Keys to lost homes in Gaza become latest symbols of Palestinian
displacement
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[February 29, 2024]
By Saleh Salem
RAFAH, Gaza Strip (Reuters) - Palestinians displaced by Israel's
military offensive on Gaza are holding onto keys to damaged or destroyed
homes as a symbol of their loss, a tradition dating back to the mass
displacement of 1948.
Most people in Gaza are refugees or descendants of refugees who fled or
were driven from their homes during the 1948 war that accompanied
Israel's creation, an event known to Palestinians as the "Nakba", or
catastrophe.
The keys to homes lost in 1948 have been handed down the generations of
some refugee families, a symbol of what they consider their right to
return - one of the most intractable issues in the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict.
Now, keys to homes bombarded in the Israel-Hamas war raging since
October are also taking on a symbolic meaning.
"History is repeating itself," said Hatem Al-Ferani, sheltering in a
tent in Rafah, southern Gaza, with his family.
"My grandfather took the key and left with it, hoping to come back, and
I took the key hoping to return to my apartment and find it as it was."
Instead, during a week-long truce in November, Al-Ferani received
pictures showing that the family home, an apartment in a block shared
with his parents and brothers in Jabalia refugee camp in northern Gaza,
had been destroyed.
"This is the key to that home, which I worked hard for," he said,
holding it up. "I am now 44 years old. At this age, I need to start my
life from the beginning and build a new house."
The war began when militants from Hamas, the Islamist group that has run
Gaza since 2007, attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7, killing 1,200
people and taking 253 hostage, according to Israel. It was the worst day
of violence against Jews since the Holocaust.
Vowing to destroy Hamas, Israel has responded with an air and ground
offensive on Gaza that has killed more than 30,000 people, according to
Gaza's health ministry. It has laid waste to much of the territory,
displaced most of its 2.3 million people, and caused widespread hunger
and disease.
SYMBOL OF A DREAM
Hussein Abu Amsha is in a similar situation to that of Al-Ferani. He and
his family are in a tent in Rafah, and during the truce he received a
video that showed their home in Beit Hanoun, northeastern Gaza, had been
bombarded.
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Hussein Abu Amsha, a displaced Palestinian man whose house was
destroyed by Israeli strikes amid the ongoing conflict between
Israel and Hamas, holds up the key of his destroyed house with an
ancient Palestinian coin, outside his tent in Rafah, in the southern
Gaza Strip, February 26, 2024. REUTERS/Ibraheem Abu Mustafa
"This key is all that's left of the house," he said, showing a key
fastened to a keyring made from a coin with the word "Palestine" on
it, which he said dated back to the British Mandate period, before
the creation of Israel.
"The key represents the homeland for all of us. We cannot live
without a homeland," said Abu Amsha. "We hope to be able to go back,
even if it's just to a tent on top of our house."
Mohammed Al-Majdalawi, displaced from Al-Shati refugee camp in
northern Gaza, said he remembered his grandfather showing him an old
key and recounting memories of 1948, and now he was going through a
similar experience.
"What did I do to Israel for them to destroy my home? The children
of the world are living well while our children are living in
humiliation, dying and getting sick in this cold," he said.
In the West Bank, also dotted with refugee camps dating back to
1948, giant keys can be seen in various locations, part of an
iconography of displacement whose meaning is understood by everyone
there.
"The key represents the right of return," said Mohammed Said, head
of the media office of a committee administering Qalandia refugee
camp, between Jerusalem and Ramallah.
"The key is a metal object that can be made anywhere, but holding on
to this key means that you have a dream to fulfill."
(Additional reporting by Ibraheem Abu Mustafa in Rafah and Raneen
Sawafta and Ismael Khader in the West Bank; Writing by Estelle
Shirbon; Editing by Kevin Liffey)
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