Layla Al-Khalifa

Uncovering Gaza’s Lost Ones: Hunt for Missing Relatives in Mass Graves

The Heart-Wrenching Search for Missing Loved Ones in Gaza

JERUSALEM — A mother’s relentless search for her missing child knows no bounds. Kareema Elras, a mother in Gaza, has spent four days navigating through the chaos, dust, and unbearable stench of mass graves at Nasser hospital, in search of her 21-year-old son Ahmed, who was killed on Jan. 25 in Khan Younis.

After days of searching, Kareema finally found her son’s body. She expressed, “I have been coming here all the time until now, until I found the body of my son, my son Ahmed, the cherished little boy, his mother’s love. He lost his father when he was 12 years old, and I raised him.”

As families walk among the graves, the scene is hauntingly familiar from war zones worldwide. The sight of bulldozers unearthing the dead, gravediggers marking out individual spaces, and families hoping to find their loved ones is a painful reality.

With over 34,000 lives lost in a war-torn land, burying the dead has become a complex and dangerous task in Gaza. The conditions make it challenging to determine the causes of death for those being exhumed from the graves.

Amidst conflicting reports and lack of access for forensic investigations, allegations of bodies found with hands tied have surfaced. Calls for an independent international investigation have been made to shed light on the atrocities.

The work of identifying and giving a proper burial to the dead continues, bringing some closure to families like Somaya Al-Shourbagy, who laid her husband Osama to rest at a cemetery.

In the midst of the turmoil, little Hind, around five years old, remembers her father fondly: “He loved me, and used to buy things for me, and he used to take me out.” A poignant reminder of the human cost of war in Gaza. — BBC