mahmoud aldebe and his family have evacuated nine times. his children scavenge for anything that could be sold to buy food. and they suffer for it. skin diseases. hepatitis. "the smell is suffocating," he says. "and the dogs are everywhere. there's nowhere to go to the bathroom. so at night, my family and i went together to relieve ourselves, only to be attacked by dogs that tried to bite us." they lived here before the war, jabalia. bombed now into an age of stone. the consequences of the war stretch the length of gaza and into every life in one way or another. noara al—najjar and her children, just after the israeli strike that took her husband. their father abdel rahman, one of more than 70 people killed in an operation to rescue two hostages. his daughter malak lost an eye in the attack. "pain," she says. "i lost my father. enough." noara was pregnant at the time and now has the couple's baby, rahma. the ceasefire is welcome, but it's not the end of suffering. translation: after the i ceasefire, i want to give my children the best life.