It would lead every news bulletin. We would have indepth portraits of every victim. We would see the smiling faces of the photos of children and babies killed in this horror. Politicians would do grief stricken speeches. Social media would abound with ordinary citizens sharing their disgust, their horror. It would go down in the history books, a crime remembered with shock for generations. Gaza had a pre- genocide population of around 2.2 million, much smaller than Britain's 69 million people. According to a new study from Al Jazeera, Israel has wiped out more than 2,700 Palestinian extended families in Gaza since the genocide began in October 2023.The youngest victim killed in Gaza by the Israeli state, a one-year-old baby. The oldest victim, a 101year-old man.
Each family, their own memories, their own histories, their own
traditions, their own secrets, their ups, their downs, their celebrations,
their tragedies. All of these families gone, erased from the earth as though
they didn't exist in the first place. All those precious shared moments that
they had, a child's first word, family celebrations, days out of the beach, all
of these families wiped from Gaza civil registry, all of their memories wiped along
with them as if they never happened. If anywhere else on Earth, especially in a
territory with just over 2 million people, 2,700 plus extended families had
been violently exterminated in the space of 2 years. There would be no debate
or discussion or controversy about whether that this constituted genocide. It
would be deemed outrageous to even deny it. It is our responsibility,not least
in countries which helped arm and facilitate this genocide, to remember all the
details of what our countries helped do to the people of Gaza.
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