Gaza Continues to Bleed!

0
15

Faisal Ahmad

There is a hollow, devastating cycle to the grief of our Ummah and our shared humanity. Just as the ink dried on yet another fragile diplomatic agreement, the illusion of safety was shattered. Only days after a framework agreement was signed in Lebanon, the skies above southern towns like Deir Seryan, Taybeh, and Khiam were filled once again with the roar of warplanes and the smoke of detonating homes. For anyone watching closely, it is a bitter confirmation of a long-standing truth: promises made on global stages offer no protection to those on the ground.
While the world shifts its fleeting attention from one headline to the next, we are forced to confront a deeply troubling reality: the collective amnesia that has settled over the tragedy in Gaza. When temporary ceasefires are signed and fragile truces are announced, a dangerous complacency takes root. The global community breathes a sigh of relief, treating a pause in formal warfare as a resolution, while the quiet, agonising attrition of human life continues unabated.
The numbers are not mere statistics; they are individual lives, crushed dreams, and torn lineages. According to the latest data from local health authorities, the human toll has reached staggering, catastrophic heights.
In Gaza, since the escalation began, more than 73,000 lives have been lost, and over 173,252 individuals have been wounded. Even amid nominal pauses, ongoing violations continue to claim hundreds of innocent families, often striking those huddled in displacement tents. In Lebanon, the recent offensives have claimed at least 4,246 lives, left over 12,190 injured, and forced more than 1.2 million people (more than twenty per cent of the nation’s population) to flee their homes with nothing but the clothes on their backs.
Beneath these numbers lies the visceral horror of daily life. Our children are dying! Not only from shrapnel and collapsing concrete but from the slow, agonising cruelty of deprivation. Gaza has become an open graveyard where infants are starved of basic nutrition, clean water is a luxury, and medical treatment is administered on blood-stained floors without anaesthesia. United Nations agencies note that Gaza now holds the highest number of child amputees per capita in the world.
To watch a child waste away from acute malnutrition while aid trucks are blockaded and turned away at borders is a moral failure that words can barely capture. The international institutions designed to protect the vulnerable have proven paralysed, while powerful governments offer empty rhetoric instead of concrete action.
We cannot rely on trembling political structures or compromised leadership to alter this course. The responsibility falls directly upon regular people worldwide. We must refuse to let Gaza and Lebanon fade into the background noise. There must be a sustained, unyielding clamour across global forums, an uninterrupted demand for open humanitarian corridors and undisrupted supply lines with an immediate influx of rehabilitation aid to rebuild these shattered societies.
As a Muslim, we believe that whoever does not care about the affairs of fellow muslims is not one of them. We must look into the mirror of our own conscience. As humans, and explicitly as Muslims, we bear the weight of an immense, burning shame. We have watched the systematic erasure of entire families, month after month, year after year, and our collective outrage has occasionally dwindled into a numbed, silent acceptance.
There are no justifications we can construct to absolve ourselves of this cold behaviour. When we stand before the Creator on the Day of Judgement, and we are asked what we did while our brothers, sisters, and children cried out from beneath the rubble, what answer will we give? No political complexity, no media fatigue, and no personal distraction will serve as a shield against our passivity. Our silence is our complicity, and the blood of the innocent cries out not just for our tears, but for our unwavering actions, our prayers, and our refusal to ever look away.

The writer is an alumnus of QAU, FUI & a freelance columnist, based in Islamabad. He can be reached at fa7263125@gmail.com.