SUSAN ABULHAWA: I want to say that the reality on the ground is infinitely worse than the worst videos and photos that we’re seeing in the West. There is a — you know, beyond people being buried alive en masse in their homes, their bodies being shredded to pieces, these kinds of videos and images that people are seeing — beyond that, there is this daily massive degradation of life. It is a total denigration of a whole society, that was once high-functioning and proud and has basically been reduced to the most primal of ambitions, you know, being able to get enough water for the day or flour to bake bread. And this is even in Rafah.

And the people in Rafah will tell you that they feel privileged because they’re not starving to death, while their families in the north, the ones that they can reach, because Israel has basically cut off 99% of communication — what remains are basically communications by people who have, you know, set up some ingenious ways to keep internet in the north. But most people in the north have no idea what’s happening. As a matter of fact, at one point — I’m sure you all know Bisan Owda, who is on Facebook. She explained to me she often goes up to the border between Khan Younis and the middle area in the north where you can’t go beyond, and she explained to me that an aid truck, that sort of pushed its way through but was eventually fired on, had — people came up and ran up, thinking that the war was over and people were returning to the north. So, most people in the north are in total darkness and hunger and really have no way of communicating, no way of figuring out where to get food.

And, you know, what we’re hearing on the ground is surreal. It’s dystopic. What I witnessed personally in Rafah and in some of the middle areas is incomprehensible. And I will call it a holocaust — and I don’t use that word lightly. But it is absolutely that.

I recommend listening to the whole thing, but this is the most harrowing part for me. The death toll is likely a massive undercount and, if the Zionists have their way, we will never be allowed to know the truth.

  • queermunist she/herOP
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    10 months ago

    Sorry, you’re missing some context. That list is of examples, but the genocide convention also says “any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group”

    So, no, actually it’s still genocide even if they’re only exterminating a portion of the group.

    Also “holocaust” is a word with its own meaning outside of the specific context of Nazi Germany. There’s a difference between a holocaust and The Holocaust.

    Soldiers are dedicating bodies. Children are starving and being buried alive. Prisoners are terrorized, sexually assaulted, tortured, and murdered. Most importantly, however, people and corpses are burned - not in ovens, but with bombs.

    Have you never heard the term nuclear holocaust?