A generation of children are dying in Syria, but a remarkable little girl is reminding the world not to forget about them.

Bana Alabad, who just turned seven years old, has been recording the carnage from her home and sharing it with the world over social media.

Bana is bravely giving a voice to the children being terrorized in Aleppo one of Syria's bloodiest battlegrounds.

"I want to carry the voice of the children to the world," she says in a video.

Her Twitter account began on Sept. 24 with a message to handful of followers: “I need peace.”

Now, more than 67,000 people are following her updates.

With the help of her mom, who used to be an English teacher, Bana is documenting the daily horrors of war.

"Bombs Now," she tweeted Saturday. Her feed is littered with similar updates about how she survived another night of bombings.

But many of Bana’s messages are about the more mundane things she misses.

She asks her followers about their friends, reminisces about school and being able to play outside.

The messages are simple but heartbreaking, revealing what it’s like to live as a child in a city under siege. More than 100 children have been killed, according to the Lebanon Unicef.

Her story has reached thousands across the globe, including Syrian president Bashar al-Assad. When an NBC told Asad about Bana during an interview, the president quickly dismissed her.

“It’s a game now, a game of propaganda. It’s a game of media,” he said. “The terrorists use the civilians as human shields... but we have to do our job to liberate them."

Bana responded with a tweet "Sir Assad ...I'm not a terrorist, I just want to live and no bombing please."

Her mother has urged followers to send messages to U.S President Barack Obama and Russian President Vladimir Putin about the ceasefire.

But there is little hope of peace on the horizon; Russia vetoed a UN Security Council resolution that would have ordered an end to the airstrikes.

And while the great powers of the world are unable or unwilling to find peace Bana's tweets are finding their way to kids around the world, from Japan, to France, showing their support.

- With a report from CTV Ottawa’s Mercedes Stephenson