A Palestinian man carries his brother’s severed arm, the only part of him that remains. He carries it in a daze through a land of ruin as a group of journalists place the remains of a colleague into plastic bags. “This is all that’s left,” they say. In one of Gaza's few barely functioning hospitals, a doctor is forced to amputate the limbs of nine children from a single Israeli air strike. Tell me when this gets too much. Tell me when you’ve read enough.
Emotions can rarely be conveyed amid such visible, audible, and raw suffering. They certainly cannot be captured by words. ‘Sympathy,’ ‘sorrow,’ ‘pain': these words do not even scratch the surface of how we feel. And though many still hesitate to use it, even the word ‘genocide’ has lost its weight, as have all attempts to explain the unfolding events in political or moral terms.
We are all witnesses
Recognising the truth of today’s events—understanding what is happening, who the victims are, and who (or what) made them victims—will fall to future generations. This may be the heaviest burden that they inherit. Living through this terrifying moment, we are all witnesses, whether we like it or not. No one can say they didn't know.