By Mohammad-Taghi Eslami, World BEYOND War, May 21, 2026
The slogan “Never Again” emerged after the Second World War, when the horrifying dimensions of the Holocaust became known, and it gradually became one of the most important moral slogans of the modern world. Its meaning was simple and clear: never again should human beings be pushed outside the circle of humanity because of their ethnicity, religion, nationality, race, language, or political position. Never again should camps, genocide, siege, starvation, the humiliation of prisoners, the killing of civilians, or the organized destruction of human beings be justified in the name of security, revenge, racial superiority, or military necessity.
But John Reuwer, in his brief and deeply moving account of being detained by Israeli forces while on his way to deliver humanitarian aid to Gaza, confronts us with a painful question: has the world truly remained faithful to the moral meaning of this slogan?
When he is transferred from his small aid boat to what resembles a floating prison; when he is met with bowed heads, forced kneeling, shouting, beatings, prolonged searches, and numbering; when he sees humanitarian volunteers packed into metal, unventilated containers; and when, at night, he sees wet and shivering detainees walking in a small, endless circle under floodlights and the gaze of armed guards simply to keep warm, images of concentration camps suddenly come alive in his mind.
To be fair, Reuwer himself acknowledges that his experience was brief and should not be equated with the immense suffering of the historical victims of violence and genocide. Yet precisely this brief experience reveals a larger truth: the danger lies not only in the exact repetition of the past, but in the repetition of the logic of the past.
It is the same logic that turns a human being into a number. The same logic that strips a prisoner of dignity. The same logic that calls civilians “collateral damage.” The same logic that presents humanitarian aid as a security threat. The same logic that says the suffering of some human beings matters, while the suffering of others can be ignored.
Today, in the midst of the Third Imposed War waged by the United States and Israel against Iran, this question is no longer merely historical for us. It is a living, urgent, and moral question.
If “Never Again” is heard only when the victim belongs to the political camp of the great powers, then it is no longer a moral slogan; it becomes an instrument of selective memory. If the world remains indifferent to a Palestinian child, an Iranian woman, a patient without medicine, an elderly person under bombardment, a detained aid worker, a humiliated prisoner, or a defenseless civilian, then it has learned from history only the names of tragedies, not the logic needed to prevent their repetition.
Never Again means that no nation should be deprived of the right to life and dignity because of its geography, the policies of governments, or the narratives imposed by powerful media. It means that no state has the right to make siege and bombardment appear moral through the language of security. It means that humanitarian aid must not be treated as a crime. It means that prisoners must not be humiliated. It means that children must never be called the cost of war. It means that the people of Iran, Palestine, Lebanon, Yemen, Syria, Iraq, Ukraine, and every other place in the world are human beings before they are given any political label.
So in these dark days, let us say aloud once again the moral meaning of Never Again:
Never again for anyone.
Never again against any defenseless nation.
Never again, in the name of security, against human dignity.
#NeverAgainForAll
#EthicsInTheMidstOfWar
#WorldBEYONDWar
#HumanDignity
#HumanitarianAidIsNotACrime
#Iran
#Gaza
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