“sorry English isn’t my first language” then writes the most magnificent, amazing, best literature I’ve seen in years
“Remember when we used to play this game on a field like this”
What Sangwoo said: “Who cares about all that?”
What he meant: “You have no idea how sorry I am for what I’ve done and what I’m about to do, hyung. But I’d do it all again and again if it meant saving you and me from this wretched hell hole. I love reminiscing on the past because you were a major part of mine. And I wholeheartedly want you to be part of my future too. If I had the choice, I’d tell you to run away with me. So when I come at you with this knife, I promise I’ll be as easy as I can be. Just pretend it hurts so that they’ll let us go home. Please.”
Israel doesn't know where the tunnels are and the tunnels themselves aren't interconnected so flooding won't work. They tried this before and it failed.
This is just them salting the earth, making it impossible for Gazans to plant crops. This will ensure that Palestinians starve even after the Israeli army withdraws
may he never know a single moment of peace again in his life may he be tormented every time he sets foot in public may he be forever stained with blood and die in infamy
Hyperfixations are a fucking drug, dude. All I have to do is think about The Bad Batch and suddenly I'm like
The Israeli government: *Is constantly making it clear that they want to bomb the shit out of Gaza*
US Politicians: Oh c’mon guys, you’re being overdramatic. The Israeli government would never do that.
Meet Mohammed Nazzal, a Palestinian child. He was in administrative arrest (this means he can stay held captive without charge for as long as israel decides, also look it up for better understanding) without charge or trial in Israeli occupation prisons and was released yesterday as part of the hostages exchange.
"They shattered metal bars on me, beating me non-stop on my head, broke my hands. They starved me."
A released captive Amani Hashem embraces her son Adam and returns to her family after spending 7 years in occupation prison. She shared her experience in the interview.
What stuck with me is when she said: "On the rare occasions the occupation would allow family visits, they would let me see both of my kids but only hug one of them. My kids were so young they didn't understand. I'd hear the younger one saying: "Why didn't mom hug me too? Does she not love me?" That's when I realized the limitless of the occupation's evil. They stripped me from seeing my children grow up, I'm getting to know them from the beginning now."