In April 1990, on the 47th Anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, Maryla Husyt Finkelstein (1917–1995) spoke to Amy Goodman on WBAI radio in New York. She was not only a Holocaust survivor but also a woman who carried the voices of the exterminated with her —a witness to hunger , confinement, betrayal, and unimaginable loss. Maryla survived the Warsaw Ghetto , Majdanek , and two slave-labor camps. Every member of her family in Poland was exterminated . Her husband, Zacharias Finkelstein , survived Auschwitz and the death march, though his entire family too was wiped out . They were left alone in the world, but they carried their memories like sacred testimony. Maryla was also the mother of Professor Norman Finkelstein , one of the fiercest critics of Israeli policies today. Her legacy and her words live through him —and through us, if we choose to listen. When Maryla spoke that spring day in 1990, she gave a testimony of hunger and abandonment that eerily echoes what...
Dr. Omar Harb was more than a university professor, poet, and psychologist— he was a pillar of soul and intellect in Gaza. In an interview with Al Jazeera just three weeks before his death , he weighed less than 40 kilograms , a staggering drop from nearly 120 kg before the crisis . He spoke with quiet despair : "I looked at my before and after photos and thought ' this can’t possibly be the same person '. We don’t know why we’ve reached this point . People are suffering , and no one is paying attention to this suffering." Those words—so simple, yet so haunting— echo across Gaza’s hollow streets. Dr. Harb, who lost 26 members of his family , had appealed even for a new wheelchair as his body betrayed him . A Life Starved of Peace, a Death Refused Dr. Harb died not from the debris of bombs , but from the void of life—no food, no medicine, no humanity . His personal tragedy mirrors the broader agony of Gaza, where Category Five famine has been declared ...