News BBC, Jerusalem

Jabalia, viewed from the air, breathed.
A hiroshima-like desert desert to the eye appears. Dead dead bodies in the buildings dot of childned-up groundscape, some leaning against fierce angles.
Many disables of waves that make everything but it is impossible to make this geography before depriving it, tightly wrapped camp of refugees.
And yet, as a drone camera flies to the wreck, it picked up splashes blue and white where small tent camps were placed in the patches of open land.
And numbers, destroying broken buildings, moving in the streets of dirt, where food markets come under tin roofs and cans in tin. Children using a crushed roof as a slide.
After more than six weeks stopping Gaza stopped in Gaza, Jabalia was slowly resurrected.

In Al-Qasasib neighborhood, Nabil returned to a house of four floors that still standing, though it had windows, doors and – in some places – walls.
He and his relatives made crude balconies from wooden pallets and strung-up tarpaulin to keep elements.
“Look at the destruction,” he said as he checked the ocean of jabalia’s ruins from a stimulating upper floor.
“They want us to leave without being built? How do we leave. The least we can do is rebuild it for our children.”
In cooking a diet, shining on Nabil is a fire on the staircase naked, which put it closely with the pieces of broken carton.

On another floor, Laila Ahmed Onasha was cleansed in a sink in which tap running dry months later.
“No water, electricity or canal,” he said. “If we need water, we have to go to a long place to fill the buckets.”
He said he cried when he returned home and found it broken.
He blames Israel and Hamas for destroying the world that he used to know.
“They both are responsible,” he said. “We have a decent, comfortable life.”
Shortly after the war began in October 2023, Israel told Palestinians in the northern part of Gaza Strip – including Jabalia – to move south for their own salvation.
Hundreds of thousands of people listened to the warning, but many remained, determined to ride the war.
Laila and her husband Marwan stayed until October last year, when Israel restored Jabalia, Hamas said the units fighting inside the narrow streets of the camp.
After two months of protection to the adjacent camp of Shatidi, Leila and Marwan returned to find Jabalia almost unknown.

“When we returned and saw how it was broken, I didn’t want to stay here,” Marwan said.
“I have a great life, but now it’s a hell. If you have a chance to leave, I’ll go. I’m not going to stay just another minute.”
Stay or go? The future of civilian population in Gaza is now the subject of international debate.
In February, Donald Trump suggested that the US should take Gaza and that almost two million Palestinian residents need to leave, possibly for good.
Faced with international hostility and fierce opposition from the leaders of the Arab, Trump later appeared from the plan, saying he recommended it to anyone.
In the meantime, Egypt led Arab’s efforts with a good choice, to present an emergency Arab Summit in Cairo on Tuesday.
Kide, it says Palestinian population must remain within Gaza while the place is reformed.
Donald Trump intervention brings out the great stiffness of Gaza.
“If Trump wants to leave us, I will stay in Gaza,” Laila said. “I want to travel my own free will. I don’t leave because of him.”
The whole way is sitting on a nine-story yellow block of flats that are so odd that it’s hard to believe it’s hard to crumble.
The upper floors pass throughout, threatening others. Eventually, it was definitely broken, but now it’s home to more family. There are blankets in windows and wash hanging to dry in late winter sunshine.
Most unreported to all, outside a maketoft plastic passage on a corner of the ground floor, next to garbage and waste heaps, wearing a wedding gown.

This is the shop of Sanaa Abu Isbbak.
The 45-year-old seamstress, the mother of 11, setting up business two years before war but she had to leave it when she fled south of November 2023.
He returned when the ceasefire was announced. With her husband and daughters, she is busy cleaning the debris from the shop, arranging clothes in hangers and preparing for business.
“I love the camp of Jabaliah,” he said, “And I will not leave it until I die.”
Sanaa and Laila seem to be determined to stay put if possible. But both women are different talking about their reference to young people.
“He didn’t know how to write his own name,” Laila said his granddaughter.
“There is no education in Gaza.”
The little girl’s mother was killed in the war. Laila said he was still talking to him at night.
“He’s the soul of my soul and he left his daughter in my hands. If I had the opportunity to travel, I would do it for my grandson.”