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  • Syrians are celebrating the capture

  • of the last square inch of ISIS territory.

  • Were in Raqqa.

  • This used to be the capital of the Islamic State.

  • Under ISIS rule,

  • these women would have likely been executed

  • just for dancing with men.

  • Today theyre making a point by doing it in public.

  • But when the party ends, they go home to this.

  • Raqqa was liberated almost a year and a half ago.

  • Still, 80 percent of the city lies in ruin.

  • Tens of thousands have returned.

  • But rebuilding is slow.

  • With the Islamic State wiped off the map,

  • we came back here to see how people are getting by,

  • and to ask: Can they recover from such a violent past?

  • Remember, this was Raqqa under ISIS.

  • Crucifixions, torture and, by the end, heavy airstrikes.

  • And fierce fighting that killed

  • at least hundreds of civilians.

  • American-backed forces finally pushed ISIS out in October 2017.

  • But 17 months later,

  • people here are still counting the dead.

  • Dr. Mahmoud Hassan is part of the cleanup effort.

  • His job: Sorting through corpses.

  • Thousands of them.

  • To try and identify who they might belong to.

  • We watch his team examine bodies.

  • Theyre not taking samples or running DNA tests.

  • Theyre looking for basic clues: clothes, hair, gender.

  • So how has the city been repairing and rebuilding?

  • You keep finding new bodies, new graves.”

  • That’s the real fear: that a lack of progress

  • will continue to make this war-torn city

  • a breeding ground for radicalization.

  • We visit Najwa and Mohammed, who lived here under ISIS

  • and still bear the scars.

  • They told us that their nephew came

  • barging through their door one day

  • to hide after stealing a bracelet.

  • Islamic State police found him anyway.

  • Has there been any support offered to you

  • to help with jobs or help with rebuilding

  • or help with anything to restart your life?”

  • Najwa and Mohammed are some of the worst afflicted here,

  • and there are thousands like them,

  • with few opportunities and no support.

  • But it’s not like people are sitting back

  • and waiting for help to arrive.

  • For example, the city’s bridges are destroyed.

  • So residents made these homemade

  • rickety ferries to get by.

  • It’s clear that rebuilding Raqqa will take time.

  • And the determination of everyday Syrians

  • is moving the city in that direction, slowly.

  • In the city center, where ISIS held public beheadings,

  • gardeners are planting trees.

  • A small sign of hope for the future.

  • But is the world paying attention, and will people

  • here get the help they need?

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