Gaza's Reckoning: Thousands Buried Under Rubble After Brutal Conflict
As the ceasefire in Gaza continues, a daunting task lies ahead for Palestinians to recover thousands of bodies from under the rubble of their homes and buildings. The scale of the debris is staggering – 61 million tonnes of rubble, with at least 10,000 people thought to be buried, according to estimates.
Rescue teams have been struggling to reach those trapped beneath the wreckage using rudimentary tools, including shovels, pickaxes, and wheelbarrows. Requests to Israel to allow excavators and heavy machinery to assist in the recovery efforts have gone unanswered. "The whole world has seen the equipment that was brought in to retrieve the bodies of Israeli hostages," said Dr Mohammed al-Mughir, director of humanitarian support and international cooperation at the civil defence. "We also need the same equipment to retrieve our bodies."
As families wait anxiously for news about their loved ones, psychologists warn of an "ambiguous loss" – a situation that can generate or contribute to depression, trauma, and identity confusion. DNA testing is desperately needed to identify the thousands of missing or deceased people, but Israel has refused to allow the necessary equipment into Gaza.
The recovery efforts have been further complicated by the presence of hazardous debris, such as unexploded ordnance and asbestos. The United Nations mine action service has logged 147 incidents related to ordnance in rubble, resulting in 52 deaths and hundreds of injuries.
As the situation continues to deteriorate, hopes for a comprehensive rubble-clearing operation have been repeatedly dashed by ongoing Israeli strikes. The territory remains a patchwork of concrete shells and shattered walls, with neighbourhoods pockmarked with craters and mounds of rubble. The question that remains is not what might fall next but what, if anything, can stand again.
For Aya Abu Nasr, the prospect of recovering her family's bodies is a constant source of pain and sorrow. Her extended family lived in a five-storey house in Beit Lahiya, which collapsed after an Israeli airstrike last October. "Most of my family members had been staying on the ground and first floors," she said. "I lost five of my siblings – two brothers and three sisters – along with all their families." The remains of her loved ones are scattered between the ground and first floors, making it impossible to recover without heavy machinery.
As the world watches Gaza's struggle for recovery, one question lingers: how can we rebuild after such destruction? The answer lies not in the rubble itself but in the resilience of those who have lost everything.
As the ceasefire in Gaza continues, a daunting task lies ahead for Palestinians to recover thousands of bodies from under the rubble of their homes and buildings. The scale of the debris is staggering – 61 million tonnes of rubble, with at least 10,000 people thought to be buried, according to estimates.
Rescue teams have been struggling to reach those trapped beneath the wreckage using rudimentary tools, including shovels, pickaxes, and wheelbarrows. Requests to Israel to allow excavators and heavy machinery to assist in the recovery efforts have gone unanswered. "The whole world has seen the equipment that was brought in to retrieve the bodies of Israeli hostages," said Dr Mohammed al-Mughir, director of humanitarian support and international cooperation at the civil defence. "We also need the same equipment to retrieve our bodies."
As families wait anxiously for news about their loved ones, psychologists warn of an "ambiguous loss" – a situation that can generate or contribute to depression, trauma, and identity confusion. DNA testing is desperately needed to identify the thousands of missing or deceased people, but Israel has refused to allow the necessary equipment into Gaza.
The recovery efforts have been further complicated by the presence of hazardous debris, such as unexploded ordnance and asbestos. The United Nations mine action service has logged 147 incidents related to ordnance in rubble, resulting in 52 deaths and hundreds of injuries.
As the situation continues to deteriorate, hopes for a comprehensive rubble-clearing operation have been repeatedly dashed by ongoing Israeli strikes. The territory remains a patchwork of concrete shells and shattered walls, with neighbourhoods pockmarked with craters and mounds of rubble. The question that remains is not what might fall next but what, if anything, can stand again.
For Aya Abu Nasr, the prospect of recovering her family's bodies is a constant source of pain and sorrow. Her extended family lived in a five-storey house in Beit Lahiya, which collapsed after an Israeli airstrike last October. "Most of my family members had been staying on the ground and first floors," she said. "I lost five of my siblings – two brothers and three sisters – along with all their families." The remains of her loved ones are scattered between the ground and first floors, making it impossible to recover without heavy machinery.
As the world watches Gaza's struggle for recovery, one question lingers: how can we rebuild after such destruction? The answer lies not in the rubble itself but in the resilience of those who have lost everything.