KHAN YOUNIS: Exhaustion, despair and anger are grinding away at Neāman Abu Jarad. Once again, for the 11th time, he and his family have been forced to uproot and move across the Gaza Strip.
āItās a renewal of the torture. Weāre not being displaced, weāre dying,ā Neāman said last week as the family packed up their possessions and tents in Gaza City to escape escalating Israel bombardment ahead of a planned invasion of the city.
The next day, they unpacked in southern Gaza on barren former agricultural land outside the city of Khan Younis, unsure where they would now find food and water.
This has been the Abu Jaradsā life for nearly two years, since fleeing their home in the far north of Gaza days after Israel launched its onslaught in response to Hamasā Oct. 7, 2023, attack. Like countless Palestinian families, they have fled the length of Gaza and back, forced to move every few months as Israel attacks each new shelter. The Associated Press has chronicled much of their journey.
During the ceasefire that began in January, they had a bittersweet return to their home, which was damaged but still standing. But within two months, Israel broke the ceasefire, and the Abu Jarads had to wrench themselves away.
With each move, Neāman and his wife Majida try to preserve some stability for their six daughters and their 2-year-old granddaughter amid the misery of tent life. The youngest is 8-year-old Lana; the eldest is Balsam, in her 20s and married.
But the sense of futility is weighing heavier. No end is in sight and Neāman fears it will get worse.
āWhatās coming is dark,ā he said. āWe might be expelled (from Gaza). We might die ⦠You feel like death is surrounding you. We just scurry from place to place, away from death.ā
Uprooted yet again
āIt gets worse for the girls. Itās hard on them to change every time they get used to something,ā Majida said.
Since May, the familyās refuge had been a tent in Gaza City. It wasnāt easy, but at least they got to know the neighborhood and their neighbors and figured out where to get water and medical care.
Their daughters could see friends from before the war, who were also displaced nearby. Another family in a neighboring building let their daughter Sarah come use their Internet to study for online high school classes. The girls downloaded books onto their phones, to study or just to have something to do.
Food was more difficult, as Israeli restrictions on aid pushed Gaza City into famine. Neāman joined hundreds of others waiting for aid trucks to enter from Israel. It was dangerous ā Israeli troops regularly opened fire toward the crowds, and Neāman saw people getting killed and wounded, Majida said. But he sometimes came back with food.
A few weeks ago, they found a school for Lana. āShe was very excited. Her life would have some regularity,ā Majida said.
But Israel had ordered the population to evacuate, preparing a new assault to seize Gaza City that it said aims to dismantle Hamas, free hostages and move toward taking security control of the strip. Bombardment came closer. One strike leveled an apartment tower a block away, sending shrapnel that pierced the Abu Jaradsā tent. Another destroyed a house across the street, killing members of the family sitting outside, Neāman said.
Lana had only attended three days of classes. But it was time to go. Last Thursday, they joined a growing exodus of Palestinians fleeing south.
Stress tears at the family
Dressed in pink pajamas and leaning against her father in their new camp the next day, Lana described her best friends Sila and Joudi bidding her farewell as they left Gaza City. They hugged her and told her they loved her ā and they were crying, Lana said.
āBut I did not cry,ā she added firmly. āI will not cry at all. I wonāt be sad.ā
Majida and Neāman worry about Lana. Their other daughters had a grounding of normal lives. But Lana was only six when Israelās campaign overturned their lives.
āShe is gaining awareness in the middle of war, bombardment and life in the tents,ā Majida said.
Lana can be stubborn and impatient.
āThereās things my sisters put up with that I donāt put up with,ā Lana said. She canāt tolerate the discomforts of tent life. Having to use the makeshift bathroom upsets her. āSitting and reading, I canāt get comfortable,ā she said.
Over the months, everything pushes the family to a boil ā boredom, lack of privacy, the daily toil of lugging water, gathering firewood, searching for food, cleaning the tent. Behind that lie darker thoughts: the feeling this could be their fate forever, the fear a strike could kill them.
Crammed together in the tent, the girls squabble and fight sometimes.
āWe were a model family, understanding and loving,ā Neāman said. āI never imagined weād reach this point. I get afraid the family will fragment from all the pressure.ā
āIn a desertā
The latest move drained what little money they had ā hundreds of dollars to buy a new tent and rent a truck to carry their belongings.
It also stripped them of everything that made life bearable. The new camp lies in a stretch of barren dirt and fields. Thereās no market nearby, no schools. They have to walk 2 kilometers (1.2 miles) to get an Internet connection. They are surrounded by strangers.
āWeāre living in a desert,ā Neāman said.
Friday morning, their daughters walked more than a kilometer (half mile) to catch up with a passing water truck. It ran out before they could fill all their plastic jugs.
The family spent the day clearing their spot of land, assembling their two tents ā one for the family, one for Neāmanās sister. As they worked, an Israeli strike rang out in the distance. They watched the black smoke rise over Khan Younis. Exhausted by the end of the day, Neāman still had to dig a latrine and set up the bathroom.
The area had been a closed Israeli military zone until a few weeks ago, when Israel announced displaced could move there. An Israeli military position is not far away. They can see tanks moving in and out.
āItās not safe here,ā Neāman said.
Majida tried to focus on practicalities.
If someday water trucks start coming closer, she said, the girls wonāt have to walk as far and will grumble less. Once they set aside a corner for a kitchen, where they can cook and do washing, that will start creating a daily routine.
āThe more details of daily life that are in place, the more comfortable we will feel,ā Majida said.
āThings will get better,ā she said again and again, without a trace of optimism in her voice.
They may have to move again
Four days later, on Tuesday, a voice message from Neāman came to the AP.
āWeāre sitting here unable to eat,ā he said. They have almost no money to buy food. No aid is reaching them.
Worse, a man claiming to be the owner of the land had come, backed by armed men, and demanded they pay rent or leave. Neāman canāt afford rent. He canāt afford the costs of moving, but may have no choice.
āSoon weāll die of starvation,ā he said. āTwo years, all our energy has been drained, physically, mentally, financially. We canāt bear more than this.ā