Two years ago, the gates of hell opened upon Gaza — and they have yet to close. Since October 7, 2023, the usurping entity has waged a war of annihilation unlike any the modern world has witnessed, not as a military confrontation but as a systematic attempt to uproot life itself from a land called Palestine.

Two years of fire and ashes, of corps and ruins, of international silence and moral collapse — two years in which Gaza wrote its greatest chapter of heroism amid the harshest chapter of human history.

A River of Blood that does not Stop

Over 66,000 Palestinians have been killed in two years — including 28,000 women and 18,592 children — meaning that a Palestinian child was killed every hour. These are not war statistics; they are the anatomy of genocide. Entire families — 2,613 in total — were erased from civil records, wiped from existence. Mothers were killed embracing their babies still in their arms, infants born only to die moments later under the rubble. Even rescuers and journalists were hunted: 990 medical workers and 251 journalists were killed while conveying the truth. It is a story written in blood, in a world that has lost its conscience.

Systematic Destruction: A City Erased

The usurping entity has not only slaughtered people — it has also murdered the very idea of place. Over 125,000 tons of explosives were dropped on a strip of land barely 365 square kilometers wide — the equivalent of eight Hiroshima-sized nuclear bombs. The result: 90% of Gaza’s infrastructure destroyed, $68 billion in economic losses, and 61 million tons of debris blanketing what used to be neighborhoods. More than 1.9 million Palestinians — nearly 80% of Gaza’s population — have been displaced, many multiple times, surviving on scraps of bread and polluted water under torn tents or in the shells of their homes, and yet, amid the wreckage, life insists on returning. Gaza, which they tried to erase, still breathes — rebuilding shacks from its own ruins, writing on its broken walls: “We will not leave.”

Education Under Fire

In Gaza’s schools, the daily lesson has become: how to survive.137 schools and universities were completely destroyed, and 357 more were partially damaged — 90% of Gaza’s educational institutions are now unusable. The toll: 18,000 schoolchildren, 1,300 university students, and over 1,000 teachers were killed. A generation buried before it could spell its name — learning replaced by the sound of bombs.

A Collapsing Health Sector and the War of Hunger

Nowhere is the genocide more visible than in Gaza’s hospitals.38 hospitals were destroyed, 28 others forced out of service, and 60 ambulances obliterated. Nearly 1,000 doctors and paramedics were killed while fulfilling their humanitarian duty. The remaining hospitals function without electricity or medicine, performing surgeries by mobile phone light. As the siege tightened, starvation became a weapon. By late 2024, the UN declared Gaza officially in famine: 459 Palestinians had died from hunger, including 154 children. It is genocide in slow motion — a silent bomb that kills without sound. Yet Gaza heals itself with unbreakable resolve: doctors work unpaid, volunteers share water and bread with a half-smile that refuses defeat.

The World: between Official Paralysis and Public Awakening

Two years of documented massacres — and the world officials still watching. UN resolutions are ignored, appeals buried under vetoes, and the usurping entity continues to kill under Western protection.

But in the streets, the conscience of humanity has awakened. From New York to Jakarta, from Madrid to Rabat, millions have marched for Gaza, shouting against the genocide. The world is now split in two: a camp that stands with the victims, and another that shields the executioner.

Gaza: Memory of Pain, Voice of Humanity

After two years of extermination, Gaza stands — wounded yet unbowed — transformed into a global symbol of endurance and a living witness to the hypocrisy of the world. The usurping entity failed to break Gaza because those who are the rightful owners of the land cannot be defeated by bombs. Every ruined home is a testimony of the crime. Every child who crawled out of the rubble is proof of determination. The blood of Gaza’s martyrs is no longer a statistic; it is an open indictment before history and justice.

Today, the usurping entity faces genocide charges before the International Court of Justice, and arrest warrants for its leaders have been issued by the International Criminal Court. The path to justice is long, but the wheels have begun to turn — driven by Gaza’s resilience and the outcry of free people everywhere.

Gaza is no longer just a place — it is the moral compass of the world. It bears its wounds with unbreakable patience, rises from its ruins, and tells the world:

“I am here… still alive. From under the rubble, hope is born again.”