008
UAH 42.080057
UGX 3679.575926
UYU 43.776274
UZS 12913.46686
VES 53.89669
VND 25387.5
VUV 118.722008
WST 2.800827
XAF 636.839091
XAG 0.03353
XAU 0.000374
XCD 2.70255
XDR 0.767364
XOF 638.500677
XPF 115.785284
YER 249.01501
ZAR 18.942499
ZMK 9001.202219
ZMW 27.601406
ZWL 321.999592
  • RBGPF

    60.6700

    60.67

    +100%

  • SCS

    0.1100

    11.24

    +0.98%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    23.2

    +0.39%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0400

    6.91

    -0.58%

  • GSK

    -0.6200

    32.08

    -1.93%

  • CMSC

    0.0800

    22.88

    +0.35%

  • RIO

    0.8600

    60.38

    +1.42%

  • BCC

    3.1000

    123.61

    +2.51%

  • NGG

    -0.1600

    56.27

    -0.28%

  • BTI

    0.3700

    35.72

    +1.04%

  • RELX

    0.1800

    46.08

    +0.39%

  • BCE

    -0.6700

    22.54

    -2.97%

  • AZN

    -0.3600

    65.37

    -0.55%

  • JRI

    0.1900

    12.23

    +1.55%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    8.25

    +0.61%

  • BP

    -0.1300

    31.09

    -0.42%

Gazans lose tens of thousands in war, but have few chances to mourn
Gazans lose tens of thousands in war, but have few chances to mourn / Photo: © AFP/File

Gazans lose tens of thousands in war, but have few chances to mourn

Once a day, Umm Omar picks up the phone and calls her late husband, humouring their four-year-old daughter who does not understand yet her father was killed early in the Gaza war.

Text size:

Little Ella "wants us to call him, to tell him about her day", said Umm Omar, who has fled with her three children to Al-Mawasi, a coastal area teeming with mostly displaced Palestinians in the southern Gaza Strip.

More than 40,000 people have been killed in Gaza since war between Israel and Palestinian militants broke out on October 7, the Hamas-run territory's health ministry said Thursday.

It was triggered by Hamas's attack on southern Israel that day that resulted in the deaths of 1,198 people, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.

Umm Omar told AFP she did not understand "how the months have gone by" since her husband, Ibrahim al-Shanbari, was killed in an Israeli strike on northern Gaza.

When he died, Umm Omar said she lost everything "in a fraction of a second", but there was little time to bury him properly, grieve or process the loss of the "kind" man that he was.

There was no funeral procession or "any of the usual mourning (rituals) because it's wartime", Umm Omar added.

"It was very difficult to say goodbye... because the martyrs were buried very quickly," she said, with fighting raging across the besieged territory.

To help Ella, "I ended up pretending" her father was still alive, said Umm Omar.

Still, according to her, others had it worse, "those who have lost an entire family, those who have not been able to say goodbye, or those who find their children in pieces".

With more than 1.5 percent of Gaza's 2.4 million population killed during the war, many people have lost loved ones.

The smell of death is everywhere, but under constant bombardment, shelling and battles, Gazans often have little time -- or place that is not in ruins -- to process their grief.

- 'Death has replaced life' -

Some victims bled to death before reaching hospitals, many of which had gone out of service due to the fighting or facing severe shortages amid an Israeli siege imposed early on in the war.

Others were crushed under their toppled homes, their bodies eventually retrieved from the rubble of bombed-out neighbourhoods. Some are still missing, feared buried under the ruins.

To Mustafa al-Khatib, 56, who has lost several relatives, "death has replaced life."

The incessant violence has rendered many cemeteries inaccessible, often forcing Gazans to dig makeshift graves with whatever tools they can find, Khatib told AFP.

And "there are no stones or cement to make a concrete covering for the grave either", he said.

The hasty interment of Khatib's uncle in a hospital yard has left him with a "heavy heart", he said.

His sister was laid to rest at a long abandoned cemetery, which Khatib said was later bombed.

In central Gaza's Al-Maghazi refugee camp, a woman placed her hand on the ground outside a school used a displacement shelter: this is where she said her daughter was buried after dying in her arms, fatally wounded in a blast.

With nearly all Gazans displaced at least once by the war, and often far from home, they have resorted to burying family members on any available patch of land, in the street, or sometimes on football fields.

Many do not know when they may be able to return to their burial spots or even find them again.

- Longing for a final embrace -

In the nearly 10 months since the war began, AFP correspondents have witnessed mass burials and bodies put in the ground in blood-stained blankets.

Some were wrapped in plastic sheets, marked with a number rather than a name, either because the bodies were unrecognisable or because no relatives had come to claim them.

Across the ravaged territory, which had already suffered for years under a crippling Israeli-led blockade and past cycles of violence, hasty burials are now conducted daily in the midst of fighting, evacuation orders and hazardous journeys to find food, water and medical care.

Khatib said he had "grown accustomed" to the often chaotic and fleeting farewells before friends and family return to their daily task of survival.

Some never had the chance to say goodbye.

Gazans interviewed by AFP have struggled or were outright unable to express their grief and loss. Many said they await their own death to rejoin relatives.

For more than six months, Ali Khalil has known that his 32-year-old son Mohammed was killed in the bombing of his home in the Al-Shati refugee camp, on the outskirts of Gaza City.

But he had fled for safety with his grandchildren to the coastal territory's south when he heard the news.

"What hurts me the most is not having been able to bury my son, not having hugged him and not having said goodbye to him," said the grieving 54-year-old man.

"I wonder if his body remained intact or if it was in pieces. I have no idea."

M.Cunningham--TFWP