Special correspondent
We are riding in the warm light of the setting sun. Villages and towns with bright lights. It is a peaceful landscape where people walk and drive without having to constantly look into the sky.
We were in the outskirts of Amman when Safa'a Salha lifted her cell phone so I could read a message she wrote.
The Gaza mother wrote, “Oh my goodness, Jordan is so beautiful.”
The evacuees came to the Jordanian border through the road. I joined the last part of them there, helicopter to Amman.
Safa'a speaks very little English, and anyway, the noise of the helicopter makes it impossible to talk.
She showed me another message. "We used to see this (helicopter) every day, it was bombing and killing people. But today it feels completely different."
Next to her, her 16-year-old son Youssef showed me the scars from his last surgery. He smiled, trying to talk, not Gaza, but ordinary things. His excitement about helicopters, how he likes football. Yusufu said he was very happy and gave me a bump in his fist.
Next to him is nine-year-old Sama Awad, with a fragile and scary appearance, holding the hand of his mother Israelites. SAMA has a brain tumor and will undergo surgery at Amman.
“I wish she would be treated best here,” the Israelis said, and when we were on the ground, the noise from the engine went away.
I asked a question, which was answered several times by looking at the images, but the people who just left face to face.
What is Gaza like now?
Erra replied, "It's terrible. It's impossible to describe it. It's terrible on many levels. But people just want to keep going."
Four children on sick leave were evacuated with twelve parents and guardians. They left Gaza in an ambulance on Wednesday morning and crossed Israel without stopping until they reached the border crossing point.
The plan to evacuate children was first unveiled in February at a meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and Jordanian King Hussein.
Jordan said the goal is to bring 2,000 sick children to the kingdom for treatment. So far, only 33 people have been evacuated to Jordan, each traveling with parents or guardians.
Jordanian sources said Israel has delayed and imposed restrictions, which - which hindered the evacuation process as much as the recovery of the war. The patient's Gansu region has also been evacuated to other countries through Israel.
We take the Jordanian followers to the Israeli government organization - Cogat (Cogat) (Government activities coordinator on the territory)) - who told us, "Since the beginning of the year, especially in recent weeks, the number of Gazans evacuated from Israel through Israel has increased significantly."
Kogat said thousands of patients and escorts have already gone to countries including Jordan, the United Arab Emirates, the United States and others. "The ongoing hostilities in the Gaza Strip pose a challenge to the implementation of these evacuation operations," the statement said.
Israel broke the final ceasefire in March and launched a wave of attacks that illustrates Hamas' post.
Gaza remains claustrophobia for its inhabitants of hunger and death. Exceptions are made for those who go out for treatment.
According to the United Nations, 2.1 million people are at risk of famine. Tom Fletcher, the group's humanitarian chief, has called on the UN Security Council to take action to "prevent genocide in Gaza."
These are people who have sober traditions in the UK Foreign Ministry, who have served as ambassador and senior government adviser.
Israel's lockdown prevents basic aid supply from reaching the population. As the bombing continues to explain, Israel Abu Jame’s description of a terrible place of words.
Children arriving in Jordan from Gaza on Wednesday will join a small Amman hospital for other injured and sick young people.
We have been following the case of Habiba Al-Askari since January, who came with her mother Rana, hoping that the doctor would save three gangrene-infected limbs - two arms and one leg.
However, infections caused by rare skin conditions are too far away. Habiba performed triple amputation.
When I met Habiba and Rana again this week, the little girl rolled with her remaining feet toes and played children's games on her mom's phone. She blew a kiss with the stump of her arm. It's completely different from the frightened girl I met in a helicopter evacuation five months ago.
“She is a strong person,” Lana said. Habiba will be equipped with prosthetics. She had made up her mind to walk and asked her mother to hold her armpits while she was beating.
Lana hopes that one day she will bring Habiba back to Gaza. The mother and son are safe and well cared for in Amman, but their entire world, their family and neighbors are back in the ruins. Concerns about Habiba's health have made Rana reluctant to consider it as soon as possible.
"We don't have a house. Where if we want to go back? We'll go back to a tent full of sand... (but) I really want to come back. Despite everything that happened, Gaza is still beautiful. For me, Gaza will always be the most precious place on the entire planet."
They will return. But to war or peace? No one knows.
With other reports from Alice Doidard, Suha Kawar, Nikh Millard and Federal Federal Federal.