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Ceasefire Isn’t Enough: What the World Must Do to Truly End the War in Gaza

Peace in Gaza won’t come from pauses in gunfire—it will come when the world chooses justice over silence, and action over apathy.

By Azmat Roman ✨Published 6 months ago 3 min read

For months now, Gaza has been a living nightmare.
The headlines may come and go, but for the people who wake up every day under drones, rubble, and hunger—this isn't a news cycle. It's their reality.

Ceasefires have been announced, broken, and re-announced. Yet even in moments of "pause," the suffering doesn't stop. The war has destroyed not just buildings, but generations of hope. And if the world truly wants peace in Gaza, it must understand a painful truth:

A ceasefire is not the end. It’s only the beginning.


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The Human Cost Behind the Numbers

The United Nations, Red Crescent, and other global agencies have reported staggering figures:

Over 30,000 Palestinians dead, the majority of them women and children

Thousands buried under collapsed buildings

More than 1.7 million displaced, living in tents or overcrowded shelters

Hospitals in ruins, running on candlelight and hope

A famine looming, as clean water and food vanish


These are not just statistics. Each number is a name. A family. A future.

So while some governments debate military strategy, and others issue "statements of concern," real people are dying in real time.


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Why Ceasefires Alone Will Not Work

Ceasefires, while critical, are often temporary band-aids applied to deep, untreated wounds.

Here’s why they fall short:

1. They don’t address the root causes — The blockade, occupation, displacement, and lack of sovereignty remain untouched.


2. They can be easily broken — Without accountability, ceasefires can be violated without consequence.


3. They often come too late — By the time they're announced, thousands are already dead or displaced.



A ceasefire may stop the bullets—but only justice, dignity, and rebuilding can stop the war.


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What the World Must Actually Do

To truly end the war in Gaza and prevent another cycle of violence, a global, multi-layered response is needed. Here’s where it must begin:

1. Demand Permanent Peace, Not Temporary Silence

Global powers must shift from managing the conflict to resolving it. That means:

An immediate, unconditional ceasefire

Permanent lifting of the blockade on Gaza

A return to meaningful peace negotiations with international oversight


2. Hold War Criminals Accountable—On All Sides

War crimes are war crimes, no matter who commits them. The bombing of refugee camps, targeting of hospitals, and killing of civilians must be investigated and prosecuted by the International Criminal Court and other neutral bodies.

No peace is possible without truth and justice.

3. Flood Gaza with Aid—Not Just Sympathy

While statements of concern are being tweeted, children in Gaza are dying of hunger. The international community must:

Open safe corridors for humanitarian aid

Allow medical teams to rebuild collapsed hospitals

Prioritize the delivery of clean water, food, and shelter Sympathy is not a solution. Supplies are.


4. Give Gaza a Future, Not Just a Pause

Even if the bombing stops today, Gaza cannot recover without long-term investment in:

Infrastructure

Education

Healthcare

Psychological trauma support


Rebuilding Gaza is not a charity project. It’s a human responsibility.


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The Role of Everyday People

You don’t have to be a world leader to make a difference.

Every person can:

Share verified stories from people in Gaza

Support NGOs and aid organizations working on the ground

Contact local representatives and demand action

Refuse to be silent in the face of genocide


Silence, at this point, is not neutral. It is a stance.


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What Peace Really Looks Like

Peace is not the sound of guns going quiet for a few days.
Peace is the sound of a child laughing freely, not ducking from drones.
It’s a mother putting her kids to bed without fear of a missile striking before morning.
It’s people returning home—not to ruins, but to rebuild.

Peace is not the absence of war. It is the presence of justice, dignity, and hope.


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In the End, History Is Watching

Years from now, children will ask what the world did while Gaza burned.
Will we say we looked away? That we waited for governments to act? Or that we raised our voices and refused to let another child become rubble?

Ceasefires are necessary—but they are not victory.

Victory will be when no mother has to bury her baby in a blanket of dust.
When every child can sleep through the night.
When Gaza is more than a graveyard of promises—it is a home once again.

That is the war worth fighting for. And that is the peace we must demand—now.


Thank you for reading this 😭💔.

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About the Creator

Azmat Roman ✨

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