Anvar Havas distributes leaflets on the street with a photograph of his missing 17-year-old brother Hadi. More than 11 thousand people have disappeared from the beginning of the war in gas Peace and security Anvar Havas goes out into the street every morning, squeezing printed sheets in his hands with a photograph of his missing 17-year-old brother Hadi. She wanders around the destroyed city of gas for hours in the hope of finding at least some information about the missing. “I’m looking for my brother, Hadi Havas,” says 22-year-old Anvar, and in her voice it sounds clearly & nbsp; pain. – I pray to God to help me find him. “& Amp; nbsp; Anvar & nbsp; it stucks on the walls and poles & nbsp; one photo after another, asking street merchants, enters the field hospital of the Palestinian society & nbsp; red crescent – in search The clues that could bring her to her brother. & nbsp; “Without working state bodies and security forces, without official institutions that could help us, without normal communication and the Internet, we were forced to resort to old methods – distribution of paper ads,” she says. & nbsp; Anvar is not alone. The young Gazi Activist al-Majdawi founded an online initiative entitled “Palestinian Center for missing and forcibly disappeared persons”, the purpose of which is to make up for this tragic gap. Gazi communicates daily with families looking for his loved ones, and is tired of entering data into the digital platform, which he created using volunteers. The platform documents the missing, checks information about them and tries to find them. & Amp; nbsp; “There are hundreds, and possibly thousands of unidentified dead.” “We tracked about a thousand & nbsp; cases of loss & nbsp; missing or forcible disappearance,” says Mustafa Ibrahim, chairman of the AL-Dameer Human Rights Board. – Thanks to the coordination of actions with the Israeli authorities, we managed to find out the fate of 600 people. There are no information about 420 more disappeared. ”& Amp; NBSP; according to the Palestinian Statistical Bureau, the number of missing in gas since the beginning of the war exceeds & NBSP; 11 thousand people, most of them are women and children. The fate of these people remains unclear due to the lack of accurate statistical data that could determine whether they were killed as a result of air strikes and remained buried under the rubble or disappeared under other circumstances. & Amp; nbsp; local human rights organizations report that some of the missing, apparently, are contained in Israeli prisons. Dozens of Palestinians went missing while trying to get to the centers of the distribution of assistance. Some of them were killed and buried during the Israeli military operations, and their names were not listed in the official lists of the dead. & Amp; nbsp; Gaza residents are still faced with growing difficulties in identifying the bodies or documenting deaths due to the constant lack of resources necessary for search and rescue operations, which even more aggravates the suffering families awaiting answers.