Gaza City – In a sweltering tent at Gaza’s port, 45-year-old Iman al-Rahel readies her family for lunchtime.She sends her 13-year-old son, Yazen, to fetch food from the nearby takiyya, or community kitchen.“I think they’re serving rice today,” she whispers to her daughter, a faint smile easing across her tired face.But that brief smile vanishes when the conversation turns to another possible wave of displacement after Israel’s latest announcement that it plans to seize Gaza City.“God forbid,” she says, pressing her hand against her chest. “I only pray that this won’t happen, that we won’t be forced to leave for the south.”Still, Iman says, if Israel were to officially order an evacuation, she would be among the first to go to southern Gaza, “without hesitation”. The al-Rahel family are divided over whether to leave northern Gaza or stay. From right to left, 23-year-old Abdullah, 17-year-old Mohammed, who was injured seeking aid last week, the mother of the siblings, Iman, Abdullah’s wife, 21-year-old Saja, and 24-year-old Ghadeer and her two-year-old daughter Ayloul [Abdelhakim Abu Riash/Al Jazeera]The mother of five stayed in Beit Lahiya in northern Gaza during the Israeli invasion in the early stages of the war after it began in October 2023, moving her family from one shelter to another as tanks advanced and the bombardment intensified.“I can’t forget a moment of that time,” Iman says quietly. “In Beit Lahiya, the school we were sheltering in was besieged by tanks and snipers last December. My 23-year-old son [Abdullah] was shot in the neck at the time, as was my husband. Th …