
Gaza's orphans have lost everything - even the dream of growing up
The number of children killed in Gaza, according to the local health ministry, recently rose above 15,000.
Fatality figures in Gaza are disputed by Israel, but even allowing for miscalculation or exaggeration, it is a staggering loss of life.
Many children have been orphaned, losing not just both parents but also siblings, grandparents and other close relatives too.
Against this tragedy, the children of Gaza can't dream of growing up.
War has robbed them of that.
'I just want to forget'
"I'm here hanging out with my friends because I just want to forget the war," Osama says, surrounded by other young boys, probably no older than 10.
"I look at my destroyed home there and think about the memories I had there with my mum and dad, in their room. And now it's gone.
"We used to have fun every day, sit in the kitchen, play together at home, and now it's all gone.
"I want to forget everything. I want to have fun."
Israel continues to bombard Gaza
On Thursday, Egypt sent a delegation to Qatar in an attempt to push for a renewed ceasefire.
Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met with senior security officials on Thursday night to discuss developments.
For now, Israel is continuing to attack Gaza daily and is refusing to lift a blockade on aid entering the Strip.
The United Nations has reported that cases of malnutrition among children in northern Gaza have almost doubled as a result.
Hundreds of children have also been killed since the resumption of attacks almost two weeks ago.
She danced until the war came home
Five-year-old Jenin liked to dance, like so many five-year-old girls around the world liked to dance.
She danced in the tent where her family was sheltering from the war nearby and she danced until the day that the war came home.
It was early in the morning when the missile struck - the family was getting ready for Suhoor, the Ramadan breakfast.
Twenty-five of Jenin's relatives were killed, including her father and all of her brothers and sisters.
Her mother was already dead, killed in a previous strike.
Jenin now lies in a hospital bed, still unaware she has lost her family.
She is mostly unconscious - her skull fractured, she has bleeding on her brain and is in desperate need of surgery she cannot get in Gaza.
"She's truly lost all sense of safety. She's terrified by anyone who comes near her," Jenin's aunt told Sky News.
"Jenin has lost the ability to speak. The shock was so severe that she can no longer communicate verbally."
She went on: "Instead, she points and gestures, but words elude her. Most of the time, she is angry and throws things around; her emotional state is drained.
"Sometimes she responds, but other times she doesn't. When she looks at us, there's a visible frustration in her eyes -frustration from not being able to see her mum."
Another family that didn't survive the night
In Gaza City, our team filmed another family that didn't survive the night.
Rescuers searched for survivors but pulled out the bodies of four people.
Twelve-year-old Sameer was the only one to escape the strike. He sobbed in silent prayer next to the wrapped corpses of his parents and siblings. Another orphan in Gaza.
"One of my favourite memories with my family was a day at the beach," he told us.
"We swam and played and had such a good time. I remember my brother walking back and spilling juice on himself. We laughed and told him off!"
His family was buried together, side-by-side in a shallow grave. Sameer, the one who lived, watched on, silent and lost.
"I wasn't scared before, because I had my family around me. Right now, I am scared to lose more people. My mum and dad and everyone were martyred. I'm worried about losing more people. So now whenever I hear the planes above, I think they're going to bomb me in my home."
There is no word for someone who has lost so much.
But in Gaza, there are so many children who have lost everything.
Their childhood, their families, their future.

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