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Showing posts with label Hossam Shabat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hossam Shabat. Show all posts

Monday, August 18, 2025

Gaza’s journalists are talented, professional and dignified. That’s why Israel targets them- Nesrine Malik in The Guardian

A marcher holds a photo of slain Al Jazeera journalist Anas al-Sharif, as pro-Palestinian protesters in New York City condemn the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, 16 August 2025. Photograph: Stephanie Keith/Getty Images
Recent killings have dazed the world and provoked condemnation. But little is said about the calibre of Palestinian journalism

The first time I met Al Jazeera’s Gaza team lead, Tamer Almisshal, was in July last year. His team had already buried two journalists, Hamza al-Dahdouh and Samer Abu Daqqa. The rest, he told me, were hungry. They were also dealing with trying to get hold of protective gear, threats from the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and the killing of family members. Ismail al-Ghoul hadn’t seen his wife and child in months and was missing them intensely. Hossam Shabat, Mohammed Qraiqea and Anas al-Sharif were asking for time to secure food in the morning before they could start reporting. Today, they are all dead.

I spoke with various members of the Gaza team while writing a profile of Gaza’s veteran reporter Wael al-Dahdouh, who lost his wife, three of his children and grandson. All spoke of their work as a duty that needed to be carried out despite the risks. Three members of that team have since been killed in a chain of assassinations. Each time I sent condolences, the response was always that the coverage would not cease. “We are continuing,” the Gaza editor told me last week, after he lost his entire Gaza City team in the targeted strike that claimed the lives of Sharif, Mohammed Nofal, Ibrahim Thaher and Qraiqea. “We will not betray their message, or their last wishes.”

As these killings dazed the world – and the response to them became mired in unproven and in some cases risibly implausible claims that some of these journalists were militants – little has been said about the calibre of journalism in Gaza. How fluent, articulate and poised its journalists are under impossible circumstances. How much they manage to capture horrific events and pain on a daily basis, in a journalistic Arabic that they have perfected to an art, while maintaining a professional, collected presence on camera. How much they manage to keep their cool. I struggled often to translate their words into English, so rich and expansive is their expression. Even Sharif’s final message, a text for the ages, loses some of its power in translation. In it, he addresses those who “choked” our breath, but the word he uses is closer to “besieged” – evoking not just physical asphyxiation but the silencing of a surveilled people’s voice.

What strikes me when I speak with journalists in and from Gaza is how evangelical and heartbreakingly idealistic they are; how much journalism to them was a duty even if it meant certain death. All who have been killed had a choice... READ MORE https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/aug/18/israel-gaza-war-journalist-killed-safety-al-jazeera

 AS ALWAYS PLEASE GO TO THE LINK TO READ GOOD ARTICLES (or quotes) IN FULL: HELP SHAPE ALGORITHMS (and conversations) THAT EMPOWER DECENCY, DIGNITY, JUSTICE & PEACE... and hopefully Palestine, or at least fair and just laws and policies]

Wednesday, March 26, 2025

"Hossam Shabat and Mohammad Mansour were the latest Palestinian journalists to be assassinated in Gaza. Responsibility for their killings rests in part on their Western colleagues who have failed to accurately cover Israel's genocidal assault. "

All the Palestinian journalists in the photo were recently martyred in GAZA, after showing the truth to a blind world.

Gaza in 2025- Palestine is the most well-documented genocide in history, yet the most denied.

To be clear- Wikipedia on what a MARTYR was and is:

A martyr (Greek: μάρτυς, mártys, 'witness' stem μαρτυρ-, martyr-) is someone who suffers persecution and death for advocating, renouncing, or refusing to renounce or advocate, a religious belief or other cause as demanded by an external party. In colloquial usage, the term can also refer to any person who suffers a significant consequence in protest or support of a cause. 

Miniature from the Menologion of Basil II depicting the 20,000 Martyrs of Nicomedia, who were martyred when Roman soldiers set their church on fire on Christmas Day, AD 302

In its original meaning, the word martyr, meaning witness, was used in the secular sphere as well as in the New Testament of the Bible.[4] The process of bearing witness was not intended to lead to the death of the witness, although it is known from ancient writers (e.g., Josephus) and from the New Testament that witnesses often died for their testimonies. 

In Palestine, the word ‘martyr’ is traditionally used to mean a person killed by Israeli forces, regardless of religion.[15][16] For example, Shireen Abu Akleh was a Palestinian Christian journalist who was killed by Israeli forces, and Arabic media calls her a ‘martyr’.[17] This reflects a communal belief that every Palestinian death is part of a resistance against Israeli occupation.[18] Children are likewise called martyrs, such as the late children of journalist Wael Al-Dahdouh who were killed in an Israeli airstrike.[19]

Palestinian-American Shireen Abu Akleh overlooking the Old City of Jerusalem
Shireen Abu Akleh[a] (Arabic: شيرين أبو عاقلة, romanizedŠīrīn Abū ʿĀqila; April 3, 1971 – May 11, 2022) was a prominent Palestinian-American journalist who worked as a reporter for 25 years for Al Jazeera, before she was killed by Israeli forces while wearing a blue press vest and covering a raid on the Jenin refugee camp in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. Abu Akleh was one of the most prominent names across the Middle East for her decades of reporting in the Palestinian territories, and seen as a role model for many Arab and Palestinian women.[5][6] She is considered to be an icon of Palestinian journalism.[7]

How Western media silence enables the killing of Palestinian journalists

Hossam Shabat and Mohammad Mansour were the latest Palestinian journalists to be assassinated in Gaza. Responsibility for their killings rests in part on their Western colleagues who have failed to accurately cover Israel's genocidal assault.

  

Palestinian journalists lift placards during a rally in protest of the killing of fellow reporters Hussam Shabat and Muhammad Mansour in Israeli strikes a day earlier, in Gaza City on March 25, 2025. (Photo: Omar Ashtawy/APA Images)
On March 24, 2025, we witnessed the deliberate killing of yet another Palestinian journalist. Hossam Shabat, a 24-year-old reporter for Al Jazeera Mubasher and contributor to Drop Site News, was assassinated in an Israeli airstrike targeting his vehicle in northern Gaza. Hours earlier, Mohammad Mansour, a correspondent for Palestine Today, was also killed in Khan Younis.

These were not accidents. These were not casualties of “crossfire” or “clashes.” These were targeted assassinations designed to silence those who document the truth about Gaza.

“If you’re reading this, it means I have been killed—most likely targeted—by the Israeli occupation forces,” wrote Hossam in a final message shared by his team. His words now stand as both testament and indictment. “I documented the horrors in northern Gaza minute by minute, determined to show the world the truth they tried to bury.”

The Israeli military placed Hossam and five other Palestinian journalists on a hit list in October 2024. He regularly received death threats by call and text. Yesterday, that threat was carried out.

When this genocide began, Hossam was just 21 years old—a college student studying journalism who could not have imagined his future. “Little did I know I would be given one of the hardest jobs in the world: to cover the genocide of my own people,” he wrote about a year ago.

Since October 2023, at least 208 Palestinian journalists have been killed by Israeli forces. This is not collateral damage—it is a systematic campaign to eliminate witnesses. By targeting journalists, Israel seeks to control the narrative, to ensure that its actions in Gaza occur in darkness, free from the scrutiny of international law and public opinion.

The idea that Western journalists are responsible for Hossam’s martyrdom today is not a slogan. Their total journalistic malpractice and regurgitation of Zionist propaganda has left Palestinian journalists exposed, as a precious few who publish the truth, and, therefore: targets. Their failure to accurately report on the targeting of their colleagues, their reluctance to challenge Israeli narratives, and their tendency to frame these killings as unfortunate byproducts of conflict rather than deliberate acts—these journalistic failures have real consequences. They have left Palestinian journalists vulnerable, bearing alone the responsibility of documenting atrocities that many Western outlets refuse to acknowledge.

Hossam embodied resilience in the face of this isolation. “I say to the world, I am continuing. I am covering the events with an empty stomach, steadfast and persevering,” he once said in an interview. Hours before his death, he filed a story about Israel’s renewed bombing campaign that killed over 400 people, including nearly 200 children, in just hours. “I want to share the text urgently,” he wrote, desperate to ensure the world would know.

For 492 days, Hossam survived in conditions most journalists will never experience. He “slept on pavements, in schools, in tents—anywhere I could,” he wrote. “Each day was a battle for survival. I endured hunger for months, yet I never left my people’s side.”

The father of Mohammad Mansour, the other journalist killed yesterday, spoke words that should haunt every newsroom: “Stand up and speak, tell the world, you are the one who tells the truth, for the image alone is not enough.”

Yet most Western journalists remain silent about the systematic killing of their Palestinian colleagues. The International Federation of Journalists has documented by name those killed or injured, but these deaths rarely receive the coverage or outrage they deserve. When journalists are targeted anywhere else in the world, press freedom organizations and major news outlets rightfully condemn such attacks. The silence surrounding Palestinian journalists speaks volumes.

True journalism means acknowledging uncomfortable truths: that these journalists were not killed accidentally but deliberately targeted; that their deaths serve to obscure war crimes; that the weapons used to kill them often come from the same countries whose media fails to report accurately on their deaths.

In his final message, Hossam made a request: “Do not stop speaking about Gaza. Do not let the world look away. Keep fighting, keep telling our stories—until Palestine is free.”

Western journalists have a moral and professional obligation to honor this request. They must accurately report on the targeting of their colleagues. They must challenge narratives that dismiss these killings as unfortunate accidents. They must recognize that their silence makes them complicit.

Hossam concluded, “By God, I fulfilled my duty as a journalist.” The question now is whether Western journalists will fulfill theirs.

News on Palestine you can trust

Thank you for reading this article. Before you go, we want to ask for your help. The Israeli government announced they will spend an additional $150 Million on propaganda in 2025. With the help of mainstream media, they are trying to sway public opinion over the genocide in Gaza.

https://mondoweiss.net/2025/03/how-western-media-silence-enables-the-killing-of-palestinian-journalists/

 [AS ALWAYS PLEASE GO TO THE LINK TO READ GOOD ARTICLES (or quotes or watch videos) IN FULL: HELP SHAPE ALGORITHMS (and conversations) THAT EMPOWER DECENCY, DIGNITY, JUSTICE & PEACE... and hopefully Palestine]

 


 
American Classroom Globe of the 1940s

"This is Hossam’s team, and we are sharing his final message : 
 
“If you’re reading this, it means I have been killed—most likely targeted—by the Israeli occupation forces. 
 
When this all began, I was only 21 years old—a college student with dreams like anyone else. 
 
For past 18 months, I have dedicated every moment of my life to my people. 
 
I documented the horrors in northern Gaza minute by minute, determined to show the world the truth they tried to bury. 
 
I slept on pavements, in schools, in tents—anywhere I could. 
 
Each day was a battle for survival. I endured hunger for months, yet I never left my people’s side. 
 
By God, I fulfilled my duty as a journalist. I risked everything to report the truth, and now, I am finally at rest—something I haven’t known in the past 18 months . 
 
I did all this because I believe in the Palestinian cause. I believe this land is ours, and it has been the highest honor of my life to die defending it and serving its people. 
 
I ask you now: do not stop speaking about Gaza. Do not let the world look away. Keep fighting, keep telling our stories—until Palestine is free.” 
 
— For the last time, Hossam Shabat, from northern Gaza."

 

Israel targets and kills Hossam Shabat hours after killing his colleague Mohammad Mansour

124 journalist were killed around the world in 2024, around two-thirds of them were Palestinian.