The Gaza Civil Defense forces continue to dig for what they estimate are around 10,000 missing bodies trapped under the rubble of Israeli airstrikes, more than two years after the last ceasefire. For Nooh al-Shaghnobi, a 24-year-old civil defense worker, the task is emotionally draining, with each new discovery bringing back memories of his own family's trauma.
On September 17, near the al-Saha area of eastern Gaza City, Israeli forces bombed a home, killing over 30 members of one extended family. Al-Shaghnobi and his team pulled two dead young girls from the rubble but continued digging, crawling under collapsed floors to uncover more bodies. According to al-Shaghnobi, they often identify locations of martyrs based on blood stains, bones, and skulls, relying on families of the victims for information.
The civil defense forces have an estimated 900 personnel, but after two years of conflict, their operating capacity has dropped by 90%. Without heavy equipment like excavators, recovery operations can take days. Families often wait nearby when teams bring out bodies, displaying intense grief and emotional turmoil.
For many on the Gaza Civil Defense team, death is a constant presence, not an event. They've started to feel it as if it's surrounding them, making them accept Allah's plan but still holding onto life inside themselves. Their work has become all-consuming, with some living at their workplace due to the danger of being near Israeli military presence.
In one mission, 25-year-old Alaa Khammash and his team rescued a young woman buried beneath several floors in a bombed tower. When she saw them, hope came back to her face, motivating Khammash to keep going. However, for others like al-Shaghnobi, it's harder to maintain that drive after experiencing years of trauma.
For Nooh al-Shaghnobi and his team, the task is not just about retrieving bodies but also about honoring and burying loved ones in accordance with Islamic traditions. The teams write detailed papers describing their findings so families can potentially identify the bodies later. When asked why they risk their lives to recover souls, al-Shaghnobi replied that hearing a voice tells him there's life.
On September 17, near the al-Saha area of eastern Gaza City, Israeli forces bombed a home, killing over 30 members of one extended family. Al-Shaghnobi and his team pulled two dead young girls from the rubble but continued digging, crawling under collapsed floors to uncover more bodies. According to al-Shaghnobi, they often identify locations of martyrs based on blood stains, bones, and skulls, relying on families of the victims for information.
The civil defense forces have an estimated 900 personnel, but after two years of conflict, their operating capacity has dropped by 90%. Without heavy equipment like excavators, recovery operations can take days. Families often wait nearby when teams bring out bodies, displaying intense grief and emotional turmoil.
For many on the Gaza Civil Defense team, death is a constant presence, not an event. They've started to feel it as if it's surrounding them, making them accept Allah's plan but still holding onto life inside themselves. Their work has become all-consuming, with some living at their workplace due to the danger of being near Israeli military presence.
In one mission, 25-year-old Alaa Khammash and his team rescued a young woman buried beneath several floors in a bombed tower. When she saw them, hope came back to her face, motivating Khammash to keep going. However, for others like al-Shaghnobi, it's harder to maintain that drive after experiencing years of trauma.
For Nooh al-Shaghnobi and his team, the task is not just about retrieving bodies but also about honoring and burying loved ones in accordance with Islamic traditions. The teams write detailed papers describing their findings so families can potentially identify the bodies later. When asked why they risk their lives to recover souls, al-Shaghnobi replied that hearing a voice tells him there's life.