The genocide in Gaza is not an isolated anomaly of war, but the systemic expression of a civilizational design failure. It reveals the catastrophic incoherence of our current global order — politically, economically, symbolically, and ethically. This white paper proposes a regenerative redesign strategy that reframes genocide as the terminal breakdown of coherence across nested systems and calls for a multi-domain transformation rooted in a life-value centered framework.
Grounded in the developmental grammar of Tend–Align–Transcend–Integrate (TATi), the paper offers a comprehensive analysis of four core design failures — political/institutional, economic/infrastructural, narrative/media, and symbolic/moral — and outlines actionable interventions for both immediate coherence restoration and long-term systemic redesign. These include ceasefire enforcement, reparative finance, narrative rehumanization, legal redefinition of structural genocide, and the reconfiguration of sovereignty around bioregional, participatory, and sacred principles.
Moving beyond state-centric or humanitarian discourses, the paper integrates regenerative economics, coherence-based legal architecture, and symbolic healing as foundational components of genocide prevention and peacebuilding. Gaza is positioned not only as a site of atrocity but as a threshold for civilizational renewal — a genesis point for reweaving a world where coherence, not domination, is the organizing principle.
This framework is offered as a scalable model for global conflict transformation, intergenerational justice, and the structural unthinkability of genocide.










