11 Oct 2025

Gazans' joy tempered by shock as they eye remnants of homes after ceasefire

7:46 am on 11 October 2025

By Nidal al-Mughrabi and Mahmoud Issa, Reuters

People walk along a heavily-damaged road past destroyed buildings in the centre of Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip on October 10, 2025, as the displaced return to their homes after Israeli forces' withdrawal. Gaza's civil defence agency said on October 10 that Israeli forces have begun pulling back from parts of the territory, particularly in Gaza City and Khan Yunis. Israeli forces declared a ceasefire and withdrew from some positions as thousands of displaced Palestinians began to trek home and the families of October 7 hostages awaited news. (Photo by Omar AL-QATTAA / AFP)

People walk along a heavily damaged road past destroyed buildings in the centre of Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip on October 10, 2025. Photo: AFP / Omar Al-Qattaa

As thousands of Gazans began picking through the ruins of their shattered homes on Friday after a ceasefire deal, the excitement of return was quickly tempered by shock at the depth of the destruction and anxiety over the hardships ahead.

The announcement that the US-brokered accord had gone into effect sent thousands of Palestinians pouring up the Gaza Strip's coastal road by foot, bicycle, truck and donkey cart toward the largely devastated north.

Palestinians make their way along Al-Rashid road toward Gaza City from Nuseirat in the central Gaza Strip on October 10, 2025. Israeli forces declared a ceasefire and withdrew from some positions in Gaza on October 10, as thousands of displaced Palestinians began to trek home and the families of October 7 hostages awaited news. Israeli prime minister's office said that the government had "approved the framework" of a hostage release deal with Hamas, as both sides edged closer to ending more than two years of hostilities in Gaza. (Photo by Bashar TALEB / AFP)

Palestinians are going home by foot, bicycle, truck and donkey cart. Photo: AFP / Bashar Taleb

Essentially all of Gaza's 2.2 million population was displaced during two years of unrelenting war that has killed tens of thousands of people and reduced huge swathes of the enclave to ruins.

For some, the prospect of returning even to the remnants of their former houses was enough to inspire elation.

"Of course, there are no homes, they've been destroyed, but we are happy just to return to where our homes were, even over the rubble," Mahdi Saqla, 40, said as he stood by a makeshift tent in central Gaza. "That, too, is a great joy."

Trudging along the road along with her family, former Gaza City resident Mahira al-Ashi said she was so excited to return to the city where she had grown up that she couldn't sleep as she waited for news about when they could start moving.

"By God, when they opened the road, I was so happy to go back," she said.

A man walks past rubble and damaged buildings along a street in the Tuffah district east of Gaza City on 8 July, 2024 amid the ongoing conflict in the Palestinian territory between Israel and Hamas.

A man walks past rubble and damaged buildings along a street in the Tuffah district east of Gaza City on 8 July, 2024. Photo: OMAR AL-QATTAA / AFP

Confront star reality

But for many of those who have already returned, the stark reality of the situation quickly sank in.

To the south, in the city of Khan Younis, Ahmed al-Brim pushed a bicycle loaded with wood through a scene of apocalyptic destruction - row after row of buildings crumpled by bombardment and streets strewn with rubble.

"We went to our area ...it was exterminated," he said, waving a hand through the air. "We don't know where we will go after that."

Another Khan Younis resident, Muhannad al-Shawaf, said it used to take him three minutes to reach a nearby street from his house. Now, it took over an hour as he picked his way through piles of debris.

"The destruction is huge and indescribable, indescribable,"he said. "It is almost all in ruins and not suitable for living in."

Palestinians check the rubble after the Israeli army withdrew from Nusairat in Gaza on June 8, 2024. The eight-month-long war of Israel in Gaza has devastated neighborhoods into rubles during the clashes with Hamas fighters. According to the United Nations and humanitarian agencies, nearly 1.7 million Palestinians have been displaced from their homes. Despite the growing pressure on the Israeli government led by Benjamin Netanyahu to accept the proposed truce and start a ceasefire, the Israeli war cabinet has insisted on going ahead with a more comprehensive military operation in the Gaza Strip. (Photo by Khames Alrefi / Middle East Images / Middle East Images via AFP)

Palestinians check the rubble after the Israeli army withdrew from Nusairat in Gaza on June 8, 2024. Photo: KHAMES ALREFI / AFP

Little left of old lives

Despite the widespread celebrations that greeted news of the ceasefire, many Palestinians were keenly aware even before going back that little remained of the lives they knew before the war.

"Okay, it is over, then what? There is no home I can go back to," Balqees, a mother of five from Gaza City who has been sheltering in Deir al-Balah in central Gaza, told Reuters on Friday morning.

"They have destroyed everything. Tens of thousands of people are dead, the Gaza Strip is in ruins, and they made a ceasefire. Am I supposed to be happy? No, I am not."

Her sentiments were echoed by Mustafa Ibrahim, an activist and human rights advocate from Gaza City who also took refuge in Deir al-Balah, one of the few areas in the enclave not overrun and levelled by Israeli forces.

"Laughter has vanished and tears have run dry," he said. "The people of Gaza are lost, as if they are the walking dead, searching for a distant future."

Palestinians check the rubble of a building destroyed by an Israeli strike in the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip on September 28, 2025. Over nearly two years, Israeli military operations in Gaza have killed at least 65,549 Palestinians, mostly civilians, according to the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza, figures the UN considers reliable.

Palestinians check the rubble of a building destroyed by an Israeli strike in the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip on September 28, 2025. Photo: AFP / Eyed Baba

'Entire districts are gone'

Some former Gaza City residents had already started heading back even before the ceasefire went into effect, some making it as far as the northwest suburb of Sheikh Radwan.

Among them was Ismail Zayda, a 40-year-old father of three, who went to check on his house on Friday morning and was amazed to find it still intact, albeit amid a "sea of rubble".

"Thank God, my house is still standing," he told Reuters in a voice note. "But the area is destroyed, my neighbours' houses are destroyed, entire districts are gone."

The war erupted in October 2023 after Hamas-led militants stormed into Israel and killed around 1200 people and took 251 hostages.

Israel's retaliatory air and ground war killed over 67,000 people, according to local health officials, reduced much of the coastal Gaza Strip to vast tracts of rubble and wrought a humanitarian disaster.

Palestinians make their way along Al-Rashid road toward Gaza City from Nuseirat in the central Gaza Strip on October 10, 2025. Israeli forces declared a ceasefire and withdrew from some positions in Gaza on October 10, as thousands of displaced Palestinians began to trek home and the families of October 7 hostages awaited news. Israeli prime minister's office said that the government had "approved the framework" of a hostage release deal with Hamas, as both sides edged closer to ending more than two years of hostilities in Gaza. (Photo by Bashar TALEB / AFP)

Photo: AFP / Bashar Taleb

-Reuters

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