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[–><!–>We’ve interviewed more than 700 people in Gaza over the past two years. Their stories stayed with us.–><!–>
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[–><!–>No single experience can fully contain the agony of Gaza, the near-obliteration of a society and a place.–><!–>
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[–><!–>Of the nearly 100 we reached, everyone lost something or someone: a family member, a friend, their home, hope.–><!–>
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[–><!–>When we spoke last summer to Samar al-Jaja and her nephews, Mohammed, Mahmoud, Ahmed and Abdullah Akeila, it had been 10 months since the brothers’ parents and baby sister had been killed in an airstrike.–><!–>
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[–><!–>Negotiators from Israel and Hamas began holding talks in Cairo on Monday about a possible swap of Israeli hostages in Gaza for Palestinians in Israeli prisons. If they agree, the war could be one step closer to ending.–><!–>
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[–><!–>Almost everyone we spoke to has been displaced from homes or shelters multiple times. Many have no home to return to.–><!–>
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[–><!–>Last October, when we wrote about Hammam Malaka and his wife, Najia Malaka, they had been separated for almost the entire war.–><!–>
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[–><!–>Many people we spoke to told us about hunger: suffering from malnutrition, losing significant weight or going days at a time without food, even as they tried desperately to find it.–><!–>
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<!–>As a mother, all I think about is how to save one meal for tomorrow, how to bring water without quarrels in the long lines.–>
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[–><!–>Aaed Abu Karsh, 35, had managed to carve out a sliver of something like normal life when we first spoke to him last November.–><!–>
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[–><!–>The anguish of just getting through the day came up again and again as we spoke to people about what it feels like to live through the war.–><!–>
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[–><!–>Not everyone we tried to reach survived.–><!–>
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[–><!–>After he disappeared, family members saw some photos of stray dogs eating corpses in northern Gaza, the cousin said. They thought they recognized his body among them.–><!–>
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<!–> at any moment. It would strike us all together, so that it would be better than this life.–>
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[–><!–>Some people we spoke to were lucky: They managed to leave, whether by paying their way out, through their foreign passports or because they were evacuated for medical treatment.–><!–>
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[–><!–>They all have loved ones in danger back in Gaza. And for all the safety of where they are now, it is not, in the end, home.–><!–>
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[–><!–>Since we first spoke to her there, two more of her children have managed to join her in Bologna.–><!–>
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[–><!–>When we first spoke to Maher Ghanem last year, his grief was fresh.–><!–>
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[–><!–>Even if the war ended somehow, few still thought there was any future left for them in Gaza.–><!–>
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