13/09/2025
What story will remain when the bombs stop falling, when the dust finally settles, and when the rubble of Gaza is cleared? What will history remember of this moment?
Today, the world knows of at least 64,000 Palestinians killed—slaughtered by occupation forces, fully backed by Western governments, foremost among them the United States. Yet this number reflects only what can be documented. It does not account for the thousands still buried beneath collapsed homes, mosques, schools, and hospitals. With international monitors barred from entering Gaza, the true toll remains hidden. Some experts warn the dead may number in the hundreds of thousands.
For two years, genocide has been carried out in plain sight. For two years, the people of Gaza have endured relentless bombardment, starvation, and destruction. And for two years, the world has watched. International monitors remain locked out. Institutions built to prevent atrocities stand idle. The very governments that claim to defend human rights continue to fund, arm, and shield those carrying out this massacre.
Are we, as human beings, so diminished in spirit that we sit back and allow a rogue state to commit genocide in real time? Has our collective conscience been so numbed that we can watch the slaughter of a people, livestreamed to the world, and still remain silent?
This is not merely another chapter of war. It is not simply another tragedy. It is the worst genocide and Holocaust of modern times—a crime against humanity perpetrated by Zionist forces with the full weight of American support.
History will not only remember the children buried under rubble. It will remember those who turned away. It will remember governments that enabled, justified, and armed this atrocity. And it will remember those who refused to be silent.
The question remains for all of us: When Gaza burned, when her people were slaughtered, what did you do?