Palestinians on returning home: 'It feels like we're reborn!'
Emotional scenes played out all over the Gaza Strip on Monday as families and friends reunited for the first time in over 15 months after the Israeli military allowed movement between northern and southern Gaza.
A sea of people swept the shoreline heading north along the sandy remains of the coastal highway. Many traveled on foot trudging through sand, a Palestinian flag flickering in the wind above them.

"It feels like we're reborn!" Om Wael, a grandmother from Gaza City, told ABC News as she carried her granddaughter in her arms, with a look of joyful determination on her face.
"Even if our home is flattened, we're so happy to return to our city, to our homes, unharmed. Thank God," she said.
Mirvat Ajur, 29, from the Daraj neighborhood in central Gaza City, told ABC News that she walked for about five hours until she reached central Gaza.
"It was a difficult journey, but the people were very happy, singing, clapping and dancing in joy at returning to their homes," she said.

Approximately 300,000 people made the journey home, according to figures released by Gazan authorities. Samira Halas, 55, was among them.
"I know that my home is damaged and burned, but I want to return to it," Halas, from Gaza City’s Shuja'iyya neighborhood, told ABC News, describing the destruction she saw upon her return "like an earthquake had hit it."
"I want to live in those burned and destroyed rooms," she continued. "I am like a fish dying far from the sea."
-ABC News' Ruwaida Amer and Zoe Magee









