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Ahmed from Gaza𓂆 🍉
@Ahmed_Nashwan_
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Accountant 🧑💼, writer ✍️, survivor of the genocide till now. Remember me as Ahmed, | Support my family here ⤵️
Gaza_tent 🍉🇵🇸
Joined September 2020
RT @AssalRad: If a pregnant Israeli woman had been killed there would be wall-to-wall coverage in Western media. But there’s barely a whi…
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RT @jennineak: do you see this? do you see that this is one of at least 60,000 Palestinians (who have been accounted for)? does this regist…
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RT @mamoun_linda: Israel’s Ben Gvir said Palestinian prisoners ‘should be killed with a shot to the head’ and given ‘minimal food to surviv…
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This is my teacher, my friend, and my neighbor, Ibrahim Al-Shawesh, after his release from Israeli prisons. He is my secondary school teacher, I couldn't believe the images because they were shocking. He has a thin body, and his skull bones are clearly prominent, it seems he hasn't tasted food for months. Israel is a barbaric terrorist entity that doesn’t deserve to exist. How painful these scenes are, my teacher💔
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"For 45 days I was blindfolded and on my knees." A Palestinian man from Gaza who was detained by Israeli forces explains his ordeal of being tortured under Israeli captivity. Ibrahim Mohammad Khaleel al-Shaweesh, who was released in a very poor state of health, says Israeli forces used all forms of torture, including electricity and dogs. He says that at one stage he was blindfolded, shackled and on his knees for 45 days.
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RT @RamAbdu: Freed Palestinian detainee Ibrahim Al-Shawish… After his release from Israeli prisons, with his frail body, having endured a f…
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RT @mamoun_linda: Mohammad Brrash was released today after 22 years in Israeli prisons. “Do not tell my mother I have become blind. She se…
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RT @AssalRad: Yoav Gallant: “The proposal that Hamas agreed to in early July was identical to the current proposal” Remember how many mont…
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RT @mamoun_linda: Gaza from space. This is what unconditional support for Israel looks like.
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🔴Important, please share widely‼️ It is unimaginable that we have been drinking salty water, designated for irrigation, for more than two weeks. Its taste is terrible, barely bearable. With every sip, we see the dirt dancing in our bottles, yet what choice do we have when fresh water is so far away from us? Without water, there is no life. In Beit Hanoun, where the city was once known for its fresh water that rejuvenated souls, today it lives in a nightmare. There is no desalination plant to relieve us of this burden, and no voice answers us in the midst of this despair. The home that once took pride in its waters has changed its features and has become a house of dryness. We live amid the ruins of memories and water pollution, and we urge the world to hear us, to respond to our basic needs. How can life be possible without clean water? We must have a desalination plant, free of charge, to restore a part of our dignity and the purity of our lands. But is there anyone who will respond? In a time when the simplest rights are violated, we hope that our voices reach those who hold the decision, before we die of thirst!
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RT @AssalRad: The West Bank is getting almost no media coverage. How is this not newsworthy?
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RT @mamoun_linda: Barcelona fans chanted for Palestine during a EuroLeague game against Maccabi Tel Aviv last night. Why is Israel still in…
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RT @KhaledNash1993: I postponed my wedding, hoping the war would end and my home would remain standing. But my dreams were shattered when m…
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It was a painful and nostalgic moment when I found my certificates of excellence buried under the rubble of my home that was destroyed by war. Those pieces of paper carry not only grades but reflect dreams and hopes for a future full of opportunities. They express the effort of many years, the long nights of studying, and the laughter of childhood under a ceiling that was once a refuge of warmth. But now, amidst the ruins of memories, I find myself questioning: what is the value of these certificates if life itself has been shattered? How can these papers restore what I have lost in dreams and the echoes of a beautiful past? Yet, despite the pain, I remembered that these certificates are not just proof of success, but symbols of resilience and willpower. They will remain a testament to the strength of the human spirit and the ability of hope to survive, even in the darkest circumstances. They will be a motivation for me to rebuild my dreams anew and for those memories to drive me toward a brighter future, away from the noise of the debris.
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