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Bisan’s Last Message Echoes Holocaust Horror

Palestinians in Gaza say they are dying of thirst and hunger under Israel’s new assault. Since 18 months of siege and bombardment, Gaza’s infrastructure has collapsed: water plants lie idle, bakeries have no fuel, hospitals run in darkness. Gaza health officials report that over 48,000 Palestinians have been killed since October 2023, and on May 6, 2025 Israel launched a full-scale offensive – dubbed “Operation Gideon’s Chariots” – aiming to destroy Hamas’s military and government infrastructure. The toll on civilians has been catastrophic. Palestinian filmmakers and aid workers describe Gazans as physically wasting away under the bombardment. In a viral social-media plea titled “This is my people’s last message,” Gazan journalist Bisan Owda warned that children and elders are “physically and spiritually fading”, with “no food, no water, no fuel, no medicine, nothing – only prayers and tears” (paraphrased). Her account is mirrored by others inside Gaza. Journalist Aya al-Hattab writes that “hunger is part of our daily reality now” – she says she sometimes goes two days without food, and finds empty market shelves and dwindling bread supplies
Siege and Scarcity
Humanitarian agencies warn that Gaza’s basic lifelines are failing. More than two million people face running out of clean water: UNRWA reports all desalination plants have stopped, forcing families to drink dirty well water. UNRWA Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini pleads: “Fuel needs to be delivered now … Fuel is the only way for people to have safe drinking water. If not, people will start dying of severe dehydration, among them young children, the elderly and women.” The siege has choked off food and fuel as well. Gaza’s bakeries have shuttered or are on the brink: six of 22 bakeries “had already shut after they ran out of cooking gas,” and the rest say they will close within days unless fuel and flour are allowed in. Gaza’s power plant was shut down entirely, silencing water pumps and sewage treatment. “No electricity, no water, no life,” sums up one displaced Gazan mother. Aid agencies report that Israeli forces have blocked trucks carrying food, medicine and fuel for weeks.
Water: All three Gaza desalination plants are offline. Without generator fuel, civilians rely on contaminated water. UNRWA warns this is “a matter of life and death”
Food: Markets are empty and staple foods vanish. Gaza’s World Central Kitchen – which had been feeding hundreds of thousands – just announced it has “no more food to prepare” after flour and supplies ran out. The UN World Food Programme warned in March that Gaza’s food stocks were dry.
Fuel/Energy: With crossings closed, nearly all fuel imports have stopped. Six bakeries have closed and hospitals fear generators will fail. Israel even cut power to Gaza in March, halting the plant that produced 18,000 m³ of drinking water daily. Water officials warn this “suspended operations at a desalination plant,” depriving people in central and southern Gaza of clean water.
Aid Blockade: Since March 2, virtually no humanitarian supplies have entered. UNICEF, WHO and NGOs report that Gaza’s hospitals are running out of medicines and fuel. International groups say the total blockade is now pushing Gaza into famine.
The situation on the ground is harrowing. Gaza City and refugee camps overflow with displaced families clinging to each other. One Al Jazeera reporter described a single strike that “killed the owner of a home and the displaced people he hosted. One single family just lost nine members, including women and children, and more people [are] missing and trapped under the rubble.” In Khan Younis, children line up at charity kitchens with empty bowls, but World Central Kitchen’s kitchens are now silent – “We have no more food to prepare,” they announced when supplies ran out. Malnutrition is spreading: aid workers say they can no longer prevent hunger-related deaths.

Echoes of the Holocaust: The “Muselmann” Lives Again
The horror unfolding in Gaza has chilling historical echoes. Holocaust archives at Yad Vashem describe the term “Muselmann” (German slang meaning “Muslim”) to identify emaciated concentration-camp prisoners who were “reduced to no more than a shadow by starvation, exhaustion and hopelessness.” These “walking dead” suffered a death that began long before the gas chamber – an invisible annihilation through hunger. In Gaza today, many Palestinians have become living Muselmänner. Parents watch their children’s bodies wither in front of them. Pregnant women and infants lie dying of dehydration. This bitter paradox – that a nation founded by Holocaust survivors is now inflicting genocidal-scale suffering on another people – is painfully symbolized by the geography. Just 45 miles from Jerusalem’s Yad Vashem, Gaza’s children crawl for scraps. At Yad Vashem they enshrine “Never Again.” Yet in Gaza, another generation is being “emptied” under a siege not seen since the darkest pages of history.
Human-rights scholars and UN investigators say this is deliberate. Human Rights Watch reports that Israeli leaders publicly called for denying Gaza food, water and fuel, and that civilians are being “starved as a method of warfare”. Rights groups condemn the blockade as a “starvation tactic” that may itself be a war crime. Even the former Israeli defense minister Yoav Gallant faces an ICC arrest warrant for “the war crime of starvation as a method of warfare” in Gaza. Scholars note that Israel’s actions – razing 80+% of Gaza’s agricultural land, wrecking its water and sanitation systems – fit the UN’s definition of genocide. These alarming parallels make Gaza not just a humanitarian crisis, but a moral reckoning for the world.
A World of Silence and Consumption
Despite the evidence streaming out of Gaza, much of the world remains silent or distracted. In cities thousands of miles away, life goes on: billboards glow, sports games continue, supermarkets brim with food. Columnist Ahmed Moor observes that starvation is “a slow, painful way to die. And unlike bombs and tanks, it’s easy for western leaders to ignore.” Gaza’s survivors try to document every atrocity – one columnist notes “no crime in history has been so well documented by its victims as it happened”– but their posts barely break through global apathy. Campaigners ask: will anyone speak up before Gazans vanish?
Meanwhile, the world continues consuming. Wealthy nations burn oil and produce food surpluses, yet Palestine’s people starve at the doorstep of one of the biggest arms exporters on Earth. There are no shortages of words condemning historic genocides – the museums and memorials are full of them – but when history repeats itself, there is deafening silence. Commentators point out that this silence is itself a luxury: “If just one Israeli soldier had been killed, we would have declared the ceasefire over” – but nearly 200 Gazans were killed this week, and the world yawned.
The chorus of international conscience has yet to swell to Gaza’s plea. Bisan Owda’s voice is one of many raised for help. Every empty bowl in Rafah and every unburied child in Gaza should prod that conscience to action. The world built Yad Vashem to remember past genocides – in Gaza, the images from this siege demand that vow be kept now. As one Gaza aid worker put it, “Water is now the last remaining lifeline.” If that lifeline is not restored, many more will join the list of the walking dead that history vowed never to let happen again.
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