
Mohammed Akram| مُحَمَّدْ𓂆🇵🇸
607 posts

Mohammed Akram| مُحَمَّدْ𓂆🇵🇸
@Muhammad0deh
Engineering student from Gaza, writing from my tent. Writer, novelist & journalist,wounded in genocide, still writing so the world cannot say it did not know





Israel intercepts Gaza flotilla near Crete and detains 175 activists bbc.in/3OCO1Lj

MONSTERS!!!! THIS IS A DISABLED CHILD!!!



For every non-Jew living in Britain today. If most Jews leave Britain and that leaves the country with our haters and attackers untouched and free to do as they please - is that the Britain you want to live in? Well? IS IT? Every Brit who isn’t Jewish needs to ask themselves that


Why is anyone surprised that Jews are being attacked in Britain today? For too long @UKLabour and the Left in general have not only tolerated but in some cases embraced all the deranged 'globalise-the-intifada-from-the-river-to-the-sea' extremists who praised October 7, vilify the Jewish state, and bully anyone who dares challenge them. If this was any other group, the government would declare a state of emergency. At the very least there would be a crackdown. But no: they are Jews, so who cares. Well, I care, and so do a lot of people, and we won't all be intimidated.


🇵🇸 Le Moyne College President Tells Genocide Survivor He Cannot Use the Word “Genocide.” Le Moyne College, a Jesuit institution in Syracuse, New York, sent a letter to students this week condemning the language used by Palestinian poet Mosab Abu Toha during an April 15 guest lecture — specifically his use of the word “genocide” to describe Israel’s actions in Gaza. President Linda LeMura, without naming him, wrote that the word caused “real hurt” to Jewish students and implied its use was incompatible with the college’s commitment to inclusion. She then listed her commitments going forward: dialogue sessions, new guidelines for “deeply charged” campus programming, and a declaration that antisemitism has no place at Le Moyne — describing Abu Toha’s testimony, implicitly, as an example of bigotry requiring institutional guardrails. Abu Toha, who survived Israeli strikes in Gaza, lost over 100 relatives—most of them children—and still carries physical wounds from a 2009 airstrike, called the letter “deeply shameful.” “How dare you tell a person who survived a genocide that they cannot speak about it?” he wrote. “I never once used the word ‘Jewish’ during the entire event. I refuse to conflate the faith of Judaism with the actions of the state of Israel.” “If anyone told you they felt ‘hurt’ because I used the word genocide,” he wrote, “then I ask you: how should I feel? How should my wife feel after losing her father? How should my three children feel after losing their grandfather?“

I just watched a short clip of a man who fled his home in Beit Hanoun, a city 🇮🇱 has completely destroyed, & is now living in a tent set up over graves, he said, “It’s ok, it’s the safest place” i found to protect my children” I’ll never forget wut 🇮🇱 has done. Some things don’t just wash off over time, like Germany still lives w the moral weight of WWII



Humbled to share the cover of my forthcoming book. A project born of heartbreak, urgency, and the unbearable reality of watching Israel’s genocide against Palestinians unfold in real time.




