🚨Breaking: Dr. Hussam Abu-Safeia, director of Kamal Edwan Hospital, is being killed by Israeli Occupation Forces.
Dr. Hussam is heavily tutored, and each time his lawyer visits, new injuries are discovered on him.
His last words to his lawyer were: “They brought me here to kill me; this is my end.”
Israel has already killed Dr. Hussam’s son, and now it’s Dr.Hussam’s turn.
Raise awareness and speak out to help him before it’s too late.
Hesap gününde duymadık bilmiyorduk denilmesin diye yazıyorum yoksa bir şeylerin değişeceğinden değil.. Gazze'de askeri soykırım azaldı bitmedi ama başka bir aşamaya geçti. Gazze'de her çadırda her ailede hasta var, yetersiz beslenme, hijyenden yoksun barınma yerleri ve haşerat.. Bombalalarla füzelerle ölmeyip bir şekilde hayatta kalanlar sistematik olarak ölüme sürükleniyor, Gazze'de bağışıklık sistemi sağlam belkide tek bir insan bile yok.. Çadırlar böcek içinde, banyo imkanı yok, kanalizasyon sistemi çökmüş, bırakın yıkanmaya içmeye bile su yok. Gazze deyince hep Resullah'ın şu sözü gelir; Bildiklerimi bilseydiniz az güler çok ağlardınız.. Mazlum coğrafyaları müstesna tutuyorum ama develere yüklesen dünyayı bilmem kaç kez tur atacak zenginliğin içinde Gazze'ye 1 şişe su sokmayan Ümmetin bu en zelil çağına denk düştüm sadece ona yanarım..
Evlenirsen pişman olursun. Evlenmezsen de pişman olursun. Çocuk yapsan da yapmasan da pişman olursun. Kierkegaard bunu 200 yıl önce şöyle söylemiştir:
"Neyi seçersen seç pişman olursun. Çünkü sorun tercihlerinde değil yaşanmamış bir hayatı romantize etmendir. İnsan her daim gidilmemiş bir yolu cazibeli ve gizemli bulur. Bu yüzden mesele en doğru seçimi yapman değil. Hangi pişmanlıkla yaşayacağını seçip karar vermendir."
Sen neye karar verdin?
Gazze’de soykırım devam etmesine rağmen artık neden hiç gündeme girmediği sorusunun önemli cevaplarından birisi bu: İsrail, Gazze’de işlenen suçları belgeleyen ve dünyaya duyuran gazetecileri bir bir suikastle katlettiği için
#ZionismIsEvil (Siyonizm kötülüktür)
Bu çocuğun yüzündeki o hüzünlü, kederli bakışlarıyla dünyaya vedasını hiç unutmayacağım.
Dilerim ki dünyanın bütün iyi kalpli insanları bir araya gelir ve bu k.atilleri durur.
Gazze’de çocuklar katlediliyorken, bu çocukların çoğusu cennete aç gidiyorken evinde et doğramalı mı doğramamalı mı gibi konuların herkesin önüne düşmesi daha kötüsü böyle paylaşımların tartışma konusu olması, gündem olması gerçekten beni deli ediyor! Bir çocuğun tüm ailesinin yok ediliyor olması veya sınır kapılarının hala insani yardıma kapalı oluşu tartışılması gereken milyonlarca sorun varken neden böyle oluyor😞
Altında yüzlerce yorum…
Dünya bu kadar boş bir yer olmamalı bazıları için! Bir su bardağı kadar işe yarasak yeter!
🗣️Sumud Filosu aktivisti HAK-İŞ Genel Başkanı Mahmut Arslan, İsrail tarafından alıkonulmadan önceki son mesajını Yeni Şafak'a gönderdi:
- Soykırımcı İsrail Akdeniz'i kendi villasının havuzu gibi görüyor.
- Yunanistan'ın bu ikiyüzlü kaypak tavrını not ediyoruz.
🌊🇵🇸ebebek'in kurucusu Halil Erdoğmuş Sumud'a neden katıldığını anlattı
🗣️Halil Erdoğmuş:
"Hayatımız boyunca bebekleri mutlu etmeye çalıştık. Ama Gazze’de savunmasız bebeklerin öldürüldüğünü görmek insanın içinde başka bir yara açıyor
Bu yüzden mücadele bitmeyecek, Sumud büyümeye devam edecek”
📌GZT Saha Editörü @ummugulsumdrms'un da bulunduğu Sumud Filosu Gazze’deki ablukayı kırmak amacıyla 54 gemi ve 500’ü aşkın aktivistle Marmaris’ten Akdeniz’e açıldı
They took him from a hospital.
Not from a battlefield.
Not while carrying a weapon.
But from the ruins of a place where life was still being stitched together with trembling hands, blood-soaked gauze, exhausted prayers, and the final remnants of human dignity.
Hussam Abu Safiya was not merely a doctor in Gaza. He became the face of medical resistance against annihilation itself.
While the world debated “complexity,” he remained beside the wounded.
While governments issued carefully crafted statements about “concern,” he carried burned children through collapsing corridors.
While powerful nations armed the machinery of destruction, he chose to stay with his patients even when death circled overhead day and night.
And for that, he was punished.
Since his abduction by zionist forces during the raid on Kamal Adwan Hospital in late December 2024, Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya has spent well over 490 days in detention, more than a year stolen from a healer whose only crime was refusing to abandon the dying. More than 490 days of disappearance from his family, his patients, and the world he tried to save.
More than 490 days during which international institutions have watched his suffering with unbearable passivity.
Reports from released detainees paint a horrifying picture: beatings, humiliation, starvation, shackling, psychological torture, medical neglect.
Testimonies describe him physically deteriorated, exhausted beyond recognition, vomiting, unable to properly eat, isolated, abused, and subjected to degrading treatment that no human being should ever endure.
Prisoners spoke of hearing his screams during interrogations.
Others described prisoners being bound hand and foot for days at a time.
Some recounted attacks by dogs, stripping, assaults after interrogation sessions, and deliberate attempts to break the spirit of detainees through humiliation and terror.
This is what they do to a doctor.
To a man whose hands were trained to heal.
And where is the outrage from the self-proclaimed guardians of international law?
Where are the emergency sessions?
Where are the sanctions?
Where are the arrests, the tribunals, the red lines that Western leaders endlessly preach about when the victims are not Palestinian?
The silence surrounding Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya is not accidental.
It is political.
It is calculated.
It is the silence of a world order that has decided Palestinian lives, even the lives of doctors, nurses, children, journalists, and aid workers, are expendable.
History will remember this silence.
It will remember how international organizations issued statements while Gaza’s hospitals were systematically destroyed.
It will remember how governments continued supplying weapons while physicians operated without anesthesia under bombardment.
It will remember how media outlets normalized the unimaginable until concentration became routine, until mass graves became statistics, until starving children became background noise in the daily cycle of headlines.
And it will remember Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya.
Because some people become larger than themselves.
They become symbols.
He now stands among those names history refuses to bury, the men and women who chose humanity in an age of moral collapse.
A doctor who stayed when escape was possible.
A father separated from his loved ones.
A healer imprisoned while war criminals walk freely across international stages shaking hands beneath chandeliers and cameras.
What does it say about our civilization that a physician can disappear into a prison system accused of torture while governments that speak endlessly of “human rights” continue business as usual?
What does it say about us that the world can mobilize instantly for markets, borders, and geopolitics, but cannot summon the courage to save a tortured doctor?
The tragedy of Gaza is not only the destruction of buildings. It is the destruction of meaning itself. Words like “law,” “justice,” “human rights,” and “international community” have been emptied of substance before our eyes.
Millions of people now watch a genocide unfold in real time while the institutions created after the horrors of the twentieth century stand paralyzed, compromised, or complicit.
But even now, despite everything, Gaza continues to produce people like Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya, people who remind humanity what courage actually looks like.
Not the courage of politicians giving speeches behind podiums.
Not the courage of generals speaking from safe command rooms.
But the courage of a doctor remaining in a collapsing hospital while bombs fall around him.
That kind of courage terrifies oppressive systems. Because it exposes them. Because it reveals the contrast between those who preserve life and those who destroy it.
And so they try to crush him.
But there are people whose suffering becomes testimony.
Whose imprisonment becomes indictment.
Whose silence screams louder than entire governments.
Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya is one of them.
If he dies in detention, it will not simply be the death of a Palestinian doctor.
It will be another death certificate for the moral credibility of the international system itself.
And if humanity still possesses even the smallest fragment of conscience left, then his name must not disappear into the darkness of bureaucracy, propaganda, and selective outrage.
Say his name.
Speak about him.
Write about him.
Refuse the normalization of this horror.
Because the measure of our humanity is not found in speeches or slogans, but in whether we remain silent while healers are tortured behind prison walls.
💔
#FreeDrHussamAbuSafiya
#FreeThemAll
Thiago Ávila, kaç kez bayılana kadar dövülmüş. Hâlâ İsrail hapishanesinde esir.
Uzak bir kıtadan yola çıkıyorsun, Gazze’ye ulaşmak için defalarca denizleri aşıyorsun ama haydut devlet seni tutuklayıp işkence ediyor.
Söylenecek her şeyi kendi evladına yazdığı mektupta söylemiş.