Saturday, 31 May 2025

a Palestinian child




His crime—he's Palestinian.

The pain runs deeper than the cracks in his dry skin, a century of suffering carved into every line. Salt tears have traced the same paths down his cheeks so many times, like ancient creeks cutting through stone.

He will never surrender.

His body—injured, scarred, hollow-cheeked from hunger—yet his soul remains unbroken. His roots tunnel so deep into the holy land that olive trees sprout from his palms, their branches fed by his own blood. Each drop waters the memory of what was, what is, what must be: free Palestine.

He sees his killer's face, knows the hands that loaded the weapon, recognizes the voices that cheered when the trigger was pulled. Their names will be shamed and forgotten.

Nineteen months without real sleep, dreams interrupted by the thunder of bombs. His stomach longs for the weight of bread, his throat for the coolness of clean water. Home exists now only in the scent of dust he carries on his clothes, his school desks scattered like broken teeth across rubble that once was a children's playground.

Everything taken—walls, windows, family photos, the tree his grandfather planted, the key to doors that no longer exist. Everything except the one thing they cannot touch: his dignity, worn like an invisible crown, passed down through generations like a sacred flame that refuses to be extinguished.

His crime—he's Palestinian. His sentence—to remember. His verdict—to endure. His appeal—to the conscience of the world.

And still, he is just a child.

Ahmad Baker 
May 2025


Wednesday, 21 May 2025

14 miles

I walked back from Central London after the march, tracked the first 22.5 km, which is the distance from Jerusalem to Beit Nuba, my village that was demolished and wiped off the map after 1967 war
14 miles..

 
 just 14 miles from Jerusalem, once stood My village Beit Nuba. Not only were homes and lives erased, but even the olive groves, why do they hate our olive trees, our history markers. 

Fourteen miles, or 22.5 kilometres – a distance measured not merely in steps, but in the immeasurable pain of 58 years of walking through dispossession, and diaspora. It is the vast distance between the ghostly outlines of a demolished village, and the fervent dreams of a brighter tomorrow.

This path stretches to eternity, a reflection of l years of occupation, of refugees, and the silent ruins of towns and villages holding untold stories. Each footfall echoes the steps of my people, Palestinian people. 


Yet, even here, on these clean London roads, my eyes strain to decipher a different narrative. To look beyond the headlines of loss and despair, finding instead the tenacious green shoots forcing their way through cracks in the pavement, a testament to a resilience that blossoms in each solitary, defiant flower.

 

Our hearts bear the crushing weight of what has been stolen: the profound anguish of thousands of martyred children, the ceaseless torment of daily bombardments, the indignity of queuing for water to quench thirst, food to stave off hunger, even a patch of earth for a decent grave. 
Oh Gaza, 
Oh Gaza, 
Oh Gaza.. 

And yet, still, we walk.

 

Unlike the ephemeral dust on a path, the fleeting scribbles on a wall, or the worn markings on a road, what we carry is enduring. We hold within us olive groves, the scent of wild thyme, sweet watermelons, the unwavering determination reflected in the eyes of those children who remain steadfast. Each worn path, even those now lost, is a history etched not in cold stone, but in the very soul of this soil beneath our feet.

And so, we continue on this road. 
Long, long road.
 

We walk, reciting these chants of hope, planting the seeds of freedom, and spreading the call for justice. We find solace in the shared strength of our resilience, a collective spirit that refuses to be extinguished. For even on this seemingly endless journey, each step taken in solidarity reminds us of the destination we strive towards:
A time when we will no longer read the chronicles of suffering, but instead turn the vibrant pages of a free Palestine.
Ahmad Baker
17.05.2025