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Key Points
- Palestinians return to northern Gaza, relieved yet wary amid widespread destruction.
- The ceasefire allowed displaced families to return after Hamas agreed to release Israeli hostages.
- Gaza’s ruins pose rebuilding challenges as residents vow never to leave the north again.
Along a road running by Gaza’s Mediterranean shore, a mass of people, some holding infants in their arms or carrying bundles of belongings on their shoulders, trekked north on foot.
“My heart is beating, I thought I would never come back,” said Osama, 50, a public servant and father of five, as he arrived in Gaza City.
“At least we are going back home, now I can say war is over and I hope it will stay calm,” she told Reuters via a chat app.
Many of those displaced have had to move several times as Israel designated parts of the Gaza Strip as humanitarian zones and then cleared them out before mounting bombardments and ground operations there.

The return of Palestinians to northern Gaza was delayed at the weekend but went ahead after Hamas agreed to hand over three Israeli hostages later this week and Israeli forces began to withdraw. Source: Getty / Ali Jadallah
Much of the Gaza Strip lies in ruins.
The Hamas-run Gaza government media office said returnees to the north need at least 135,000 tents and shelters as they try to re-establish their lives in the rubble-strewn landscape of their former homes.
A delayed return
But Israel said that Hamas had broken the deal by failing to release civilian female hostage Arbel Yehud and kept its forces in the Netzarim corridor that cuts across the enclave south of Gaza City.
On Monday, a Hamas official told Reuters the group had handed over to mediators a list that showed that 25 of 33 hostages scheduled for release in the first phase are alive.
The identities of who was dead and who was alive was not immediately confirmed, keeping families in a state of hope and dread.