
Every killing of Palestinians should jolt the world with the same force as the massacre at Bondi. Each death toll emerging from Gaza should press upon our conscience with the same gravity as the names and numbers recited in Sydney. If grief is the true measure of our humanity, then applying it selectively is not restraint—it is failure. A life does not lose its worth because it ends beneath a different sky, in another language, or among a people whose suffering has been rendered routine. Until Palestinian deaths unsettle us as deeply as those mourned closer to home, we are not bearing witness to tragedy; we are practising indifference.
On March 23 this year, Reuters ran a brief and chilling headline: “Israeli strikes kill 15 people in Gaza over past day, Palestinian medics say.”
Pause—and ask an unsettling question: do you remember them?
Do their names linger? Their faces? Their interrupted lives? Did that day register as a moment of reckoning on the global conscience? Were solemn statements issued? Did broadcasts pause? Did public spaces fill with grief?
No. I don’t remember them either That admission is not incidental—it is the point. Fifteen Palestinians died that day, absorbed almost invisibly into the statistical hum of a long-running catastrophe. Their deaths occurred near the end of a performative “ceasefire,” shortly before Israel resumed large-scale bombardment with renewed political sanction. By Gaza’s brutal standards, it was not an exceptional day. And that is precisely why it vanished.
Now consider another fifteen.
When fifteen people were murdered in Sydney’s Bondi area, the shock was immediate and visceral. A nation recoiled. Streets fell quiet. Flags were lowered. Grief radiated outward—from families to communities to the national psyche. And rightly so. This is how fifteen deaths should feel. This is how mass killing should register in a society that has not learned to domesticate horror.
The contrast is not about geography; it is about moral conditioning. Western societies have been trained—patiently and persistently—to feel intensely for certain lives and abstractly for others. Palestinian suffering has been normalized, stripped of urgency, framed as permanent background noise rather than human calamity. It is documented, not mourned.
This is more than a failure of media framing or political language. It is a collapse of ethical imagination. When Western lives are lost, the world halts. When Palestinian lives are erased, the world scrolls.
There is no justification for this.
Palestinians love their children no less. They grieve no less deeply. Their futures are no less singular, no less irreplaceable. There exists no moral arithmetic by which their deaths warrant diminished outrage, thinner remembrance, or quieter sorrow.
What made Sunday in Sydney feel like catastrophe is not unique to Sydney. That same scale of devastation is inflicted upon Gaza with numbing regularity. Familiarity dulls outrage. Repetition breeds acceptance. But normalization is not neutrality—it is complicity.
At its core, this crisis exposes the narrow limits we have placed on compassion—or rather, how tightly we have been taught to draw its borders. Albert Einstein warned of an “optical delusion of consciousness,” the illusion that we are separate from one another. Our task, he argued, is to widen our circle of compassion to include all humanity—not flawlessly, but sincerely.
That task is no longer philosophical. It is existential. A civilization incapable of feeling the pain it inflicts—especially when that pain is distant, racialized, or politically inconvenient—cannot endure. We are too powerful, too technologically advanced, and too adept at rationalizing cruelty to afford such moral blindness.
If humanity is to outgrow its adolescence, it must mature ethically. That requires resisting propaganda, rejecting selective empathy, and refusing to rank lives by passport or proximity. It demands that every massacre—whether in Sydney or Gaza—shake the world’s conscience with equal force.
Fifteen lives deserved remembrance, not erasure. That they are forgotten speaks not to their value, but to the poverty of our moral memory.
Javed Akbar is a freelance writer with published works in the Toronto Star and across diverse digital platforms. He can be reached at: mjavedakbar@gmail.com








