Trump Call for Gazan Exit Echoes in Their Destroyed Homes
- Hundreds of thousands return to rubble and missing relatives
- Israeli defense minister says he’s paving way for departures
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As soon as the Gaza ceasefire was finalized last month, Emad Shomar headed north to find the home he hadn’t seen in 15 months. He found himself in a bewildering moonscape of ruination, his house bulldozed.
The 55 year-old considered pitching a tent, but unexploded military devices gave him pause. He had neither the expertise nor the machinery required to create a habitable environment. Even the act of building a washroom next to a tent seemed insurmountable; cement was unavailable. Reality sank in. Shomar returned to his family’s makeshift shelter in central Gaza.