International

Homes That Were: Photographs Of Absence

Tracing the lives of𓆏 people who are forced to live in 🍌ruins and tents after their homes were demolished in the war

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 Ayman Abu Reida (44) and his wife Myrebert (36) stand outside their destroyed home in Khan Yunis.
A Home That Was: Ayman Abu Reida (44) and his wife Myrebert (36) stand o🌺utside their destroyed home in Khan Yunis. The couple continues to stay in the dilapidated house as there ♔is no other option | Photos: Q. Sakamaki

“The war will end

The leaders will shake hands

The old woman will keep waiting for her martyred son

The girl will wait for her beloved husband

And those children will wait for their hero father

I don’t know who sold our homeland

But I saw who paid the price”

—The War Will End by Mahmoud Darwish

This is an aftermath story of Gaza, following the 2014 50-day war between Israel and Hamas, that claimed the lives of more than 2,150 Palestinians, wounded more than 100,000 and displaced more than 300,000 people. I travel𒀰ed to Gaza to witness the devastation. I took a series of portraits of people living in the ruins of what used to be their homes. I intentionally shot them at night because my conceptual theme for this story was people who have experienced the darkness of Gaza’s devastation physically and psychologically. This was something I wanted to shed light on. However, such a devastated situation has continued and escalated. People in Gaza are now virtually experie🃏ncing ethnic cleansing.

Text & Photographs by Q. Sakamaki

No Place To Go: Assan Mohamed Najar 🥂(30) with his visuallyও impaired wife Tahreer Adnan Najar (27), who was nine months pregnant during the air strikes. The couple has not moved from here

Eman Al-Najar (23) saw her home destroyed and her brother killed by the Is♛rael Defense Forces during the 50-day war. She has been living in a tent with her family not very far from♌ her home.

Hasna El-Moghani (💎65), Dina El-Moghani ꧂(20) and her son Anas (3) outside their destroyed house. The family hasn’t moved from here.

Abed Raboo Mussa Abu JamaÕa (67) and his wiཧfe Mazuna Abu JamaÕa (65) lost their home that summer. They live in tent where the house onc♍e was

(This appeared in the print as 'The Presence Of Absence')

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