Monday, June 16, 2025

In Tel Aviv, rescue teams use advanced equipment, sniffer dogs, and heavy machinery to save those trapped under rubble. In Gaza, civil defense workers and neighbors dig with bare hands, without fuel or tools, because Israel blocks the entry of life-saving equipment. Many victims in Gaza die slowly, not from the initial bombing, but from suffocation, hunger, or thirst beneath the ruins.

Alaa From Gaza

In Tel Aviv, rescue teams use advanced equipment, sniffer dogs, and heavy machinery to save those trapped under rubble. In Gaza, civil defense workers and neighbors dig with bare hands, without fuel or tools, because Israel blocks the entry of life-saving equipment. 

Many victims in Gaza die slowly, not from the initial bombing, but from suffocation, hunger, or thirst beneath the ruins. 

This is not a tragic accident, it is a policy. It is the outcome of a deliberate blockade that strips people of their right to survive, their right to be rescued. 

The world calls one side's suffering a crisis, and the other's a consequence. This disparity reveals more than neglect, it reveals dehumanization. 

Palestinian lives are treated as expendable, and global silence makes it easier to bury them, not only under rubble, but under indifference.

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