A few days ago I was in Gaza.

The traces of the fighting in May are very obvious.

But many who live in the small coastal strip have unfortunately been forced to get used to it.

Gaza teenagers experienced their fourth armed conflict. 

What ignited the spark? 

It began with a canceled Palestinian election in the West Bank that frustrated many Palestinians at the end of April. 

Then came a court ruling on the eviction of Palestinian families in Sheik Jarrah in East Jerusalem in early May.

According to the decision, the families could be evicted because it is believed that the land belonged to Jewish families before the war in 1948. According to Israeli law, the Jewish population can claim land owned before 1948, a right Palestinians do not have. 

It created strong protests at, among other places, the Al Aqsa Mosque, which is located in the middle of the Temple Mount in Jerusalem, and when Israeli police stormed these, the last fire torch was lit. 

Was in an inferno

The people of Gaza could only follow everything from a distance.

But soon after, they found themselves in the middle of an inferno.

Hamas, which is branded a terrorist group and controls Gaza, began firing rockets at Israel in response to the unrest in Jerusalem.

Israel responded with intense air strikes in the Gaza Strip, according to its own information only aimed at military targets.

More than 250 people died in Gaza.

A quarter were children.

Of the Hamas rockets, 13 were Israeli.

On May 21, both sides agreed on a ceasefire.

Both sides declare themselves winners. 

Must return to everyday life

Gaza has a population of two million.

Even before the flare-up in May, life here was difficult.

Now you must once again return to what is everyday and normal.

But if you have lost most of your family, it does not matter if you are refined like Gazabo.

Nothing is the same again - everyone is a loser.