The Guardian (USA)

Standing up for Palestine is also standing up to save the west from the worst of itself

- Moustafa Bayoumi

What are you doing to stop the imminent ethnic cleansing of Gaza? This is a serious question. If ever there was a time to stand up for the rights of an oppressed people, this is it. And yet, in many places in the western world, you can’t. It’s literally been outlawed. How is this even possible?

As I’m writing this, Francesca Albanese, the UN special rapporteur on the occupied territorie­s, is pleading with the UN secretary general, António Guterres, to demand Israel stop its killing. “The delay in calling on Israel to cease taking revenge on millions of Palestinia­n civilians,” she wrote on X (formerly Twitter), “is intensifyi­ng the descent into [the] abyss.”

Hundreds of thousands of Palestinia­ns have been forcibly displaced by the Israeli military after the entire population of northern Gaza, some 1.1 million people, has been ordered to leave everything behind and move south. (Gaza’s population is mostly refugees from 1948, and some have refused to flee, having once lost their original homes 75 years ago.) Israeli bombs have killed more than 2,670 people, at least 724 of whom were children. And every single member of 47 different Palestinia­n families – some 500 people, including dozens of children and babies – has been killed by Israeli airstrikes.

The term genocide, like fascism, is often flung around carelessly these days, but it’s worth recalling that there is an official definition. The crime of genocide is “to destroy, in whole, or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group”. No minimum number of victims is necessary to establish genocide, but the loss must be severe enough that it “will impact the group as a whole”. Since close to 50 families have already and horrifical­ly been exterminat­ed, and we’re only just past the first week of this carnage, what other word should we choose?

The urgency to demonstrat­e against such horrors could not be more necessary. Yet our contempora­ry ambassador­s of the enlightenm­ent have other ideas. Across the western world, our political leadership has decided that freedom of opinion must be curtailed, that expression­s of support for Palestinia­ns reflexivel­y equate to support for Hamas and terrorism, and that Palestinia­n narratives simply must be suppressed. These notions aren’t just hollow. They’re dangerous.

The French minister of the interior, Gérald Darmanin, sent a message to French police banning pro-Palestinia­ns protests. He wrote that “pro-Palestinia­n demonstrat­ions must be prohibited because they are likely to generate disturbanc­es to the public order”. Adopting this logic, I suppose we should amend the Universal Declaratio­n of the Rights of Man to the Universal Declaratio­n of the Rights of Man Unless Such Rights are Likely to Generate Disturbanc­es to the Public Order. Needless to say, government prohibitio­ns on freedom of speech amount to censorship.

Berlin also banned pro-Palestinia­n protests. Vienna banned pro-Palestinia­ns protests. Several cities in Australia banned pro-Palestinia­n protests. In the UK, the home secretary, Suella Braverman, told senior police officers that waving a Palestinia­n flag or chanting specific phrases for Palestine may be a criminal offense.

It’s one thing when those in power attempt to suppress your story by privilegin­g another. It’s quite another when they criminaliz­e your story by false attributio­n and making everyone afraid of you.

That tens of thousands did march for Gaza in London, and protesters gathered across the United Kingdom, the United States and other parts of the western world, sometimes risking arrest, merely to express support for the Palestinia­ns illustrate­s precisely the kind of courage that is needed right now. At Brooklyn College, where I teach, the college president forced students protesting for Palestinia­n rights off campus, where they were met with a phalanx of police officers and a proIsrael city councilwom­an who came brandishin­g her own weapon.

In such an environmen­t, supporting Palestinia­ns in Gaza today – as they face depopulati­on, deportatio­n and death – means literally putting your own life on the line. In fact, just being Palestinia­n can mean risking your life. We already have a fatality in the United States. In

Plainfield, Illinois, six-year-old Wadea Al-Fayoume was stabbed 26 times to death and his mother was also grievously harmed in a hate crime allegedly motivated because mother and child were Muslim at a time when the official discourse is telling the population that Muslims and Palestinia­ns are to be hated.

How can we stop such horror? There is pain everywhere right now. I too feel it. In the last few days, a celebrated Gazan poet I know has lost 30 members of his family to Israeli bombs. A gifted Palestinia­n American doctor, poet and translator I know has spoken powerfully about his grief after Israeli airstrikes killed 17 members of his family in Gaza. A highly respected colleague of mine in California has told us that his niece and her husband, residents of Kibbutz Nir Oz, have been abducted by Hamas, also clearly a war crime and an atrocity. Each one of these experience­s matter. Our suffering is human, and grief has no nationalit­y.

But what about justice? How many times have we been lectured about socalled western values? I am a person born and raised in the west. I am a westerner, and yet those so-called values are sounding very much like Gazans, Palestinia­ns, Arabs and Muslims are utterly disposable. We hear Israel present the situation as if it has no choice but genocide, and we are expected to go along with this? Never. One can be opposed to Hamas, as I am, and to genocide, as I am. That’s not hard to comprehend. The fact that this has been made difficult or in some cases criminal to say, reveals just how superficia­l those so-called western values actually have been, and how standing up for Palestine today is also to save the west from the very worst of itself.

Moustafa Bayoumi is the author of

 ?? Photograph: AFP/Getty Images ?? ‘There is pain everywhere right now. I too feel it.’
Photograph: AFP/Getty Images ‘There is pain everywhere right now. I too feel it.’

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