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No One Cares: 18,000 Palestinian Children Killed so Far

18,000 Palestinian children killed so far in this war on Gaza. Over 200 died in just a few hours of bombing on Tuesday alone.
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Editor: Israel’s army is responsible for 18,000 Palestinian children killed so far in Gaza. People were outraged about the 37 children killed by Hamas on October 7, as they should be! It was a terrorist attack that has been condemned by most. Why aren’t the same people upset about those 37 children saying anything about the 18,000 Palestinian children killed in Gaza? Do they not matter? Will seeing them help?

Here are their faces:

Montage of children killed in gaza this weekPin

That’s only a handful of the hundreds of Palestinian children killed just this week. Doctors—multiple doctors volunteering in Gaza reported on the large number of children they were seeing with bullets in their heads. They exposed how IDF snipers were targeting children as young as 3-years-old.

The author of this opinion piece, Abby Zimet, is right to use the title “No one cares.” The Palestinian people feel helpless, alone, and forgotten by the rest of the world.

“…he found his brother lying on the ground covered in blood from a missile hit to his head; his daughter lay nearby, also wounded; his pregnant wife cradled their one-year-old son, both of them engulfed in flames; their three-year-old-son lay wounded in the head and back, in his last moments helplessly watching as his mother and baby brother burned alive.”
Palestinian in Gaza after moving his family to a “safe zone” and one of their tents was bombed overnight
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They’re right to feel that way about governments and world leaders, but people around the globe held protests on college campuses and marched in the streets in an attempt to stop the slaughter of innocent Palestinians.

Tent encampments were set up in solidarity with the Palestinians who were forced to live in tents in Southern Gaza after their homes were destroyed by the IDF’s indiscriminate bombing carried out with American bombs.

A Columbia University graduate student was arrested by ICE agents for taking part in peaceful protests on campus in 2024. They’re trying to revoke his green card and deport him away from his wife, an 8 month pregnant American citizen.

They’re willing to take a father away from a baby over lies that he’s a “Hamas sympathizer.” Others, including a professor, have been deported using the same excuse.

Protesting to stop the killing of citizens in a war does not make you a terrorist sympathizer. But because the people protesters want to save are in the Middle East, that automatically makes them “Muslim terrorists” (Even though approximately 45,000 Palestinians are Christian).

It’s racist at its core and our government is stripping us of our First Amendment rights on behalf of a foreign government.

We need to get money out of politics.

You cannot claim the Palestinians are free when the country next to them controls their electricity, internet, movement in and out of the country and what is allowed to enter in terms of food and supplies.

Would you consider us a free country if Canada controlled our electricity—turning it off whenever they want in order to crush dissent—and determined what food and supplies could enter the U.S.?

Those in power like to blame the Palestinians for October 7 by saying, “they elected Hamas, so they are responsible for what they do.” The election took place 17 years ago, and with almost half of the population being under 18, (47.3%) most of the population wasn’t even born yet when Hamas was elected.

If you are Pro-life only if the babies are being born in America, then you are not pro-LIFE at all. You are pro-birth in America and do not care about the unborn or babies at all. If you’re Christian, it’s even worse. To only care about God’s gift of life when its bestowed upon Americans is racist as well as anti-Christian. (Don’t forget: Jesus was born in the Middle East.)

More Palestinian Children Killed in Gaza


Common Dreams opinion piece by Abby Zimet:

No words. Of over 600 Palestinians killed this week in savage new US-funded Israeli bombings, officials say over 40% were children in the bloodiest few days of a bloody campaign Israeli leaders call “only the beginning.”

Amidst gruesome wounds and grieving parents’ luminous images of babies now gone, one desperate father who saved his five children from their bombed home bewailed, “I brought them out to what? A life where we run from one death to another.”

Despite Israel’s persistent pretense it’s targeting Hamas and Islamic Jihad fighters, this week’s bloodshed saw the most lethal day for Gazan children on record, with over 200 children killed Tuesday in a few vicious hours of air strikes.

Overall, since Israel broke the ceasefire agreement, children and women have made up two-thirds of the dead, as well as the over 900 wounded. They join a still-vastly-incomplete list of 61,700 confirmed dead – one in every 50 Gazans – and 112,719 wounded, one in every 20.

With strikes deliberately timed to kill the most victims – in the middle of the night – they caught many women and children sleeping, and social media is full of people mourning and memorializing their dead children.

At one site , rescue teams pulled just two infants still alive from a bombed building where they found over 170 dead children, and 80 women. Having seen too many “attacks like this,” aid officials bitterly dismiss Israeli claims of protecting civilians with, “Look at the evidence.”

Despite IDF lies, says one, “Eighteen thousand dead children (since 2023) tells me this is a war on children.”

Also, again deliberately, a war against families. With the help of its deadly, deeply flawed Lavender AI program, the IDF has established a “mass assassination program of unprecedented size, blending algorithmic targeting with a high tolerance for bystander deaths.” Its premise: Why target one Hamas fighter when you can kill their whole family? 

Data shows the current assault has entirely wiped out 902 extended families, some with dozens of members; at least 1,364 families have only one survivor, and 3,472 have two. This week, the brutal trend continued. A strike on a tent in southern Gaza killed five siblings and their mother: Mohammed, Tareq, Lana, Aya, Wateen and Hadee Al-Humaida.

Another killed all 30 members of Muntaser Qreiqeh’s family; gesturing to their bodies, he said, “These are the (ceasefire) negotiations.” Ramy Abdu’s sister, her children and the rest of her family all died in a strike on their home in Gaza City. “Israel may kill us at will, burn us alive, and tear us apart,” said Abdu, head of Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor, “but it will never succeed in uprooting us from our land.”

Lest we forget, the carnage has descended onto an already decimated medical infrastructure of ravaged hospitals, meager or non-existent supplies, and surviving, overwhelmed health workers, almost all of whom have, while on duty, seen loved ones arrive dead or grievously wounded in the E.R’s. of their gutted hospitals.

This week, they recounted more horrors: “We received many bodies and body parts, most of them children and women…many burned head to toe (with) limbs and heads missing.” Seven girls were getting their legs amputated, without anesthesia or sedation: “The screams were everywhere.” Doctors collapsing, crying, “the smell of burnt flesh in their noses.”

A 29 year-old woman with hideous wounds – sacrum, rectum, bladder, colon – who died; she was the sister of a doctor. A six-year-old child with shrapnel wounds in his chest and abdomen, two holes in his heart, a laceration in his left lung, a liver split in half, two holes in his colon, three holes in his stomach, five holes in his small bowel. Reported one doctor, “He did not survive.”

Many more Palestinians, of course, never make it to the hospital. In “Scenes from a Ramadan Massacre,” survivors describe running from a blast to find half a woman’s body, dismembered corpses scattered in the street, the smell of blood and decaying flesh.

Neighbors gather up the body parts into plastic bags and spend hours guarding the bodies, throwing stones at hungry stray dogs drawn by the rank smell until a single ambulance arrives. They only have space for the wounded; they refuse to take the dead.

Meanwhile, even those improbably spared by the bombs are starving, or close to it, with Israel’s blockade the last few weeks preventing access to or deliveries of food, fuel, electricity, and water that Israel already long used as a weapon of war. Beleaguered aid groups say they made gains in helping survivors during the ceasefire, but those gains have been wiped out; today, Gazans are left feeling “terrified, helpless and devastated.”

And despite leaflets dropped by a cruelly disingenuous IDF urging evacuation, there is truly, north or south, even braving bombardment overhead, “Nowhere safe to go.”

But Tuesday night, amidst non-stop shelling near their home outside Khan Younis, brothers Muhammad and Ibrahim Hamidi thought it would be safer to flee and take their families to Mawasi, the nearby coastal area that during the war Israel deemed a “safe zone.”

In the middle of the night, after setting up their tents, Muhammad awoke to bombing. Running to Ibrahim’s tent, he found his brother lying on the ground covered in blood from a missile hit to his head; his daughter lay nearby, also wounded; his pregnant wife cradled their one-year-old son, both of them engulfed in flames; their three-year-old-son lay wounded in the head and back, in his last moments helplessly watching as his mother and baby brother burned alive.

In the later telling, Muhammad didn’t know if his brother or niece survived. He only knew that Ibrahim, who had no political affiliation, worked during the war selling felafel to feed his family after his workplace was destroyed, and, “These are the targets of the Israeli ‘Defense’ Forces: A father selling falafel with three children, their mother, and her unborn child.”

Last year, tens of thousands of deaths ago, Gaza’s Ministry of Health published a 649-page list containing the names of what were then 34,344 Palestinians known to have been killed by Israel. On the House floor, Rep. Rashida Tlaib, America’s lone Congressperson of Palestinian descent, entered the names into the Congressional Record in defiant response to her colleagues’ thunderous silence in the face of the U.S.-backed slaughter – and to the hateful rhetoric of Israelis like a lawmaker who declared amidst the bloodbath, “The children of Gaza have brought this upon themselves.”

Citing the first 14 pages, all dedicated to the deaths of infants under one, Tlaib called the list “one of the most documented horrific crimes against humanity in our history.” Then she mused whether Congress was silent “because these babies are Palestinian,” angrily reminding her colleagues that “Palestinians are also human beings.”

“Fourteen pages of babies’ names. That’s 710 babies the Israeli government has murdered,” she said of what is more than ever an ungodly truth. “This is not self-defense. This is genocide.” 

Today, survivors in Gaza say they are “trying to hold on to life,” but it is “no longer what we once knew.” “We are good people :with deep feelings,” said one. “We grieve when we bury our children, and we try to understand how death has become ordinary.”

On Friday, Israel blew up what remained of Gaza’s only cancer hospital, Turkish-Palestinian Friendship Hospital, which treated 10,000 patients a year. The same day, rescue workers pulled a 25-day-old girl alive from the rubble of a blast that killed the rest of her family; said a worker who heard her cries, “Thank God she is safe.”

And Rasha Abu Jalal described surviving an airstrike with her family: “Suddenly, the screams of my five children pierced my ears. I couldn’t tell whether we were alive or dead and buried under the rubble.” They run outside, “not knowing if we were escaping death or racing toward it.”

“When will this nightmare end?” she asks her husband; his reply, “We are alone in this world. No one cares.” And still, “fear follows us everywhere.” “We survived this airstrike,” she says in shock and sorrow, “but did we really survive this war?”

This article was originally published on Common Dreams and republished here, with permission, under a Creative Commons license. See our third-party content disclaimer.

Serena Zehlius is a passionate writer and political commentator with a knack for blending humor and satire into her insights on news, politics, and social issues. Serena spent over a decade in the veterinary field as a devoted veterinary assistant and pet sitting business owner. Her love for animals is matched only by her commitment to human rights and progressive values. When she’s not writing about politics, you can find her exploring nature or advocating for a better world for both people and pets.
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