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guilllotine.bsky.social
The owl takes flight...
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Gaza does not weep for them; it waters them with its tears, making them part of its soil—a memory inscribed by the sun with every sunrise.
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The sky was not silent; it whispered their names, telling their story to the winds, scattering it among the sands and olive leaves, until they became a recited anthem.
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And a mother, their first shelter, ascended with them to the highest ranks—Hadeel Al-Hamaida, who never left them, even in their final journey.
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When Names Rise in the Sky of Eternity At a dawn that knew no mercy, the earth embraced them for the last time before the sky carried them as martyrs—five stars ascending in succession: Mohammed, Tareq, Lana, Aya, and Wateen—siblings in birth, siblings in departure.
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Salama, Suha, Karim, Alaa, Raghad, Shahd, Abdulrahman, Khamis, Hanaa, Aya, Habiba, Obeida, Layan, Mohammed, Ali… These are not just names; they are a cry against a world that watches death unfold without blinking. It was not just one person killed—it was an entire generation wiped out.
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They were simply a family sharing bread and dreams under Gaza’s sky—until the warplanes decided to erase their names from the list of the living.
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The Barhoum Family Massacre – When an Entire Lineage Is Erased by Bombs In a single moment, the light of 15 souls was extinguished, turning a home into nothing but rubble and memory. None of them were soldiers. They carried no weapons.
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They left together, their laughter silenced, but their story will forever echo. They are not numbers; they are the heartbeat of a homeland that refuses to forget.
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The Salout Family… A home turned into a memory. Intisar, Sami, Alaa, Asmaa, Misk, Hour, Dalia, young Sami, and Banan—names that once filled a house with warmth, now written in the book of martyrs.
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Israel has killed this father, the two girls, their mom along their grandparents and uncles and aunts, wiping out the entire family of 17 members. This is Garghoon's family in Rafah erased from the civil record.
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for true grooms do not die; they are escorted into eternity.
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The occupation did not wait for his joy to be complete. They stormed his city, extinguishing a light that was ready to shine, yet in doing so, they only made him eternal. Khaled did not leave—he simply changed the date and place of the wedding.
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of the night he would wear his elegant suit, stand among family and friends, a groom embraced by happiness. But he wore white in a different way… And instead of being led to his bride, he was carried as a martyr, as Qalqilya mourned yet another stolen life.
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Khaled Qaraan… The groom who was taken to the heavens before he could be taken to his bride. His mother, her heart overflowing with joy, had blessed him with loving words: "May your wedding be completed in goodness, my dear son." She dreamed of his big day,
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back to his home, his dreams, his land—only for an airstrike to shatter everything in an instant, stealing his dream and carrying it with him to the sky. Mohammed and Samih… You are gone, but not lost. Martyrs do not die—they are reborn in the memory of their homeland.
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As for Samih, he spent fifteen years chasing a simple dream—to become a father. He traveled to Egypt for treatment, but his heart remained tied to Gaza. He chose to return…
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Today, he joined them, martyred in another brutal strike, leaving behind a home that was once filled with life, now drowned in the silence of absence.
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Mohammed and Samih Al-Batran… Brothers bound by blood, separated by airstrikes, then reunited in martyrdom. Mohammed could not bear the pain of loss after his two children and brothers were taken. Grief was heavy, but fate was swifter…
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Manar Suleiman departed, but her children—Firas, Shadi, Mohammed, Karam, and Sahar—carried the pain of farewell with her. 17 names... not numbers, but hearts that stopped beating and souls soaring in the sky of the homeland.
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Majdoleen dreamed of a distant future, but the bombing was closer. Maryam, Bisan, and Layan, names that once filled the house with laughter, now remain as memories mourned by the walls.
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In the Jargon Family Massacre... They departed together, leaving behind names that still echo despite their absence: Eid, Mohammed, and Jihad left, their story unfinished. Fidaa is gone, but she remains in the memory of those who loved her. Zeinab, Fayrouz, and Ayloul—three flowers taken too soon.
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They are names etched into the land’s memory, faces that bombs could not erase, and souls soaring above us, watching, waiting for us to carry on the path.
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@hebagowayed.bsky.social Our martyrs are not mere numbers… They are stories left unfinished, dreams cut short before they could bloom, and laughter that once filled homes but now lingers as a memory in our hearts.
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The passing of children Uday Mohammed Al-Arja (13 years old) and Naji Anas Al-Arja (7 years old) due to an airstrike targeting Rafah, southern Gaza Strip.
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The passing of Abu Ubaida Al-Jamasi, a member of Hamas' political bureau, along with his family due to the latest airstrikes on Gaza.
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The passing of Deputy Minister of Justice Al-Tayyib Abu Omar Al-Hatta, his wife Fatima, and their children Yusra, Omar, Huda, Hajar, Jinan, and Banan due to the latest bombing on Gaza.
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The passing of Jameel Omar Al-Wadiya and his children, Omar, Abdul Rahman, and Shaam, after the occupation targeted their home in Al-Shuja’iya neighborhood, east of Gaza City.
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A new family erased from the civil registry… The passing of Raed Ghaboun (Abu Islam), his wife Aida Yaqub—who had memorized the Holy Quran—and their unborn child, along with their four children, all of whom were Quran memorizers, after the occupation targeted their home in Rafah.
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The passing of artist Durgham Qreiqea, the creator of the painting "Grandson of Van Gogh," due to an airstrike by the occupation targeting Gaza City at dawn today. The body is gone... but the painting remains as a witness.
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Aida Ghaboun and her son Mustafa... A departure that cries out against the silence.
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3-day-old baby, Dina Osama Abu Marzouk, Mohammed Osama Abu Marzouk. They are gone in body, but their names will forever bear witness to the crime.
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Martyrs of the Al-Aker Family Massacre in Rafah... Names That Live On Despite Their Departure Khaled Abu Riyash (Abu Mohammed), Dr. Majida Abu Aker, Kholoud Khaled Abu Riyash and her children, Osama Abu Marzouk, Siham Abu Marzouk, Noor Osama Abu Marzouk and her
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The four siblings Ahmed, Ezzedine, Osama, and Abdullah Khaled Masmah, along with the two martyrs Ghada and Maryam Masmah, were killed in a massacre targeting their family in Deir al-Balah refugee camp, in the central Gaza Strip.
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The martyr Bahaa Abu Daqqa, along with his wife and children, was killed after an airstrike targeted a civilian vehicle in Abasan, east of Khan Younis, in southern Gaza Strip.
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The martyrdom of Mrs. Nasreen Saleh Abdu "Al-Jamasi," along with her children Ubaida, Omar, and Layan, her daughter-in-law Malak, and her grandchildren Suwar and Muhammad, in a massacre against the family in the Gaza Strip.
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In a few years, the children of Gaza will grow into men, carrying with them the weight of today’s memories. When the time comes, they will rise to tear down the wall—this time, for good—because some things cannot be forgotten. _Sakir Khader x.com/sakirkhader/...