Opinion: Rafah became my home after displacement. It is now being erased

Date

Spread the love


Opinion: Rafah became my home after displacement. It is now being erased

Before October 2023, Rafah – a city covering nearly one-fifth of the Gaza Strip – was home to 350,000 residents. During the war, it gained international visibility as a supposed safe zone for one million displaced Palestinians.

My family and I had also experienced displacement and sought refuge near Rafah after losing our home more than 20 years ago. It was not my childhood home, but it became a place I grew to cherish.

Despite viral social media posts urging the world to keep “all eyes on Rafah” – in the belief that international scrutiny might deter Israel from targeting vulnerable families sheltering in tents – the world has chosen to turn a blind eye and leave Rafah to an unknown fate.

But the destruction of a place does not erase its memory or the traces of life left behind by those who called it home.

READ MORE: Rafah became my home after displacement. It is now being erased

Palestinian families fleeing Rafah arrive in the city of Khan Younis following new Israeli evacuation orders, in the southern Gaza Strip, on 31 March 2025 (Eyad Baba/AFP)

Palestinian families fleeing Rafah arrive in the city of Khan Younis following new Israeli evacuation orders, in the southern Gaza Strip, on 31 March 2025 (Eyad Baba/AFP)

About the Author

More
articles