Reviving communities home by home in Gaza
“I hope my children’s future will be brighter than our present,” said Mayyada, who is originally from Jabalia refugee camp in Gaza and has lost
“I hope my children’s future will be brighter than our present,” said Mayyada, who is originally from Jabalia refugee camp in Gaza and has lost count of the number of times her family has been forced to move during the Israel-Hamas war that started in October 2023. Forced to flee their homes multiple times, families have sought refuge wherever they could, moving between schools, temporary shelters and makeshift tents while facing overcrowding, insecurity and the loss of privacy. “From our home to another home, from school to school, from tent to tent,” she says. “We move from one place to another. Every time we faced many struggles.” Now, she tends to a garden and prepares for the birth of her twins. Rebuilding neighbourhoods As early recovery efforts expand across Gaza, restoring neighbourhoods means more than providing temporary shelter because it requires rebuilding the conditions that allow communities to function again. Families like Mayyada’s are being supported to return closer to their areas of origin through the Gaza Neighbourhood Approach project implemented by the UN Development Programme (UNDP) in coordination with the Palestinian Authority, UN sister agencies and other partners. The new housing units also come with debris removal, rehabilitation of essential services, emergency employment opportunities and the restoration of basic infrastructure, as part of UNDP’s Relief, Employment and Vital Infrastructure for the Vulnerable in Emergencies (REVIVE) initiative that is supporting communities across six countries.
© UNDP/PAPP A war-changed future Before the war, Mayyada worked as a portrait artist, painting and selling her artwork. “Painting was always the first thing I wanted to do wherever I lived,” she says. “But, since the war started, I haven’t touched my art.” The war also changed the future she and her husband, Ahmed, had envisioned together, planning their marriage and looking forward to building a life of their own. “I hoped that we would have everything,” she said. “I never expected that I would be living in tents for so long.” Starting from scratch Each displacement meant starting over from scratch, Mayyada said. Every new shelter brought new hardships, while the simple comforts of privacy, stability and routine became increasingly difficult to find. “There were times when we lived in tents with my uncles and aunts,” she recalls. “It was very difficult. There was no privacy at all.” Displacement also meant leaving behind more than a home. Across Gaza, countless people have lost not only their livelihoods, but also the routines and passions that once defined their daily lives. “All of these tents are close together and men and women must stay separately, making family life even more challenging,” she said.
