Mohammed Akram| مُحَمَّدْ𓂆🇵🇸

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Mohammed Akram| مُحَمَّدْ𓂆🇵🇸 banner
Mohammed Akram| مُحَمَّدْ𓂆🇵🇸

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

Gaza ,Palestinian 🇵🇸📍 Katılım Ekim 2021
522 Takip Edilen577 Takipçiler
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Mohammed Akram| مُحَمَّدْ𓂆🇵🇸
chuffed.org/project/mohamm… A greeting to every human being who still carries a spark of life in their heart. My name is Mohammed, from Gaza. I survived this war after two extremely difficult years, but this war was completely different… it destroyed my life and left deep scars that may never heal. I lost my home, many of my loved ones, and everything I owned. I returned only to find my house completely destroyed. Now my family and I live under catastrophic humanitarian conditions, with no proper shelter, no clean water, little food, no medicine, and no safety. I am also suffering from a skull injury caused during the war, and I still need continuous treatment. Every day, I try to gather the costs of my treatment while carrying the responsibility of supporting my family and helping them survive. Despite everything, I also try to help other families around me as much as I can, because pain in Gaza is shared by everyone. I was studying engineering and trying to build my future, but the war destroyed everything. Still, I hold on to my dream of completing my education and rebuilding my life from zero. This campaign is the only remaining lifeline for me and my family. Every small contribution means survival, dignity, and hope. I survived death, but now I am fighting for life. Please stand with me. 🔗 Donate here: chuffed.org/project/mohamm…
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Mohammed Akram| مُحَمَّدْ𓂆🇵🇸 retweetledi
Marcus d’Osint 🎒🕊️
This might be a really stupid question, and I genuinely thought I knew the answer, but I don’t believe I do anymore — so here goes: What does the UN actually do? 🇺🇳
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Mohammed Akram| مُحَمَّدْ𓂆🇵🇸 retweetledi
Assal Rad
Assal Rad@AssalRad·
Look at NYT’s original framing. It makes it sound like the flotilla is doing something wrong. In reality, Gaza is Palestinian territory, Israel’s blockade is illegal, as is its abduction of civilians in international waters. This is how they normalize Israeli crimes.
Assal Rad tweet media
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Mohammed Akram| مُحَمَّدْ𓂆🇵🇸
@AssalRad I went to the sea to wait for them and hug them, but I returned to my tent, I swear to you, crying, because we need people like them who make us feel alive and that someone in the world hears us. 😢💔
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Mohammed Akram| مُحَمَّدْ𓂆🇵🇸
I don’t know if these words will truly reflect the scale of what is happening here, but the health situation has reached an unprecedented level of collapse. The healthcare system in Gaza is facing near total paralysis, with a severe and dangerous shortage of essential medicines and supplies. It is no longer just a “shortage,” but an almost complete absence of life saving drugs and tools. Even anesthesia has become extremely limited and is used only in emergency cases, forcing doctors into daily painful decisions. Medications for chronic diseases such as heart conditions, blood pressure, and diabetes are nearly unavailable, leaving patients without treatment. My grandmother went several times searching for medication and found nothing. Cancer drugs are also completely unavailable, along with many other essential medicines that have disappeared from hospitals and pharmacies. Hospitals are overcrowded with thousands of patients, many of whom cannot even be properly diagnosed due to the lack of equipment and tests. In this collapse, sudden deaths are being recorded without clear medical explanation in many cases, amid a severe inability to diagnose and follow up. Even imaging devices, surgical tools, and ventilators are in extreme shortage, directly endangering lives. Kidney patients, children, and the injured are facing an extremely harsh medical reality with almost no resources. According to the Ministry of Health, more than 280 types of medicines and medical supplies have been blocked from entering, reflecting the scale of the catastrophe affecting the health system. This is not a temporary crisis… it is a full collapse of a basic right to life, where treatment becomes almost impossible and survival turns into a daily struggle.
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Mohammed Akram| مُحَمَّدْ𓂆🇵🇸
@Frances_Coppola I’m not blaming a people for a government. I’m asking a human question: why are some lives defended loudly, while Gaza’s children are met with silence? This isn’t about religion — it’s about who the world chooses to hear.
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Frances 'Cassandra' Coppola
Frances 'Cassandra' Coppola@Frances_Coppola·
Casual antisemitism here, conflating British Jews with Israel (which btw is not a "Jewish state", since 20% of its citizens are not Jewish). Imho this kind of antisemitism is very dangerous to British Jews.
Sarah Vine@WestminsterWAG

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.

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Mohammed Akram| مُحَمَّدْ𓂆🇵🇸
@mamoun_linda Exactly. When survivors are punished for speaking the truth, institutions expose their own moral failure. Calling genocide by its name is not extremism it is honesty. Silence protects the oppressor, not the victims.
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Mohammed Akram| مُحَمَّدْ𓂆🇵🇸 retweetledi
Linda Mamoun
Linda Mamoun@mamoun_linda·
I feel so sickened by this. Anyone should be able to use the word genocide to describe what Israel did in Gaza. ANYONE. And yet “Le Moyne College” condemned an actual genocide survivor. A poet. Someone dedicated to precision in writing. Saying only what has been documented by UN officials, human rights organizations and genocide scholars.
Drop Site@DropSiteNews

🇵🇸 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?“

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Mohammed Akram| مُحَمَّدْ𓂆🇵🇸
In Gaza, a child doesn't need to grow up to know the meaning of loss; war teaches it to them early, and in the most brutal way possible. This little girl carried nothing but simple dreams, like all children in the world: a warm home, a mother's embrace, a father's voice, and the laughter of siblings filling the place with life. But in a single moment, all of that turned to rubble, silence, and a agonizing survival unlike any other. Three high-explosive missiles, each weighing a ton of explosives, rained down on their home, as if the heavens had decided to unleash their fury upon a small heart that knew only innocence. In seconds, the entire family vanished: mother, father, siblings… all gone. She was left alone, emerging from the dust and stones, breathing with difficulty, trembling from the horror of what had happened. She wasn't trembling from the cold, but from the fear that had settled deep in her bones. Her trembling teeth told a story that words couldn't describe, and her tear-filled eyes held a pain far beyond her years. In that look, you see a child who has lost her home, her family, and her safety; you also see a whole war residing within a small heart. In Gaza, children don't survive as the world thinks. Their bodies may be pulled from the rubble, but their souls remain there, trapped among the debris, searching for a mother who is no longer there, and a father who will never open the door.
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Mohammed Akram| مُحَمَّدْ𓂆🇵🇸
Books become more than pages when they carry truth from places like Gaza. One day I hope this reaches my hands and becomes part of rebuilding what was taken. Thank you @AssalRad for giving memory a voice.”
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Mohammed Akram| مُحَمَّدْ𓂆🇵🇸
I dream of holding a copy of your book in my hands—reading it, sharing it with الناس, and keeping it as the first step in rebuilding my library from the ruins. But here in Gaza, even books feel like distant miracles. 💔 Thank you, my friend, for writing truth and giving memory a voice. @AssalRad
Assal Rad@AssalRad

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.

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Mohammed Akram| مُحَمَّدْ𓂆🇵🇸
We survived once again, but this time the fear is unbearable. I was on my way to my friend near what is known as the yellow line, when suddenly a quadcopter drone appeared and started firing directly at us. There was no warning and no reason, as if it was targeting us just for amusement. We ran with everything we had, trying to escape the bullets chasing us. Until now, we are still hiding and cannot go out. The drone is still hovering and firing, and fear surrounds us from every direction. My friend told me this has been happening since the morning, that it has been repeatedly targeting tents, homes, and civilians without mercy. My heart almost stopped from the intensity of fear, and now even the simplest things, like walking outside, feel like a risk that could end our lives. What kind of life is this? Where is the ceasefire they talk about? And where is the world while this is happening to us right now??
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