The July Uprising may have began with student protests but it grew into a nationwide revolt that cut across class, creed, and ideology. Fueled by years of frustration, young people turned anger into action, using digital platforms to organise, mobilise, and unite the country. As the regime responded with violence, more joined: garment workers, rickshaw-pullers, teachers, parents, doctors, artists, street vendors. People who had never marched stood beside lifelong resisters, bound not by politics but by a shared conviction that enough was enough.