International

[ International ] [ Main Menu ]


  


56877


Date: January 27, 2025 at 19:51:52
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Israel can murder a toddler in the West Bank with zero coverage

URL: https://x.com/mehdirhasan


Mehdi Hasan reposted

Assal Rad
@AssalRad
·
10h
Where are these headlines in Western media??

Israel can murder a toddler in the West Bank with zero coverage.

Nesrine Malik:
'The horror is not just that so many children in Gaza died. But how they died. In
maximum terror. Many in their own homes, pulverised or smothered. Others in
maximum pain, succumbing to injury without relief. Some after limbs were
amputated without a single dose of painkiller.'

‘We owe it to the thousands of children who have been killed to pause and
open ourselves up to the fullness of the little lives that were snatched away.’

Goodbye to the slain children of Gaza. You were loved, you are remembered,
you did not deserve it.


Responses:
[56878] [56881] [56879]


56878


Date: January 27, 2025 at 19:54:14
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Goodbye to the lost children of Gaza. You were loved, you are remember

URL: https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/jan/27/children-gaza-loved-remembered-innocent-mourn?CMP=share_btn_url


Goodbye to the lost children of Gaza. You were loved, you are remembered, you
did not deserve it

Nesrine Malik

There is no way to rationalise the horrors inflicted on Gaza’s innocent children.
Now is the time to mourn them fully

Mon 27 Jan 2025
For the past week, Palestinians in Gaza have been returning to their homes,
now mostly reduced to rubble – and to their dead who still lie beneath. It is only
now that we will start to get a fuller picture of the true toll of this war – only now
that any kind of grieving or mourning can begin, a process that has been
physically and emotionally denied to the Palestinians throughout the past 15
months. Once the final tally becomes clear, what will probably emerge is a
colossal death toll of children.

Already, indications point to it being children that have made up the majority of
casualties. UN analysis of verified deaths during a five-month period confirmed
that of those who died, 44% were children. Most often, those children were
five- to nine-year-olds; 80% of them killed in their own homes.

I would like you to pause with me here for a moment, at least for the duration of
this column, and allow those statistics to become tragedies. Too often,
individual losses during this war have been subsumed by a broader tussle over
whether the numbers of the dead were correct, whether they were justified and
even necessary. And now, a ceasefire pulls our gaze away from mortality and
into analysis of what can and should come next. This is an exercise that needs
to be done, of course. Millions in Gaza are still by no means out of mortal
danger, their future is uncertain and they need protection now. But, in that,
there is a risk of diminishing or sanitising what happened. And what happened
is that thousands of innocent people died, and among them were thousands of
children.




The horror is not just that they died. But how they died. In maximum terror.
Many in their own homes, on shaking earth, among the cacophony and
screeches of bombs, then either pulverised or smothered, to be pulled out
dusted grey in complexion, or in pieces to be gathered in plastic bags. Others
died in maximum pain, as lack of anaesthetic and medical supplies meant that
some succumbed to injury without relief. Others perished after having their
limbs amputated without a single dose of painkiller.

Thousands of moments of panic and agony leading up to a death that was
almost certain. Most of these final moments were not witnessed by any who
lived to tell the tale, nor reported. But in the case of a few, such as five-year-old
Hind Rajab, there is a haunting glimpse into the sort of horror they suffered. She
was killed among her dead relatives, alone after pleading with emergency
services on the phone to rescue her. The line died after sounds of gunfire.

Hind Rajab, who was killed fleeing Gaza City with her family in January 2024
View image in fullscreen
Hind Rajab, who was killed fleeing Gaza City with her family in January 2024.
Photograph: Family handout/AFP/Getty Images

We have only seen and heard the stories of a minuscule number of these
children: the infants found decomposing in intensive care, the babies who froze
to death, the children lying dead on a steel tray, their names written in black ink
on their bodies by their parents so they could be identified. Each one of those
deaths is a singular tragedy: a child robbed of a future, of a chance to find out
who they are, to know the world, to be a person. Now multiply that by
thousands.

Do so, and try to get your head around the scale of what was allowed to
happen, not for morbid indulgence, but because in the justification for what has
been done to Gaza’s children hides the most extreme form of dehumanisation
from which all Palestinians suffer. None is more innocent than a child, their
death the most unassailable proof of the injustice of this war; how it was
conducted, accepted and supported. None is more universally relatable than a
child, devoid of politics, of responsibility, of understanding of a world that to
them is merely a playground.

None is more impulsively protected than a child. It is why the suffering of
children thousands of miles away moves us so profoundly even when we do not
know them; in them we see the children in our own lives, all similar in their
mischief and exuberance and blooming individuality. In withdrawing into
reasoning – that war is hell, that the responsibility lies with Hamas for triggering
the war, that collateral damage is inevitable – we fail to register what happened
to Gaza’s children with proportionate grief, and our very instincts become
warped.

That desensitisation can be a dangerous thing. It risks extending to those
children who survived; the almost 40,000 orphans, the thousands of amputees,
the hundreds of thousands who are displaced and whose schools have been
destroyed, and the “complete psychological destruction” that all children who
have lived through the war have suffered. Even if the ceasefire does herald the
end of the war, there is no doubt Gaza’s youngest generation will limp forward
into a dark future if the world cannot locate its empathy and an epic marshalling
of crucial aid and support is not extended. In a plea to the security council last
week, the United Nations undersecretary-general for humanitarian affairs made
that case for the maimed, orphaned, displaced and traumatised. “The children
of Gaza are not collateral damage,” Tom Fletcher said. “They are as deserving
as children everywhere of security, education and hope. They tell us that the
world was not there for them throughout this war. We must be there for them
now.”

To the unknown child: I tried to save your young life in a Gaza hospital. Now
your face haunts me
Seema Jilani

Those who have died also still have rights – they deserve mourning, something
that has been withheld from all who have been killed. Many have not even been
given the respect of a decent burial. Twenty thousand children are still missing,
still under the rubble or dumped in mass graves. With the erasure of much of
Gaza’s infrastructure and the suspension of normal life caused by the war, their
deaths have accumulated and passed into statistical anonymity. The majority
have had no funerals, no prayers, no moments of silence, no celebration of their
lives, their spirit, their personalities, each unique. They gather in a column of
names on a list, of numbers so high, without detail or eulogising, that they
somehow imply that in its facelessness and lack of recognition, the killing of
children is an industrial byproduct. It is not. It was avoidable, unnecessary and
only permitted because Palestinian life as a whole has been made cheap by the
logic of Israel’s absolute right to defend itself by whatever criminal means it
likes. Because the world was not there for them.

But all the concerted efforts made to lessen the value of the lives of those who
died do not make it a fact. Before we hurtle to the next stage of Gaza’s calamity,
we owe it to them, and ourselves, whatever our politics, to pause and open
ourselves up to the fullness of the little lives that were snatched away. Goodbye
to the children of Gaza. You were loved, you are remembered, you did not
deserve it.

Nesrine Malik is a Guardian columnist
Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to
submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication
in our letters section, please click here.


Responses:
[56881] [56879]


56881


Date: January 28, 2025 at 07:58:54
From: chaskuchar@stcharlesmo, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Goodbye to the lost children of Gaza. You were loved, you are...


i am praying for the children of Palestine.


Responses:
None


56879


Date: January 27, 2025 at 20:52:22
From: pamela, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Goodbye to the lost children of Gaza. You were loved, you are...


🪔❤️


Responses:
None


[ International ] [ Main Menu ]

Generated by: TalkRec 1.17
    Last Updated: 30-Aug-2013 14:32:46, 80837 Bytes
    Author: Brian Steele