Who Will Tell my Story?
A Gaza Diary
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Narrated by:
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Waleed Akhtar
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By:
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Anonymous
About this listen
A moving account of life in Palestine in the wake of the events of October 7th.
'Who Will Tell My Story? finds beauty and grace amongst the rubble while never shying away from the brutal realities of living through such relentless and cruel oppression.' NIKESH SHUKLA
It was a sleepless night full of tears and fear . . . I am not sure - if I make it out alive - if I will still possess what makes me, me. And I wonder: will I be there in the future, or will I be someone to be remembered in a diary or over a cup of tea by a friend after I am gone?
Who Will Tell My Story? presents an ordinary existence interrupted by unfathomably seismic and unjust events. On the ground during the first months of the assault on Gaza following the events of 7 October, the author of this diary - first published in The Guardian - maps out the physical and psychological terrain of a life under siege.
Traversing the bombed ruins of his country, we see him as he searches for foodstuffs and power to charge devices, maintaining contact with the outside world, checking in with his friends and family along the way; we see his heart swing between despair and faith, fear and optimism, his mind imagining different futures and confronting the brutal truth of his present.
Shining a light on the fate of all those living through war and occupation, Who Will Tell My Story? conveys with astonishing clarity how seeds of hope might linger amid the most trying of times.
An Essential Read of 2025
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The straightforward, unadorned narrative makes the most heinous realities startlingly easy to grasp. The author’s voice does not dramatize the horrors; instead, it presents them with a quiet clarity that makes their weight sink deeper.
Presented as diary fragments, these glimpses of daily existence, unanchored by a central plot, perfectly mirror the chaos and unpredictability of war itself. The absence of structure becomes its own kind of truth — a reflection of a life where tomorrow is never promised and normalcy is a fragile illusion.
By: Rifat Raees Khan
Surviving the Ordinary in a War Zone
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