## One Piece Chapter 763: Declaration of Humanity - Chapter: 763 - Pages: 0-16 - Characters: Jinbe, sea cats, unidentified animal-like companion, Donquixote Homing, young Donquixote Doflamingo, Donquixote Rosinante, Doflamingo's mother, angry townspeople, Trafalgar Law, Donquixote Doflamingo, Den Den Mushi, World Noble representative, World Government official, townspeople, Tenryuubito representative, town children, Corazon, Buffalo, Baby 5, Donquixote Family members, Trebol, Diamante, Pica ### Summary Page 0: The title page reads "CHAPTER 763: 'DECLARATION OF HUMANITY'" under the ONE PIECE logo and Eiichiro Oda's name. In Jinbe's cover story, Jinbe sits in a small boat near a ruined or strangely tilted port-town building while the animal-like companion from the previous cover looks on from the water. The caption says, "SOLO VOYAGE OF JINBE, FIRST SON OF THE SEA, VOL. 12: 'UNBELIEVABLY, THE RUINS ABOVE THE PORT TOWN ARE ON THE TOP OF THE SEA CATS.'" A speech bubble with "!?" hangs over the bizarre sight, implying Jinbe has discovered that the apparent ruins are connected to huge sea-cat creatures rather than normal wreckage. Scanner-host footer text is present but ignored. Page 1: A flashback shows the fallen Donquixote family strung up or exposed before a furious crowd, with flames and black smoke surrounding them. Homing apologizes to the people: "Thank the heavens we're being given a chance at redemption!" and says, "I thought I'd spend the rest of this life of yours uselessly..." Another voice says, "Former Tenryuubito!! Even if you kill 'em, the Marines ain't gonna do anything!" The crowd answers with hatred: "That's a family of Tenryuubito, isn't it!? Let's break every bone in their bodies with hammers!" and a side note says their long-held grudges call forth maddening rage. Young Doflamingo, terrified and enraged, stares down at the mob and says, "Wait, I say! Why should we, who are up here, be brought down so lowly?" He hears people screaming that they were shot 16 times by Doflamingo on the spot, that their sons died, and that their existence alone makes others angry. The page establishes the human hatred Homing's family meets the instant they leave the Celestial Dragon world. Page 2: The people's fury becomes a chorus of accusations. One woman cries that they took both her eyes for sport; another says, "I was once a slave!" A man shouts that without a word of warning three days after taking her own life, his wife and daughter abandoned him in a wretched state. Others accuse the Tenryuubito of never being hungry while commoners suffer: "People are dying, reduced to mere skin and bones!" Young Doflamingo, still clinging to his old status, screams, "My wife was burned alive! I could not care less what happens to any of you!" When the mob asks, "Have you ever even felt hunger?" someone answers bitterly that their country is out of stagnation because of the Tenryuubito. The crowd then escalates: "Pain! Misery! Suffering! Do you bastards even know these words?!" Doflamingo calls them gods, but the mob rejects him: "You are gods, aren't you? Not human, right?" The page ends with him screaming for help, "Doffy! 'An-sama! GYAAAAAAH!!" as the privileged child is forced to face what his class did to others. Page 3: Back in the present flashback frame, Law wakes to the sound of a Den Den Mushi: "RING RING." His eye snaps open, and he lies panting, "HAA HAA," while the room around him is dark and tense. The ringing continues again and again, cutting through his breathing. Doflamingo appears in a separate panel, also shadowed and stern, as the phone keeps ringing. The page is almost wordless, built from repeated "RING RING" sounds, heavy black backgrounds, and Law's exhausted "HAA" breaths. It functions like a pause after the horror of Homing's family's punishment, pulling the reader from old trauma back toward a present conversation that is still connected to that same past. Page 4: The Den Den Mushi call reaches Homing, who asks, "What is it?" A voice from the World Noble side says that they intend to live with land on the gods and spread their self to mere humanity, calling it unbelievable. Homing answers calmly that this is their final decision: "This is as far as we can take you. 33 years ago, holy land Mariejois." He says he has always been a World Noble, Tenryuubito, but also insists, "But I am human." The faces of Homing and his wife appear gentle beside the children as he makes the choice. A representative warns that Homing has bashed his way to be a mistake and asks if he is trying to say that they are the same as him, but Homing replies with gratitude and resolve. The scene shows the original declaration behind the chapter title: a Celestial Dragon family voluntarily renounces its protected status because Homing believes they are human first. Page 5: Homing is told, "This is as far as we can take you. This is North End, a World Government non-member nation. You shall find a suitably comfortable re...