Palestinian man Ihab El-Attar, who, according to him, lost four members of his family when an Israeli strike hit their house and injured him, walks with crutches at a United Nations-run school where he takes refuge, in Gaza City May 18, 2021. REUTERS/Suha
GAZA: UN-run schools in Gaza look very little like places of learning these days in the midst of violence in its second week.
Laundry is hung on makeshift washing lines, mothers scrub infants at bathroom sinks and classrooms have become dormitories with desks stacked up and blankets spread on the floor.
For Palestinians crammed into this narrow strip of land, wedged between Israel, the Mediterranean and a small stretch of Egypt, there are few places to seek shelter from bombardment.
So, many have fled to schools run by the UN refugee agency UNRWA, which estimates that 47,000 Palestinians are now camped out in the 58 education establishments it runs in the enclave.
"We have quit without taking mattresses or anything. We left the house as it is, and we escaped," said Hassan Haboub, a father of nine whose family have made a temporary home in the four-storey complex of Gaza City's Beach elementary school.
"We have nothing but UNRWA," said Haboub, whose family fled to Gaza when they became refugees in 1948 from Ashkelon, a city that lies north of Gaza's border.
Israeli airstrikes have pounded Gaza day and night since the conflict flared on May 10.
Nearly 450 buildings in Gaza, an enclave that is home to 2 million people, have been destroyed or badly damaged, the United Nations says. Most of the 52,000 who have been displaced are in U.N. schools, it says.
UN officials say the destruction of residential tower blocks and other buildings has left thousands of people with nowhere to live in this 365 sq km enclave that is one of the most densely populated areas on the planet.
Matthias Schmale, the director UNRWA operations in Gaza, said even U.N. facilities had suffered some collateral damage. He pointed to a boundary wall of UNRWA's complex in Gaza City which has fractured and cracked walls of offices, saying a blast struck a nearby road, sending lumps of concrete and part of a wrecked car flying into the facility.
Ihab El-Attar, who usually lives in Beit Lahiya near Gaza's border with Israel, fled his home to U.N. facilities three times before: in 2014 and during fighting in 2008-9 and in 2012.
Once again, in 2021, he has sought shelter in a U.N. school. This time, he said his house was destroyed in a bombardment that killed four members of his family - it was not immediately possible to verify details of that strike.
"Every time there is a war, they drive us out," Attar said, speaking from his latest shelter at Beach elementary school after his home was hit early on Friday morning. "Four wars drove us out from the same house."