A note for Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, the symbol of resistance; a wound that became a year old

wound

PNN – An Italian journalist and researcher active in the Islamic world and the Middle East, in an article on the anniversary of the martyrdom of the late Secretary General of Lebanon’s Hezbollah, described the incident as “a deep and still open wound.”

According to the report of Pakistan News Network, Raimondo Schiavone, a journalist, researcher, and analyst of Islamic world and Middle East issues, referred to this terrorist act by the Zionist regime as an “open wound” in a note on the anniversary of the martyrdom of Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, Secretary General of Lebanese Hezbollah.

Schiavone wrote: A year ago, Lebanon and the entire Arab world woke up with a deep and still open wound: the cowardly and unscrupulous assassination of Hassan Nasrallah, the leader of Hezbollah, a man who managed to transform a resistance movement into a political and governmental force; a force that became the voice of the Lebanese people and defended the country’s sovereignty. This assassination was not an accidental incident, but a political crime designed by those who have been sowing death and destruction in the region for decades: Zionist terrorists. With a strategy based on assassination and the physical elimination of Arab leaders, Israel has once again shown that it neither knows the way to dialogue nor believes in the sanctity of human life.

Read more:

Martyr Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, a leader revered by free people.

He added: Nasrallah was not just a politician; he was a symbol of a nation that never bowed down. He was the face of resistance that turned anger into organization, suffering into dignity, and struggle into government. And for that very reason, because he had given Lebanon a vision of strength and unity, he was assassinated. The assassination, carried out with the same brutality as ever, was not just to eliminate a leader but to intimidate a nation. But the result was the opposite: his death solidified collective memory and reinforced the belief in the truth that neither bombs nor drones can stop the fight against oppression.

Schiavone concluded by writing: On the first anniversary of his loss, Lebanon keeps his memory alive with sadness but also with pride. Nasrallah remains a beacon of light for all those who believe in justice, freedom, and the dignity of nations. The masters and perpetrators of this cowardly terror may build their war machines, but they will always remain the same: Terrorists, shameless murderers and enemies of humanity. In contrast, Lebanon cherishes the memory of its martyred leader and turns his absence into a legacy of resistance. Hassan Nasrallah is not dead; he is alive in the struggle, present in the consciences and breathing in the streets that today shout his name, as a symbol of the battle that will never end.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *