We must remember the Holocaust. We must condemn the Hamas attacks of October 7, 2023, in which over 1,200 Israelis were killed and 251 civilians kidnapped. These horrors deserve unequivocal recognition.
But remembrance must never be used as a license for new atrocities.
As of May 2025, over 50,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza—17,000 of them children. Gaza has been reduced to rubble. Schools, homes, hospitals—erased. Now, with nearly nothing left standing, the Israeli government is advancing a chilling next step: the forced removal of Gaza’s remaining population.
This is not about self-defense. This is deliberate devastation followed by displacement. It is the systematic destruction of a people’s land, life, and future. It is genocide unfolding in plain sight.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made his intent clear early in the war. On October 28, 2023, he invoked Deuteronomy 25:17, stating:
"You must remember what Amalek has done to you, says our Holy Bible."
That biblical passage commands the Israelites to "blot out the memory of Amalek from under heaven." In Jewish tradition, Amalek represents an enemy to be utterly destroyed.
By invoking this scripture, Netanyahu framed the Palestinian population as Amalek—a people to be eradicated. This is not metaphor. It is the ideological foundation of a military campaign that has killed tens of thousands and now seeks to expel the survivors.
Western governments, particularly in the U.S. and Europe, continue to issue statements of “concern” while supplying weapons and diplomatic cover. This is not neutrality. This is complicity.
To recognize the trauma of Jewish history is not to stay silent in the face of mass slaughter. To condemn Hamas is not to greenlight the ethnic cleansing of Gaza.
The world must act now. We must demand an immediate ceasefire, an end to the blockade, full humanitarian access, and a binding international response to halt the displacement of Gaza’s population.
Silence is betrayal. Delay is death.
History is watching. Gaza is watching. And the stain of inaction will not be easily erased.