On May 3rd, the world exchanges congratulations and statements to celebrate press freedom. Conferences are held, reports are published, and slogans are raised about “Preserving the Word” and “Protection of Journalists”. But behind this perfect scene, there is a place called Gaza, where the journalist pays his life for the truth, in the shadow of an international silence that applies to the camera as the siege on the city.

In Gaza, the press is not just about freedom of expression, but about survival. A profession fraught with death, practiced under the threat of bombing, not censorship, and treated as an opponent on a battlefield. The word is followed by a missile, the camera is classified as a security risk, and the microphone is targeted as if it were a gun.