Two reasons, two keys: Stories of loss and hope from Gaza
Daily Sabah columnist Hilal Kaplan (R) with Nadin and her twin daughters, Cairo, Egypt. (Courtesy of Hilal Kaplan)

Amid exile from their homeland and loss of their loved ones, Palestinian families endure with resilience, holding on to hope for a safer future



We arrive at an apartment building in the back alleys of Cairo’s Nasr district. Despite all of life’s hardships, the Ramadan decorations hanging at the entrance herald a sense of hope for the future.

We are greeted by the father of the household, Mr. Abdurrahman. We learn that they moved to Egypt in April 2024, leaving their parents and siblings behind, and that he worked as a nurse while they were in Gaza. He answers our questions with such short, one-sentence replies that we are forced to ask him to elaborate.

"I can only tell you this much. If I say more, I’ll break down,” he said. We fall silent.

His wife, Nadin, said, "I want to speak,” and we listened to her.

"We lost our home and our car in the bombing. The hospital where my husband worked is gone, too. There was no water, no electricity, no gas. Whenever we had money, I could only buy baby formula. I went hungry, but I made sure my daughters were fed. All my cousins were martyred, every single one...”

She pauses here for a moment, then continues, pointing to her twin daughters sitting by her side: "I couldn’t get pregnant for five years. The bombings started right after they were born."

"They are the reason I came here,” she said, "Conditions may still be tough, but they’re 3 years old now, and I have to provide them with a good life,” she added.

As she sees us off, we hug, and she points to her husband, saying, "See, I spoke better than him, didn’t I?” successfully dispelling the sadness in the room in an instant.

Mother, daughter, two keys

We move to another household. Mrs. Maryam is 43 years old. She has five daughters and one son. She describes how, while they were living a decent life by Gaza’s standards, they suddenly became homeless and had to struggle to survive while sharing a house with 40 people. Her eyes drift to a distant point as she describes the fearful nights they, especially their young children, spent together, huddled under a single blanket.

"I used to think, ‘If martyrdom is our fate, let’s be together,’” she said.

Then she tells of how 27 of her neighbors were martyred. "Melek was one of them. She was my closest friend. We’d been together since childhood. My happiest memory was her birthday, when they invited me to their home. We had so much fun that day,” she said.

Daily Sabah columnist Hilal Kaplan (C) with Maryam (L) and her mother Zaynab, Cairo, Egypt. (Courtesy of Hilal Kaplan)

As she smiles through her pain, an elderly woman enters the room with a cane in her hand.

Her name is Zaynab, she is Maryam’s mother. She is Zaynab of Yafa. She was only 2 years old when she was forced to leave the home where she was born during the Nakba.

"At 80, they made me a refugee again,” she says. "But this time, I hid the key to my home,” she added.

Mrs. Zaynab may not have been in this world longer than Israel, but we want to see the key that will be passed down to one of her 19 grandchildren.

Maryam said, "I hid my key too.” And so, with these two keys, which are symbols of hope for a nation, we immortalize this moment.