So You’re a Professor? Here’s What You Can Do to Oppose Genocide

Feeling helpless does not mean being useless. It is possible to support Palestinians from afar.

College instructors, particularly those in Europe and North America, are generally limited when it comes to meaningful intervention in imperialist horrors afflicting the Global South.  Nevertheless, it is usually their governments either orchestrating or abetting the horror.  They ought to do something, then, even if it seems pyrrhic or inadequate. 

Continue reading “So You’re a Professor? Here’s What You Can Do to Oppose Genocide”

Scrolling Through Genocide

Zionist massacres are livestreamed to the masses in high definition and still nobody can stop them.

Not so long ago there was a common theory to which I subscribed:  that in an era of mass media and instant streaming the Zionist entity is unable to fully displace or wantonly slaughter Palestinians because of the scrutiny it would invite.  You can get away with a lot worse, the thinking goes, if nobody is watching. 

It’s a theory I’ve considered over the years while working in the fields of Native American and Indigenous Studies.  From the beginning of this work, over 25 years ago, interlocutors stressed the importance of differences in comparative analyses.  One crucial difference between Euro-American and Zionist colonization, everyone agreed, was the timeline.  While colonization is ongoing in North and South America, often in situations of great struggle or tension, settlement of the so-called New World precedes the conquest of modern Palestine by a few centuries. 

Continue reading “Scrolling Through Genocide”

Hamas is a Figment of Your Imagination

What is Hamas? Fuck if you know.

Yes, it’s true.  Hamas is a figment of your imagination. 

I understand that your impulse is to ask about decapitated babies and mass rape and bearded men hiding in the treetops, but it will do no good.  Those are also figments of your imagination. 

Continue reading “Hamas is a Figment of Your Imagination”

A Practical Appraisal of Palestinian Violence

Palestinian violence, a complicated and ambivalent category, requires thoughtful analysis, not Orientalist commonplaces and liberal platitudes.

I. Terror and Jubilation

When I was a graduate student many years ago, I got to spend time in a Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon.  Life in the camp was challenging, but community bonds were strong despite the adversity.  Internal tensions existed, but return to Palestine served as a unifying principle. 

It was an active era of Palestinian resistance—what Western journalists and intellectuals lazily refer to as “Palestinian violence.”  A major tactic at the time was the suicide bomb.  Sometimes the attacker would go after a military installation.  At other times, he (or she) targeted public spaces.  Western pundits and intellectuals, along with a fair number of their counterparts in the Arab World, declared the tactic a byproduct of atavistic evil and collected the usual plaudits in return.  To even suggest the possibility of sociological factors was a monstrous breach of professional standards.  According to the orthodoxy, Palestinian behavior was rash and unreasoned. 

Continue reading “A Practical Appraisal of Palestinian Violence”

Palestine Never Goes Away

Those who want to forget Palestine, can’t. Those who say they forgot Palestine, haven’t.

I’ve never thought of my devotion to Palestine’s liberation as contingent on any kind of productivity.  It’s there whether or not I write about the occupation, whether or not I attend a conference, whether or not I argue with trolls on the internet, whether or not I read Electronic Intifada, whether or not I donate to Red Crescent, whether or not I do archival history, whether or not I buy revolutionary paraphernalia.  It doesn’t matter if I visit Palestine, avoid Palestine, ignore Palestine, or visualize Palestine. 

Continue reading “Palestine Never Goes Away”

Palestine and the Anxiety of Existence

How do we communicate with folks who have deeply emotional responses to criticism of Israel?

I delivered the following comments (originally published at MondoWeiss) at Israeli Apartheid Week events at the School of Oriental and African Studies and Oxford University during the week of February 22, 2016. I remember the intensity of the audience at SOAS. I’d often heard that Zionism in the USA is a uniquely fervid phenomenon, but that hasn’t been my experience. I’ve had police turn up at my public events in two countries: Canada and the UK. In both cases, it was because of rambunctious pro-Israel partisans. At SOAS, a man kept yelling into the back of my head as my hosts escorted me out of the building. We made it to the sidewalk to find a bunch of constables trying to restore order. Some in the audience wanted to argue with them. The Arabs hightailed it out of there.

This evening I’m going to talk about the challenges of talking about Zionism.  I begin with a question I often hear in some variation when people discuss Jews and Palestinians: how do we communicate with folks who have deeply emotional responses to criticism of Israel?  

Continue reading “Palestine and the Anxiety of Existence”

How to Handle a Zionist Defamation Campaign

Nothing is guaranteed to save your job, but here are some suggestions that might give you a fighting chance.

I often work with people who have been targeted for punishment by the Israel lobby (or the Zionist establishment, if you prefer).  It’s a gratifying but difficult task because victims of Zionist smear campaigns are usually scared and confused.  That reaction is logical.  Zionists aim to render their targets unemployable (and thus destitute).  Such viciousness reflects the behavior of the state they want to indemnify from criticism. 

Continue reading “How to Handle a Zionist Defamation Campaign”

Sheikh Jarrah: Zionism Distilled to Its Purest Expression

Dispossessing Palestinians is Zionism’s primary function.

This article was originally published in Arabic at Awan.

Western journalists, always mindful of the limits imposed by the ruling class, have a million ways of minimizing or mystifying Israeli brutality in the Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah, where several Palestinian families are set to be expelled to make way for Jewish settlers. 

Continue reading “Sheikh Jarrah: Zionism Distilled to Its Purest Expression”

Betty McCollum Takes on the Israel Lobby

A close reading of “Defending the Human Rights of Palestinian Children and Families Living under Israeli Military Occupation Act”

Betty McCollum (D-MN) recently introduced legislation, with (thus far) thirteen cosponsors and dozens of organizational endorsements, that has generated significant interest.  The main gist of the legislation is to condition U.S. aid to Israel on Israeli adherence to international human rights standards.  The interest derives in part from the fact that what can be considered “pro-Palestine” legislation is a rarity in the U.S. Congress.  McCollum is bucking the near-complete fealty to Israel customary among her House and Senate colleagues. 

Continue reading “Betty McCollum Takes on the Israel Lobby”

Palestine is not a Quagmire

The metaphors that attempt to render Palestine complicated obscure the simple brutality of Zionist colonization.

Palestine is not a minefield.  Palestine is not complicated.  Palestine is not a morass.  Palestine is not tricky.  Palestine is not a quagmire.  

Palestine is not almost impossible to navigate. 

Continue reading “Palestine is not a Quagmire”