Captain Osama Shakman
In the long story of history, there is no crime more well-known than the Holocaust, where millions of Jews were killed by the Nazis during World War II. The world learned a hard lesson from it, and humanity promised: “Never Again.”
But today… did that promise really hold?
Now, in the 21st century, Gaza stands as a painful example that when history is forgotten, it comes back—only worse.
This is not an exaggeration or an emotional speech. It’s a real, documented truth: What has been happening in Gaza since October 2023, and still continues in 2025, is not just a war. It is a humanitarian disaster. A new holocaust.
The shocking thing is that the people who once suffered in the Holocaust are now the ones blocking food, water, and medicine from reaching the people of Gaza.
The grandchildren of those who survived gas chambers are now preventing bread and clean water from reaching Gaza’s children.
How can people who once felt hunger and fear behind barbed wires now cause the same pain to others—while calling it “self-defense”?
More than 2 million people in Gaza are trapped. They face severe shortages of food, water, and electricity.
Hundreds of thousands of children are close to starvation.
Schools are destroyed.
Hospitals have collapsed.
Aid is blocked.
But worse than all of this is the silence of the world.
Governments are silent.
International organizations are silent.
Even human hearts are silent.
The same world that built museums and memorials for the Holocaust… today gives only “statements of concern” to Gaza.
Is this not a double standard? Why is some blood more valuable than others?
What’s happening in Gaza is a new holocaust—a slow genocide.
It’s not shown in black-and-white videos from the past, but in full color, live on the news… like a long TV drama.
Where is the world’s conscience?
Where are those who swore to never allow fascism again?
How did the victims become the oppressors?
And how did the world stay silent?
Gaza does not want pity.
It does not want charity.
Gaza only asks for what humanity promised after World War II:
That no nation should starve in front of the world’s eyes.
That collective punishment against civilians must stop.
That “security” should not become an excuse for destruction.
Gaza is dying of hunger today.
Tomorrow, when this is written in history books, future generations will ask:
Where were we?
Were we silent?
Or did we at least speak a word?
History will not forgive. But a living conscience will always remember.