Two years have passed since the usurping entity ignited its war of annihilation against Gaza — a systematic genocide that spared neither stone nor soul. Two years of relentless bombardment, starvation, and siege, during which the besieged city faced the harshest trials any defenseless people could endure. Yet Gaza stood tall, carving from the ruins a new meaning for life, proving that willpower is stronger than any machinery of war.

A Burning Gaza… A Memory That Will Not Fade

In this assault, more than 67,000 Palestinians were martyred, including 20,000 children, and over 160,000 others were wounded. Nearly 90% of the infrastructure was destroyed, while 2,700 families were completely wiped out from the civil registry. Education, healthcare, and access to water all turned to ashes. These numbers do not describe a war — they describe a project of extermination, through which the occupier sought to extinguish Palestinian awareness and erase collective memory.

Resilience that Confounds the Enemy

Despite hunger and devastation, Gaza did not break. It continued to live, to resist, to educate within tents, and to call the adhan amidst the rubble. The usurping entity failed to achieve its goals and was eventually forced to halt its aggression after Gaza proved that survival itself is a form of victory. Its steadfastness dismantled the occupier’s myth of power and redefined victory as the capacity to face extermination with endurance — not with weapons alone.

After the Fire… Responsibility that Does not End

The bombings may have stopped, but the tragedy has not. The destruction is vast, and rebuilding demands genuine and sustained commitment. The world’s duty today is not sympathy but accountability — to lift the siege, to support the survivors, and to pursue justice. The crimes of the usurping entity did not stop at Gaza’s borders; they spread to the West Bank, Al-Quds, and even the sea, where international activists and humanitarian flotillas have been seized and silenced.

A Victory that Demands Continuation

Gaza triumphed because it refused to die — because it continues to write, to teach, and to pray beneath the sound of falling bombs. But the responsibility now lies with everyone who has seen and heard, to keep memory alive and to turn solidarity into sustained action, not slogans.

The tragedy has not ended — yet it also failed to crush the spirit.

Gaza tells the world: You wished for our extinction, but from pain, we have created life.