Arundhati Roy’s words cut through the fog of propaganda with rare moral clarity. In speaking of Gaza, she names what too many governments and media evade: a criminal genocide marked by engineered starvation, relentless brutality, and the slaughter of children. Her testimony is not rhetoric—it is conscience. Roy exposes how authoritarian power, from India to the United States, normalizes mass death while demanding silence from the living. Gaza is not a “conflict”; it is a graveyard created by policy, weapons, and impunity. When writers like Roy speak, they remind us that neutrality in the face of atrocity is complicity. History will not ask who was polite. It will ask who told the truth, who refused to look away, and who stood with the victims when it mattered most.
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