Guerrilla History - The West Bank, and the Nature of Resistance w/ Bana & Lara from the Good Shepherd Collective
Episode Date: October 4, 2024In this episode of Guerrilla History, we bring on two members from the Good Shepherd Collective, Bana Abu Zuluf and Lara Kilani, for a wide ranging conversation on The West Bank, the nature of resista...nce, the one year mark from October 7, narratives, and more! This was a terrific and vital discussion with two wonderful comrades, and we will certainly be bringing them back on again soon. Be sure to follow the Good Shepherd Collective on twitter @Shepherds4Good, and check out their website. Additionally, read their article Anti-Zionism as Decolonization, and if you have the ability to do so, consider supporting them financially to allow them to continue their crucial work. Bana Abu Zuluf is a Palestinian PhD candidate in International Law at Maynooth University Ireland and a member of the Good Shepherd Collective. Lara Kilani is a Palestinian-American researcher and member of the Good Shepherd Collective. Help support the show by signing up to our patreon, where you also will get bonus content: https://www.patreon.com/guerrillahistory
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You don't remember den, Ben, boo?
No!
The same thing happened in Algeria, in Africa.
They didn't have anything but a rank.
The French had all these highly mechanized instruments of warfare.
But they put some guerrilla action on.
Hello, and welcome to God.
Guerrilla History, the podcast that acts as a reconnaissance report of global proletarian history
and aims to use the lessons of history to analyze the present.
I'm one of your co-hosts, Henry Hakimaki, joined as usual by my co-host, Professor Adnan
Hussein, historian director of the School of Religion at Queen's University in Ontario, Canada.
Hello, Adnan. How are you doing today?
I'm doing really well, Henry. It's great to be with you, and I'm looking forward to our
conversation with our guests today. Yeah, absolutely. It's nice to see you as well.
know it was only a couple days since we last recorded, but it's always a pleasure getting
to sit down with you and have these really interesting and important discussions with you
and with the terrific guests that we always have on the show.
And today is certainly no exception as we have a couple of guests who we've been following
their work for quite some time and finally have the opportunity to speak with.
Before I introduce the guests, I want to make sure that I remind the listeners that they can help
support the show and allow us to continue making episodes like this by going to patreon.com
forward slash guerrilla history.
That's G-U-E-R-R-I-L-A history.
And you can keep up to date with everything
that Adnan and I are doing individually
and collectively by following the show on Twitter
at Gorilla-U-Pod.
Again, that's G-U-E-R-R-I-L-A-U-Skore pod.
Today, for you, listeners,
we have two representatives
of the Good Shepherd Collective, as I said,
folks who we've been fond of their work
for quite some time.
Those of you who follow us on social media
will see us sharing their work quite a bit.
And those of you who follow the Good Shepherd Collective
on social media will see them sharing our work
occasionally as well.
So this conversation does feel a little bit overdue,
but we're really, really happy to have these two
representatives here today, Laura and Bana.
So I'm going to just turn it over to the two of you
to introduce yourselves to the listeners
and then also after you introduce yourself individually,
the two of you together can introduce
what the Good Shepherd Collective is and the work that you do.
So why don't I turn it to Bonner first to introduce yourself?
Thank you so much, Henry and Adnan, for inviting us.
My name is Bana, and I am a PhD researcher in international law at Maineuth
University in Ireland, and also, of course, a member of the Good Shepherd Collective.
I mainly do analysis for the Good Shepherd Collective.
I do research as well, and you can also see me tweeting as well on our Good Shepherd Collective.
collective Twitter. And I also happen to sort of try to bridge the gap between the Arab
speakers and the English speakers. I speak full, fully, I'm fully fluent in Arabic. So I'm able to
basically include the discourse and analysis that's happening in Arabic for our English speaking
audience on Twitter. And I'm Laura Killani. I'm a researcher and a Palestinian American who's
a member of Good Shepherd Collective and based here in Bay.
Sahur, and Palestine in the West Bank.
And like Bana, I'm part of, you know, contributing to the analysis,
writing some of the tweets and providing news updates,
sending, you know, some of our news roundups, weekly news roundups and things like that.
And maybe to talk a little bit about what the Good Shepherd Collective is and does,
we're a collective that started in 2018,
sort of out of the, what we saw is the need for an alternative resource for Palestinian organizing
here on the ground in Palestine. So much of the resources, especially international resources,
are wrapped up in NGOs, which are, you know, have a lot of restrictions on what can be done
and what can be done and who can say it and how they can say it. And that's really restrictive
on the way people can organize in Palestine and puts a limit on not only whether or not people can
speak the truth, but how they can organize to protect their own communities. And we really wanted to
create something that could move outside of that space, create alternative funding mechanisms for
people where they needed them, and also provide resources that weren't tied to these kind of
large granting organizations, but also these neoliberal, colonial, you know, restrictions to
kind of entrapped people. Some of the things we do, of course, analysis as we talked about.
Lately, we had a new project where we created a new website and have all of this sort of democratized
data that you might not be able to find easily anywhere else or might not be able to find at all.
certainly not all in one place.
As Banna said, we also try to provide some translation, not only like literal, linguistic and cultural translation, but historical and analytical translation where we see gaps in between Palestinian understanding Palestinian analysis and Western analysis or just outside analysis.
and, of course, supporting communities on the ground and providing news to the rest of the world.
So that's a bit about us.
Banna, anything that you want to add in on that?
Yeah, I would just like to add one more thing is, I think lately we have been known to provide anti-Zionist analysis.
So we have written on anti-Zionism, on what that means, and also what Zionism as well.
means, and also how we would like to see anti-Zionist solidarity shape the organizing abroad.
Currently, we obviously have, you know, spotlighted Gaza, but lately because of the decline
and because of the focus on Gaza, people are not aware that lots is happening, obviously,
in the West Bank.
So we're shedding light on the type of
settler colonial expansion,
on the type of forced displacement that is happening throughout
and also the resistance as well that is happening
and spotlighting the pockets of resistance happening
throughout the West Bank in Jerusalem as well
that is being forgotten in the discussion,
even in this discussion about resistance that is happening
throughout by the act of resistance and whatnot.
Well, that's a wonderful outline.
We'll definitely want to talk with you both specifically about spotlighting and highlighting
what's been happening in the West Bank.
I think before we get to that kind of account and real forensic understanding from
people who are both on the ground and connected with networks there,
your collective. It's worth pointing out and noting that we are very close to the one-year
anniversary of the devastating attack upon Gaza and the genocide that's been ongoing there and
intensive, ongoing for 75 years, but intensified in this last year, and just wondering, you know,
what kind of analysis do you have about it? You're both active on Twitter talking about those
situations. I'm wondering, Vana in particular, from an international law perspective,
how do you see, you know, coming upon a year of gross, obvious violations of scores and scores
of, you know, laws internationally? And the fact that at certain phases during this
genocide, it appeared that international law might be a venue at least for mobilizing
collective resistance. How do you see that now? It's been a while since the ICJ had its initial
issuing of provisional measures that renewed them again in May. And right now it seems very quiet
on that front. So maybe that's the first dimension of the Gaza situation that's worth talking about.
And then, you know, Laura will come to you for, you know, perspectives from within, you know, Palestinian
communities observing what's happening there in Gaza and your analysis. But let's start with that
international law component. Thank you, Adam. That's actually a very good, there's a very important
question. We do see that there are different dimensions of the genocide and its impact on
Palestinians and the movement worldwide. And we see those different elements interacting with each
others, sometimes contradicting each other. We have obviously the movement element, which is the
organizing element. We have the academic element in terms of the encampments, in terms of the
what's been happening in universities and at universities. And we see also the resistance element
to arms and distance. And also, like, we have witnessed the rise of the sort of legal element
at the peak of, right? So if it were to speak about this legal element and the sort of
maybe, I would maybe cynically say, the sort of mythical hope that's bringing, is we've seen
obviously the ICJ case, we've seen the ICC arrests warrant, we've even seen an ICJ opinion
on the illegality of occupation.
We've seen also
thousands of statements
by international lawyers
on the genocide, calling it a genocide
and whatnot.
However, what we have
also seen is that none of that,
unfortunately, has caused
the genocide to end.
Right?
So international law in a way,
while it did
after years and years
of international advocacy
by Palestinians, by international lawyers,
to open a case to the ICC for the UN to implement more coercive measures
for countries to implement sanctions and whatnot.
None of that was answered to,
but it seemed there is more acceleration on that front
because there is no denial that the genocide is happening.
There's also no denial that the international community
or what is so-called
the international community
is part and parcel
of that genocide, right?
And it's complicit in that genocide
and they are very much aware of that
and the implication of that
are very great.
So we at the Good Shepherd Collective
we've always been very critical
of the international law lens
and the legal lens.
One, because we know
that international law historically
obviously has been a colonial
tool so it has entanglements with colonialism right and it will always be unenforceable if the
most powerful countries and states do not want to enforce it so it it is again it is again
teethless right so it does not have that sort of enforceable power and fortunately for us
Palestinians who are bearing the brunt of genocide, colonialism, settler colonialism, to be
very particular, the settler colonial analysis is very absent, very much absent from international
law. So yes, they might be able to attend to at some point years and years after the genocide
has already happened to basically lay claims the fact, yes, maybe there has been a genocide.
But what's the point of that
failed procedural element of international law
and very cynical element of international law,
if we may say,
to be given maybe some form of a sort of de-existing element,
to say to Gazans under the rubble,
to say to Gazans that are experiencing genocide,
that, yes, we recognize that you have experienced it,
but maybe we didn't have the time and resources enough as a court
to put an end to that or to claim or to fight for that to end
or to try to find ways to put a stop and halt to it, right?
And for us Palestinians, I think,
it's come to us the realization that Zionism is a settler-colonial genified al-Pradek
that cannot be ended, cannot be halted by the tools of international law.
It will not and cannot be.
Even though, and these are the claims of the international lawyers
that recently, settler colonialism has been sort of addressed
for the first time by the UN Special Rapporteur, right?
The UN Special Rapporteur has recently been focusing on settler colonialism.
We think, as the Good Shepherd Collective, that it's too late.
for now to mention
settler colonialism.
We've been talking as Palestinians
about settler colonialism and about
us experiencing
the genocide of settler colonialism since the Nekba
and however none of that has been
seriously addressed until
now, until in fact
nihilism has eaten away
at the core of this
organizing, at the core of this
movement. And to be
honest,
Palestinians right now do not feel like an international law offers anything to them
because the goal is liberation, the goal is decolonization,
and the goal is designification of Palestine, right?
So we must end Zionism and we must expel Zionism from Palestine.
That is the goal, because there is no coexistence with that genocidal entity, right?
however what international
wants or intractal law wants us to
do is to somehow
put only
an end to that
to that which is contrary
to international humanitarian not law
without understanding
that the existence of Zionism
on our land on Palestine
is contrary to all
morality to take
to maybe
the simplest
of it all, the fact that it is
in fact, we have to
say it, it is a zero-sum game.
Is that if Zionism lives as
Steven Solita says, if Zionism
lives, Palestinians die.
That's how it needs to be said.
So international law will never admit to that.
International law will always see the colonizer
and the colonized in the same lens.
And thus, we are very critical of it.
And we hope that those who are focusing on the legal
element can maybe put their focus a little bit more on the other elements of the movement,
mainly really what's really happening right now, which is the resistance element, which is
the direct repercussion of the genocide, the real threat to the Zionist entity, which is
the armed resistance. Yeah, I have a follow up on that, and we'll make sure to get Laura in as well.
So you're talking about international law, and many of the things that you're saying are things that I would have brought up in my follow-up had you not mention them yourself.
So, you know, well done on bringing up so many of the things that I was planning on talking about.
But I do want to reiterate a couple of things before I put forth one more.
So as you mentioned, international law itself is written by the colonizers.
international law is not written by the colonized.
And when dealing with international law, there is this perception by people who are
unaffected by international law rulings, that a ruling under international law is somehow
going to magically make justice.
It's going to rectify whatever problem there is.
And so we had a lot of people looking at the news that the ICJ was having this ruling,
that, you know, they were going to open an inquiry into the act of genocide.
And people said, okay, here, job done.
The ICJ is doing something about it and then have completely tuned out
and stopped looking at any sort of the legal questions regarding this.
Not to mention the moral questions, but just focusing on the legal questions.
They also don't focus on the fact that by doing so,
they're closing off any sort of way of supporting alternative means.
of achieving the goals of justice.
So as you're mentioning,
these people are looking only at this legalistic route
and then closing off the possibility of any,
let's just be frank about it,
armed resistance as a tool
of throwing off the shackles of colonialism,
standing up against the occupiers.
And now this brings up one of the points
that I was hoping that we could follow up on.
And then, again, we'll make sure that Lara gets in as well.
One of the things that is also very blatant and obvious to see is that too many people who have a passing interest, you know, a passing interest in an ongoing genocide is that they do not, they simply do not understand international law.
Again, setting aside the point that we've already talked about that this is international law written by the colonizers, even that law, they don't understand.
So when you bring up something that is codified within international law, like the fact that the colonized have the right to armed resistance against the colonizers, occupied people have the right, the codified under international law, the legal right to armed resistance by any means necessary against the occupiers, people are shocked when you bring this up and you say, this is international law.
written by the colonizers themselves.
And we can see that the colonizers are breaking this international law that they had codified.
And again, there is no recourse to this.
But the fact is that people do not understand even the basics of international law.
And so when we have individuals who are staunch Zionists coming out and making all sorts of ridiculous claims regarding international law that are absolutely not,
not true. These people hear it and accept it wholeheartedly in much the same way that they are
shocked when they hear that colonized people have the right to stand up against colonized. One of the
most recent ones that I saw, some Zionist who claims to be a legal scholar, and I say claims to
be because, you know, if you're a Zionist and you're trying to stand for international law,
are you really a scholar or are you just, you know, a stenographer of your ideological
conviction, but that's a separate question. This individual had done an analysis that showed that
the pager attack across Lebanon, an unprovoked attack across Lebanon, that maimed thousands of people
was justified under international law. This settler colonial entity was justified in maiming thousands
of people at the drop of a hat because they decided to. Now, of course, there is no justification in
international law for this, but the fact is that people don't understand international law.
And so when they see this, it's like a he said, she said sort of thing.
We say that the colonized have the right to stand up against the colonizers.
They say that they have the right to detonate pagers across the country.
Well, who really knows what the truth is?
You know, this is the issue is that not only is the international law written by the colonizers,
but even when we have some ability to utilize that international law,
people just frankly do not understand it and are able to be fooled into believing ridiculous
lives put forth by the oppressors.
So that was the point I wanted to make on that.
Bona, if you have anything that you want to say on that,
and then we'll turn it over to Laura as well.
Yeah, so something that we discuss probably very regularly within the GSC is
is how Zionism uses this impunity, right?
Because obviously we're very well aware that, you know,
the Zionistently have like complete impunity
for international humanitarian law violations
and other international law violations.
They do not, simply do not care about international law.
And one of the things that we say is that Zionism itself
does not paint itself with moralism.
It does not require moralism.
does not require logic, right?
Because power does not require logic.
You do not need logic or the burden of proof of justification
when you have immense power.
So that is why when they say things that we would call
a cognitive dissonance basically claims,
claims of, you know, that are absolutely unjustifiable,
just contrary to any logic.
they do not see any problem with them
because they're so used to
not having the burden of justification
they can just say simply
whatever they want to say, right?
They can do whatever they want to do
that's why their genocidal violence
is accompanied with
with open
boasting open
justifications, open
celebrations, you know
celebrations, that's
That's what Zionism is.
It just, it brought us to, to perhaps the logic of illogic.
I don't know if you can say that, but you just, it doesn't rely on any of that.
We, the oppressed have always obviously needed the tools of logic.
We needed the burden of proof.
We need to always have international law justifications.
We need to always say that yes, our resistance and resistance is,
carried and confirmed as a right for us under international law,
the Zionists do not have to worry about that.
So it does make sense for us to maybe sit back and look,
why do we constantly have to sort of arm ourselves
with the weapons of justification,
with the weapons of, you know, what do we call,
the politics of appeal, respectability politics,
whatever you want to call it
so to justify
our necessary aim of living
just we need to live right
Palestinians just want to live
right
and so we come up with all these
justifications for why we should not be killed
why we should be able to resist
why we should not be
genocided
yet none of those requirements
are made of Zionists
none of these requirements of
justification of burden of proof
are made of Zionists. So
it is not, and I would
mention we always say it's not a double
standard. It's not that there is a double standards
applied to each side. It's just
the colonialist imperialist standard
right. It's supplied
by the colonizers,
by the imperialists that
you know, they hold
you know, objective truth
and we are
simply
you know
what do you call it toys
or what do you call them
dolls
and sorry
subjects of their necropolitics
is what I wanted to say
so we're subjects of
of simply
their necropolitical
games of who gets to live
who gets to die
who gets to be human
who gets to not be
human they want to turn us into what we call
the
Orwellian
unperson right
we are the unperson
the Palestinians and the oppressed
are the unpersons right
we are not even worthy of being
a person so that's why it doesn't really
matter what international law really says
about the oppressed or the oppressor or if
even it has a demarcation of that
even if there is a demarcation
even if it clearly states that out
it doesn't really matter because
international law
is simply not of use for designers.
They don't care.
They do not abide by it.
It does not constitute their moral high ground.
Very interesting discussion.
Yeah, well, if you want to talk about the international law component,
but I wanted to ask you, Lara, about your kind of thoughts coming close to the one-year
anniversary of the genocide in Gaza and just what other components and dimensions besides
international law, you would want to remind us about, you know, here, you know, as a result of, you know, almost one year of activism, of resistance against this genocide.
So please.
Yeah, thank you so much.
First of all, such good questions and listening to Banna, like nobody ever has to say, then we'll let Laura speak.
because listening to Banna, it's like, I don't need to talk.
She's like channeling my soul.
But I do just want to add a couple things so the whole burden isn't on her.
And I think it like adding and moving on as well to your question, Adnan, I mean, so for years,
one of the things that GSC has been talking about is the role of settler organizations.
and like we should be clear all Israelis are settlers it's all settler colonialism it's all
Palestine right but when we're talking about settler organizations a lot of times the ones not
always a lot of the times the ones we're talking about are actively engaged in settlement processes
in the West Bank but also in the Galilee and in the knockup so not to say like they're just
involved in one place anyway one of the things we've been trying to raise the alarm on is the way that
these organizations and the people who represent them have been coming even more into power, right?
We know Zionism is by its nature violent and colonial and genocidal as Banna laid out.
But what these people have really been doing is moving from the previous trend that Israel had of
really like rejecting the idea of international law altogether.
what they're doing is trying to claim international law, or at least this is sort of the
trend, maybe we can say before Gaza.
So I just wanted to bring up the example of the, there was this Levi Commission, what's
the exact title, Levi Commission, report on the status, the legal status of building in
Judea and Samaria from 2012. It was co-authored or authored in some part by Betzelel Smodrich,
who's a lawyer, one of the founders of Regevim, and today holds a ministered position in the Israeli government.
For sure, people will know his name if they know anything about the Israeli government or settlement in the West Bank today.
And what they argue in this piece is they're trying to make a legal case for, you know, for the settlement building in Judea and Samaria.
I'm using air quotes here.
And what they say is that because the.
Geneva Convention and, you know, basically the whole body of humanitarian law came after World War II and the Holocaust, that these restrictions of transferring civilians do not apply to Israel. That they cannot apply to Israel because Israel, at least is part of their argument, that they were the, that Jewish people were the victims of the Holocaust and this kind of thing. So, you know, this sort of gives us a sense of how these people aren't just spurning international law.
but actually trying to reclaim this law,
which anyone who studied international law in any capacity,
especially humanitarian law,
we know that it was created for the sake of extending or at least, okay,
like the authors are the colonizers,
but the stated,
the stated objectives are to extend protections as far as possible
for civilians and the people who protect them, right?
And so these people are really,
trying to use the law very cynically to turn it on its head and benefit themselves explicitly,
which I think is something new. And this is important because we, like I said, now today,
you'll know Smotrich's name. In 2012, nobody knew Smotrich's name, right, except his funders at
Regafim. And these organizations have really moved into more of a state of prominence.
And especially in the last year, you know, to talk a little bit about the situation in the West Bank,
I'll just pull up the statistics I have written here.
Since October 7th, at least 15 villages have been entirely ethnically cleansed in the West Bank entirely.
So people have not returned due to settler violence and military violence and the destruction of their homes
and any infrastructure that they had there.
This is at least 261 Palestinian households,
more than 1,500 people,
more than half of these,
or I guess half of these are children,
758 children.
And this is just in the West Bank, right?
And this is a very dangerous thing
that happens when these kinds of arguments
that Banna has already described
come into prominence not only
like within the settler colony
where they were already accepted quietly
and being enacted quietly
but really come in more aggressively,
very openly supported by the state
and Palestinians end up
not only in the international realm
but everywhere like in the street
right in on TV
arguing that we don't deserve to be killed
so I wanted to bring those things up but also I think I was writing notes as Banna was speaking
there's so many interesting things here but one of the people I wanted to shout out who Banna
and I were reading before this interview is the excellent Mary Turfah I think that's how you say
her name right Turfah who was written like excellent pieces in the last months but one of
the ones she was writing about that I was just reading
is really about how the state of Israel and its forces and Western media in turn
have started to use this, like, medical language of, oh, I can't think of precision and accuracy
and these terms really taking, you know, language that's supposed to be inherently good, medical, surgical, you know,
and turning them into something completely different in order to sell their weapons and sell their genocide.
So I think terms are important, and I think one of the things, as we've seen this genocide escalate in Gaza and the violence and the colonialism happening in Palestine, in the rest of Palestine, in the West Bank, what Jesse has tried to do and what I think folks in Palestine are also doing and folks outside of Palestine is set our terms very clearly.
And I think we, like Banna and I can both talk about this for a long time if it's a subjective interest, but I think as Banna mentioned, like something that's so incredibly important to our collective is talking about what Zionism is and talking about what anti-Sionism is.
Because as these terms have come more into popularity, especially in the last year where folks are now, as you both mentioned, learning about what genocide is, learning about what genocide is, learning about what.
what Palestine is, seeing it on their screens and being horrified, and people want to help, right?
They want to do the right thing and they want to understand. And people are discussing this,
but there are also prominent folks who, well-intentioned or not, are publishing their own analysis.
A lot of, like, non-Palestinians who also aren't informed by Palestinian analysis or Palestinian experience
or even, like, the experience of being colonized or oppressed. And putting out their own terms.
And in this way, there's a different, like, capture of terminology that's happening where folks say, well, this is what Zionism is or this is what anti-Zionism is.
And they set the limits of the conversation of what we can expect, of what we're entitled to, of what we deserve, of who gets to be at the table in the future.
And I think that has been really important in the last year to sort of open up these conversations about,
what are these things really and who gets to say what they are, you know? And in that way,
Banna mentioned about like respectability politics. And I think that's something that Palestinians
just don't have the luxury of, especially these days. And we see that in Janine, right,
with the armed resistance. And we see that when we talk. Because we also can't give up our right
to narrate our own experience or our own futures that we desire.
And so folks who follow DSC on Twitter might know us for our controversial, you know,
comments or our, you know, our attempts to kind of elucidate or draw boundaries or explain
how we see things.
And I think that's really important because we can't just let go of meaning.
We can't just let go of terms, right?
as these things are happening around us that are very much life and death,
we have to explain what things mean to each other
and draw these boundaries amongst ourselves, or at least discuss them.
Absolutely. It's invaluable work, and the Good Shepherd Collective does a wonderful job,
both on your website, but also in these kind of more episodic interventions on particular points
in reframing the discussions, very useful as why we retweet it so awesome.
often is because part of what's happening is an information war.
This campaign of resistance is taking place on the ground in Gaza, through military means.
There's activism attempting to shape the political will or undermine support for the genocide
in other parts of the world, where there's great complicity.
And there's simply the task of political education and the propaganda.
And, you know, that has to be countered because Zionism, one of the things you were mentioning,
I mean, Bana mentioned that, like, really what this year, if it wasn't clear to people,
what has become clear over the course of the year of waiting, thinking maybe, you know,
these liberal, colonial, you know, kind of legal instruments will somehow be a vector for, you know,
a solution or, you know, all it does is just is sort of recognizing the problem.
but doing very little. And it is shown that unchecked, unopposed, Zionism when, you know, is quite willing to engage in the most barbaric and horrific, you know, mass slaughter. So there's no illusions now. You know, these are the implications and consequences of, you know, of Zionism. And one of the other things that it does is it also, you know, really tries to invert the truth, you know,
know, and make you not believe the evidence of your senses that there is horrific slaughterer
and try and normalize that. So the normalizing of the most barbaric possible things is part
of what it's attempting to achieve in order to continue to act with impunity, to be unfettered
by political constraint. And so it's so important to reframe and to oppose even at the
discursive level. And that's something that, you know, the Good Shepherd collective is doing. But I
wanted to turn to another kind of component of this, although, you know, if you have other things
you want to talk about on that, I'm happy to do so. But I did want to turn to, you know, what's been
happening in, you know, here basically a year on is that instead of this monstrous barbaric
violence being constrained, it is expanding. It is intensifying, and it's moving, you know,
to other geographies. I mean, from the very outset, of course, there were, you know, a kind of tactical
kind of contest taking place in the north. Hizbollah's intervention in solidarity to put some kind of
restraints to absorb some of the resources of the Israeli war machine by opening up a front
in the north, even if it was contained and constrained, and they were following what, you know,
seems to be just like international law, an illusory kind of idea that there ultimately would
be any check on, you know, the violence. You know, it ended up causing, you might say,
a contraction of like 1948 Palestine that was under control.
because so many people in the north had to evacuate.
But now we are seeing an attempt to really assert the concept of a greater Israel
that is at the heart of Zionist kind of geographic imagination and political imagination.
It seems that the assassination of Sheikh Hassan Nasrullah just days ago
was something that Israel had to,
felt it had to accomplish because he refused
to negotiate a separate ceasefire
without connecting that struggle
to the struggle in Gaza.
And so I'm wondering, from the Palestinian perspective,
you know, how do you see that interconnection
and the way in which the theater
of extreme violent warfare has now expanded to the north.
What does that do to the situation on the ground?
And what would you characterize as the Palestinian perspective on this?
We've heard so many other perspectives, of course, of geopolitically and the region and so on.
But what would you say is like sort of the Palestinian kind of response to these developments that we've been witnessing in the last week or two?
yeah this is a very very important question perhaps like very also difficult to answer because
it carries a lot of weight and i mean we're witnessing um this happening at the moment as we're
speaking like a lot of this uh you know open front and especially in the north and the ground invasion
and and you know we don't we will not know much information as the as the
coverage is very low, but we know that there is a ground invasion, there's much happening
on the front, and there's an escalation, a serious escalation. And also, as we've seen
with Netanyahu's visit to the UN, we've seen the sort of mapping of the good and evil,
right? The good countries, the ones are who work well with the Zionist entities,
who love each other and, you know, like hugging each other, you know, all of these Saddam, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Jordan.
Again, a very big question mark at Jordan there. I mean, we knew Egypt was directly involved in Eugenocide and Gaza by preventing Gazans from accessing or from basically getting out through
the Rafa
and also for the
opening of Rafa border
for humanitarian assistance
but I mean
Jordan obviously
in public the
monarchy present itself
as supportive of Palestinians
and whatnot
and pressuring
the Zionist entity and what's not
to stop the genocide but we know
and Palestinians know we're not
we're not
ignorant
of the fact that the Jordanian monarchy has assisted directly the Zionist entity,
whether by intercepting drones by Iraqis and Iranians as well
that were sent to the Zionist entity,
or whether by directly supporting the trade routes,
you know, when there was, and there still is, the Houthis blockade, right?
the very rightful and heroic blockade that the Yemeni Houthis are implementing, right?
So in a way, we've seen all of these dynamics.
We've seen also how settler colonialism, the Zionist settler colonialism,
has also been a target of the resistance, right?
We're not seeing only the genocidal element.
We're not seeing resistance, though that the goal of,
the ending of genocide can be accelerated, so we can reach that end.
We're also seeing how in the north, the settler colonial process has been halted, right?
Because why do we call it process?
Because Zionism relies on bringing you settlers.
It doesn't just rely on keeping the settlers where they are.
It doesn't rely on, it relies on the continuous process of inviting and incentivizing more settlers,
come in and settle in Palestine,
if they cannot provide the safety,
the so-called safety,
the Zionist entity promises them to have,
if they cannot get that,
then the settler colonial project is dismantled.
So in a way, the fact that the settlements in the north are emptied
is very much not just an accidental aspect of the resistance by Hedbullah, for example.
It is a direct and very much a strategic target of the war is that we're not just putting, we're not just sending, you know, drones and sending rockets and missiles.
It's not just a sort of like uncalculated effort. It's a calculated effort because the North, especially the North settlements are sort of,
have always been given this sort of promise of safety,
this promise of, you know,
maybe not even just safety,
but the promise of even expanding further
because the greater Israel, as you said, an idea,
it's not just in, it's not a symbolic,
it's not something that is just put into papers.
They want to create this.
They want to make it into reality.
And that's why obviously Zionism doesn't,
pain itself with borders
because borders means
defining where the settler colony ends
and they don't have that. They have
a clear idea of where they want
that to end and that demarcation
or deborders are way
further than the current borders are.
So the way the settler colonialism
and Zionist settler colonialism sees itself
as ever continuing, right?
But the resistance when what it did
and even in pockets in Janine and Nablis
and I tell me what the reason why the settlements
it's so difficult for settlement
outputs to be created in Janine and Nablis
is because of the resistance there
because the safety element prevents
the settlement and settler organizations
and all of that to sell the idea of safety
that oh look at this land
They can't just justify that.
Of course, you know,
it is obviously, you know,
much more difficult nowadays
for the continuation of settler colonial
project because there are many fronts.
Like we have the Houthi-a many front,
we have the northern front.
Syria as well had a front as well,
at some point Iraq as well have.
And we have the resistance forces in Gaza, right?
they are also, you know, constitutive front.
In the West Bank, however, we have a specific dynamic there,
one by which the Palestinian Authority acts as, you know,
very visible collaborator in containing resistance
and thwarting resistance in the West Bank, right?
So around two days ago, if I'm not wrong,
Or this week or so, it was the news of the assassination of Abed al-Hakim, Shaheen, who is a resistance fighter and nationalist, right?
And how, and the story really, the reason why it's interesting is because he was, in fact, first, targeted by the Palestinian authority.
they went up to him
and they asked him to hand himself in for arrest
and that means he's handing himself in for torture
and he is basically asked to give up arm
that's not by the Zionist entity by the Palestinian Authority
as they do with their promise of the security coordination
with the Zionists right
so it's a it's a very humiliating part of
of the
coordination and very in fact
indignifying and
it for us at the stage while we're experiencing
genocide to see so clearly
how the Palestinian Authority
collaborates with the Zionist entity
is quite
you know an underrated
way of
complete dehumanization
we have
we have seen this
in heroic resistance fighter
even saying that he was
targeted by video
and hours later
the Linus entity
come in and they
clapped with him
of course he fights until the end
and he is martyred
right so the idea is
that there are dynamic
in the West Bank for resistance
that do not exist for other
pockets of resistance and other fronts
of resistance so
it may not have
as much of as an effect on settler colonialism as other fronts have.
But nonetheless, nonetheless, without the resistance in the West Bank,
without those pockets in Hebron, Janine, Tobas, and Nablis,
without those, the settlement project would have just annihilated the West Bank completely.
They have tried to completely eradicate the resistance
as they have invaded Janine, invaded Nablis,
and, you know, called them complete military don't,
they have, for the first time in year, through rockets.
Like, we have not seen that in the West Bank.
And I must say that it was always because there is this idea
that when you throw rockets in the West Bank,
there are usually very much, like, settlements around.
So you wouldn't want to really, you know, use Air Force,
on an area that has settlements, right?
Because every area, if you look actually 360 degrees,
you'll see a settlement in Palestine.
You cannot go on a high end, on a mountain,
and not see a settlement around you.
And that's how you know settler colonialism
is very much infested in the West Bank, right?
As is, of course, for the rest of Palestine,
but it's so much so that it is the case in the West Bank
as it tries to
to bisect the West Bank
to create it, to make it so difficult
for Palestinian to live
and make it suffocating
so that we ourselves
you know
want to basically leave
and want to
you know
leave it basically to the settlers.
Of course that is not the case
and that will never be the case.
But at the end really
what this says really about this
genocidal component of
Zionism, right? The Gaza and what's happening in Gaza is that for years and years, what we have
seen is that this genocidal component has only been a means to the settler-colonial end.
And for the resistance front to not only pressure the Zionist entity to stop its genocide,
but to also threaten the settler-colonial element
means that we are seen, or now, slowly at least,
if we're not being too hopeful, the end of Zionism,
because Zionism cannot survive without settler colonialism.
And as long as we see it, we see how, in fact,
no matter what others may have said,
whether people believe in movements and non-violent resistance,
the only threat, real threat, that has been proven to be a real threat,
has been those forms of resistance.
And we're seeing it accelerated at the moment because, and in fact,
despite the defeatism in the movement abroad, right?
The movement has unfortunately died down a little bit.
We have much to say about this, me and Lauren, perhaps I'll leave some of it,
this movement element for Lara
to speak on
because she's spoken on
this before
but
the
this element
this
this you know
defeatism element
have been
has been quite
in fact
demoralizing for
for Palestinians because we're seeing
all of these
you know so called solidarity
activists in the ceasefire movement
as you call it
suddenly feel like okay we can no long
do anything. We've done everything that we can do. We have gone on protests. We have, you know,
called our, you know, representatives than what other, you know, we've done encampments,
we've done actions and direct actions and whatnot. And we have not been able to do anything
about it, only for them to realize that truly what they need to do now is, in fact,
to rally behind the resistance
and forget all of the defeat of them
because right now
an important
component that we need to save
is the radical
basically component of this movement
not the liberal component
that wants to see only an
anti-genocide in a ceasefire
but a component that wants to see
the end of Zionism completely
I have a small follow-up
and one of the things that you said a small
reflection. You know, you mentioned that Zionism is a process. Colonialism, settler colonialism
is a process. And that's absolutely the case. And we have to analyze it as such. And one of the
things specifically that you said, which I think is being laid to bear very clearly, is that
in order for these processes to carry on, in order for settler colonialism to carry on, in order
for Zionism to carry on. There is a need, a necessity, for continued settlers, new settlers at all
times. Now, historically, they would call to people, Zionists abroad, to come home. And I'm using
quotes here, listeners, you know, air quotes. You can't see them, but, you know, come home to this place
that you've never been before and settle this area. That was historically what has been the case.
But as you mentioned, as a result of the current situation, there's not going to be that many people who are coming in from, you know, Brooklyn or Poland right now that are going to settle this area at the current moment.
And they're quite aware of this.
I had just seen yesterday, we're recording this on October 2nd, when the missiles were coming in from Iran, Aviva Klompas, who was, you know,
know, official spokesperson for the Israeli government at the United Nations.
It has 300,000 followers on social media.
Tweeted, for every missile fired by Iran, we're going to make 100 Jewish babies.
That is the greatest revenge.
Now, first of all, we have to reflect on the conflation between Jewish and Zionist here,
because 100 Jewish babies, okay, great, have 100 Jewish babies.
That's wonderful.
However, there is a very clear and obvious and intentional conflation of Jewish with Zionist
because what she is talking about is not Jewish people having babies.
She is talking about new settlers.
That is why that would be revenge.
For each missile fired, there would be 100 new settlers.
She is fully aware, as is the Israeli government, that right now people are not going to be coming in to settle from abroad.
So how are you going to sustain your settler colonial project?
You know, at the current moment, what it looks like is this mass childbirth is essentially your way of trying to repopulate your settler core.
Now, I just think that it's worth dwelling on that for a moment, that we have these processes going on in terms of processes of settler colonialism, processes of Zionism.
But then we also have these rhetorical processes by people like this spokesperson.
Again, she was a speechwriter for the government of Israel who knows how to craft narrative,
who knows how to craft rhetoric, who is continuing with this well-trod path of conflating Jewish with Zionist
because they know that if you claim that, well, you know, this is a terrible thing,
well, they would call you anti-Semitic because there's this conflation.
going on. But again, it's very clear that they're not talking about just Jewish people. They're
talking about Jewish settlers in order to sustain the settler colonial project. Now, Lara,
I'm going to be transitioning to you. In the last year, there's been a lot of focus on Gaza.
Rightly so. However, as we mentioned before we started recording, in the last year, a lot of people
who aren't maybe as politically engaged and historically, you know, engaged as we are,
weren't fully aware of the historical context that led up to October 7th.
And then in the mean, in the next year, you know, the year leading up to now,
have been in a rush to try to catch up.
We've been trying to help in that endeavor.
in terms of the historical precedent in Gaza specifically as well as the Zionist project more broadly.
But there has not been enough focus in general, not just on this program, but in general,
on the West Bank within the last year because of the focus that Gaza has been getting.
So, Laura, I'm wondering if we can turn to you at this moment to give us a brief rundown of what the situation in the West Bank
was like leading up to October 7th, just briefly, because, you know, that's a huge history
and something that we've talked about.
It's like a long time back to have to remember, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
No, so, I mean, we have talked about the West Bank in the past and listeners.
We have many episodes that you can turn back to, but just briefly, you know, what was that
historical precedent a year ago, and then what has happened in the last year?
and I know that there has been a lot of things that you're going to have to recall now,
so I apologize for the scope of this question, but Laura, take it away.
Yeah, sure.
I mean, maybe I'll just, there's so much to remember.
But I think in terms of, like, understanding the historical situation, what people need to know.
Also, there are some things I want to add to what you said before,
so maybe I can fit them in as well.
The situation in the West Bank has been bad before,
October 7th. Now, unlike Gaza, the West Bank is not under a siege, right? Under a 17-year siege where
there's much more limited resources, much more limited mobility. You know, people have a bit more
mobility, a bit more access of permits, for example, to move into the rest of Palestine in
and out. Before we're October 7th, many more, I believe hundreds of thousands. I could pull up
the statistics, Palestinians had work permits and were working inside of 1948 lands,
what people would call Israel, where, you know, you can make a lot more money than if you're
working in the West Bank. But, of course, for folks who don't know, so the West Bank is split
into different areas, according to the Oslo Accords, Area A, where the Palestinian Authority is
supposed to have complete authority and will come back to that.
area B, where it's shared in area C, which is the vast majority of the West Bank, where it's
completely under Israeli military control. And this is the rural areas of the West Bank where the
settlements and the outposts exist. And so, and where most of the, you know, state land grabs happen
and things like that. So if you see a picture of a settlement, you just know it's area C.
And this is where a lot of the Israeli state violence, you know, the border police, the military
come and beat people up.
and so on. Not all of it. So before October 7th, there was a lot bad going on because there's
sort of this acceleration of settlement building, of legal efforts. We mentioned Regovim earlier
in the podcast, and Regovim is one of like many settler organizations, including the JNF,
and it's subsidiary here, if you don't know what the JNF is, the Jewish National Fund.
And it's subsidiary here, Himanuta, which is the one that buys the land in the West Bank,
among others, who have turned to this, you know, lawfare style campaigns to try to strip the most vulnerable Palestinian communities of their land and resources.
So if folks can remember all the way back to, like, 2017, 2018, there was the case of Khan al-Ahm.
which was very famous, or other folks might remember Susia in South Hebron,
both targeted by the organization Regavim,
which was using the court system to try to force these very vulnerable, very rural,
very tiny communities off of their lands.
And so this is, this was really a lot of what was going on before October 7th,
really a difficult situation.
And I should say also now that I'm, you know, recalling 2023 before October 7th was the deadliest year for Palestinians until, right, until before October 7th now, for killings by settlers, killings by, you know, Israeli state forces.
So it was already like very much an escalating situation just talking about the West Bank.
Now, since October 7th, almost immediately there was a massive spike in state violence, in settler violence.
Settlers are very emboldened. I mean, they're already emboldened, but more emboldened, and have been since then.
And also the cases that started before October 2023, when we talk about law fair and we talk about the JNF and the things that they were doing, there's one particular case I wanted to talk about.
about that started, I think, 12 years ago, or 20 years ago, actually, that's another similar
case that has really ticked up in the last months. So since October 7th, there have been
hundreds of arrests of Palestinians throughout the West Bank, regular, you know, invasions of
communities, especially in the north, on almost a nightly basis at different points. And
Tulgarum, in Nablus, in Janine, in Calculia.
Ben, I'm missing any.
It feels like I'm missing in Tafloham, but really much stronger in the North,
and particularly targeting these refugee camps.
So I think folks at home might, like folks who aren't already familiar with Palestine,
might not know that Palestinians who were displaced from,
their land in 1948, like my family, or in 1960, some of them still live in refugee camps, right?
70% of Gaza, before the genocide war started, were refugees already from either 48, I guess, from 48.
And so this is, like, this is really important in understanding the context in Gaza, right?
when we're thinking about people, families that have already been displaced 10 times in the last year,
their families, many of them, the majority of them, who were already displaced from 70 years ago, right?
People have been sharing stories online saying things like my grandmother was born in a tent and died in a tent.
And I think for those of us who have grandparents or parents who were born in a tent,
it's very devastating, right?
It's something very like tangible that we know from the stories that we heard.
So to hear that it's happening to someone, you know, only kilometers away is devastating and it's very real.
So that's something important for folks to know, but also within Jerusalem, within the West Bank, there are refugee camps. Within Bethlehem, there are several refugee camps.
And in Tulkaram, in Janine, in Tobas, in Nablis, there are also refugee camps, right?
So when the Israeli forces are invading these cities, they're not just invading the cities.
Most of the time they're going in and targeting communities in these refugee camps who are also.
often the most impoverished or some of the most impoverished in the area have organized resistance
who are protecting and defending their communities, who are used to these regular invasions
and assaults. And arresting people, there are, I think, more people arrested and being
held in Israeli jails at this point. I mean, numbers we don't even know right now, right? Because
it's so many and because so many people have been disappeared from Gaza as well.
so we don't even have the complete numbers.
And then as Banna mentioned,
there's alongside the Israeli invasions into these spaces
and the subsequent resistance,
there has been an uptick as well in PA involvement.
And so sometimes that looks like arrests,
sometimes that looks like raids.
It definitely looks like coordination.
But it also looks like going in,
finding out where, you know,
where whatever resources,
these organized resistance groups have and taking them away or destroying them or, you know,
making sure that they cannot defend their communities in the ways that they would otherwise.
So it's important to understand also, Ben, I already talked about it beautifully, but the way that
the PA forces play a really important and material role in sustaining colonization, not just as
like this abstract concept as like, oh, in the future they'll be the head of state, but in a very
real context where people are defending their families from daily incursions. And I should say not
just daily like they're driving through the refugee camp, no, they're bulldozing the streets. They're
cutting the water lines. They're invading the mosque and, you know, destroying parts of it,
you know, really tearing up infrastructure that is much needed in these communities that are
also overcrowded. But I just wanted to say, like if I can, one thing, Henry,
about what you brought up because maybe a few things about what you brought up.
It's okay.
You were talking about, you know, this element of settler colonialism, Abana brought it up,
actually, and you commented on that it's important to be having more settlers all the time.
And I think there are different elements about that that we should talk about, right?
There's what you brought up.
There is this, I think we can all see it, right?
Folks who are very familiar with, like, birth and demonstrations.
policies connected to the state of Israel and folks who are just jumping in now, there's a very
bizarre obsession with births, with sexuality, with rape, with demographics, with policing
Palestinians demographics and bodies and ability to eat, you know, ability to have children
and take care of those children and make sure that they live.
that yeah we can all witness it's very much uncovered in a new way but um i think that the way
the colonization has played out in the west bank that it's really um sped up you know not only
with this with the forced um ethnic cleansing of like i mentioned like 15 villages at least 15
villages these are what we know of in the last year and more than a thousand
500 Palestinians, but in the construction of new settlements, because the way that they bring
settlers is not only, right, of course, you know, not only through birth or through, I don't
know, birth, but also by bringing people in who are economically, you know, who are more
economically motivated, right? If you go to, I don't know, like a real estate website, you can see
that the cost of living in some of these settlements, and I'm not talking about like shabby little
outposts on a hilltop that's just been stolen. I'm talking about like settlements that are guarded,
that are, you know, really built up nice houses with pools, with gyms, with schools and, you know,
yeshivas and everything. The cost of living in those is astronomically less than living in Jerusalem,
for example, right? And so there's also this economic element that even while Israelis are
fighting, you know, to colonize and carry out genocide in Gaza, to subdue resistance in the West
Bank, to subdue and destroy as much as they can in Lebanon and elsewhere, that people who are
paying attention settlers here are also using the opportunity to colonize the West Bank as much
as they can. And they're letting each other know that they're doing that. And that's the Lelsmuch,
which has played an important role in that. But it's the whole state that's doing it, right?
But I just wanted to add another thing as well, which is that I think I read, so in another piece
by Mary Turfah, who I mentioned before, she talks about, you know, this issue of settlers in the
north and that a quarter of the settlers in one of the settlements right in the north, right next to Lebanon,
in a community that used to be shared
between Palestine and Lebanon, actually.
That a quarter of them said they wouldn't return
because the state couldn't guarantee their protection, right?
And so there's this question of
how do you guarantee protection
in a situation of settler colonialism?
Now we know, Abana said there's no real border,
there's an interest in colonizing further
and all of these things.
But there's another piece as well
by Matsa. I'm not sure exactly the name of the author, but we can share it after if it's helpful.
Where this writer was talking about this philosophy, which I also won't name properly,
Ainsig Zionism, or like final literary Zionism, where the logic might seem irrational to
those people outside who wonder, why would you open more fronts? Why would you attack more people
who, you know, who you can't beat? And what this author was arched,
is that in the situation of a fascist and colonial state like this, that the possibility
of victory is better than a slow death, right? That the possibility of total victory is better
than a slow death. And I think in the situation where we see that there is no future that
is secure for the settlers without this total victory, which, to be clear, I do not believe will happen.
That there's no continuity for the settler colony, right?
And so we published a piece, I don't know, a week or two ago maybe, about how Israel's real strength isn't, you know, it's precision or its military capabilities or that it has this excellent intellect or information gathering or anything like that.
Israel's main strength is its complete, unmitigated, eliminatory violence that it uses against anyone
that stands in the way of its colonial project. And it's doing that in Lebanon now, and it's been doing it in Gaza, even before October 7th, and it's been doing it in the West Bank, and it's been doing it elsewhere.
But when we see what's happening in Lebanon, I think we can see it with new eyes, right, that this doesn't just happen against Palestinians.
This happens to anyone who gets in the way. And this is the true strength that Israel has, that Hezbollah, that Nasrallah, that Hamas, none of them have. Because they, as we can see, as a practice, do not target civilians or civilian infrastructure, whereas Israel does that as a matter of policy.
Sorry, I know that was quite long.
John, that's fine.
I have one very small comment.
It's going to sound like a flippant comment, but I can assure you that I'm being very, very sincere when I say this, even though I'm sure some people will not take it as such.
You know, when you're talking about birth rates and, you know, this obsession with birth rates and the obsession with the birth rates of the other and how this is part of the settler colonial price.
You know, listeners who are based in the U.S. might want to reflect on that for a little bit
because that is very much part of the obsession of the United States.
It's almost as if, wow, the United States is a settler colonial project
and the settler colonial project carries on to this day
and that this is something that is baked into settler colonial projects,
into their very DNA.
You know, we have to consider the United States is still a settler colonial project
the struggle against the Settler Colonial Project continues
and as long as they acknowledge the fact that they are a settler colony
this is something that they have to grapple with
just in the same way that the Zionist entity has to grapple with the same thing
they have to think about their birth rates versus the birth rates of the quote-unquote other
that is a feature of settler colonies so listeners if you're based in the United States
or Canada
or any of those settler colonies
you might want to reflect on that
for a little bit. Adnan, I'm
going to turn it to you for the next question.
Yeah, I just
wanted to, in getting
a little bit of the flavor of
the on-the-ground conditions for
resistance, particularly
in the West Bank, but also
thinking about
the situation from a
regional perspective to
both you, Bana and
Laro mentioned the difficulties, the double difficulties of dealing not only with
the Zionist occupation and settler colonial violence and expropriation, but of the
complicating factor of having a second kind of concern and conflict in attempting to
defend Palestinian land and Palestinian people from the Palestinian authorities.
itself. And maybe it's worth talking a little bit more about the complexities of that when you're
witnessing, you know, for a year, incredible genocide, you know, taking place in Gaza, increased
violence in the West Bank. Now, you know, attacks even on Palestinian refugee camps in southern
Lebanon, and to have, you know, the organized force that is armed and equipped and supported
and financed by the West and so on, undermining activities to protect Palestine, to protect the
to protect its people, that just seems like a very complicated and, excuse me, difficult situation.
And it's paralleled by the fact that there are so many Arab Zionist regimes that are also
collaborating have normalized with Israel, are allies of U.S. Empire, and are, you know, pursuing its geopolitical
and economic interests and strategies in the region.
And so this is a very kind of difficult and complicated fight.
And I'm just wondering from the perspective of Palestinians struggling for their freedom,
what is happening vis-a-vis the PA?
I mean, when I was a, I'm sorry, I'm going so long on this,
but it's something I thought about a lot because when I visited Palestine for the first time
in the West Bank and, you know, I went to a number of places, Hebron and Ramallah and Nablos and so on.
It was already 2005, 6, 2006, I think. And for years already, I had been thinking the Oslo process is actually
more inimical to the freedom of Palestine and that what should be done in the so-called peace process
is declare the end of the PA and not have this like subcontracting of the occupation
and undermining the legitimacy and the directness of the struggle for liberation.
And when I said, you know, this, and this is in the early period where there still, there was
frustration, but there was still some feeling that, oh, you know, it's been a benefit to have
these opportunities for some kind of funding, for some government employment, for, you know,
some autonomy and so on. But these, you know, ultimately, you know, by now, surely, I mean,
nobody other than those who are in the direct employ or, you know, relatives with family
working, you know, can possibly see the PA as anything other than another internal enemy
to the liberation of Palestine. And so I'm wondering how does people deal with that? How do you
struggle with that, you know, on the ground? What are the forces of
resistance that are taking shape in, you know, opposing both the P.A. and the Israeli occupation
can they be done together? How are people thinking of that? I'm just very kind of interested in
in, you know, because so many liberation struggles, they have not had to deal with that sort of a
problem. You know, in Algeria, okay, there were a few liberal kind of organization.
but quickly they got, you know, pushed aside and it was the FLN fighting against the French
to remove the occupier, the colonizer. And it wasn't clouded by this kind of a situation.
This has been going on for decades now with the entrenchment of the PA in Palestinian society.
So just wondering your thoughts about that. Both of you mentioned it, but I'm really curious with
how you struggle with this, what are people doing about it?
And is resistance building, you know, to the PA?
And, you know, how can it possibly have any legitimacy with anyone at this point?
An extremely, extremely, like, difficult question to answer,
because it really excavates a deep, a sort of, like, guilt
that the people in the West Bank experience towards the Palestinians in Gaza
experiencing genocide, right?
One of the first
questions that were sort of hailed
by Palestinians in Gaza
were, why are Palestinians in the West Bank
not doing anything about the genocide, right?
One of the things that, like,
I personally have been asked
was, well, if the West Bank,
you know, Palestinians obviously
in the West Bank, you know, live far away
from Gaza,
but not too far away, why are they not protesting?
Why are they not resisting?
And it was always an answer that was difficult to, it was also, sorry, a question
that was difficult to answer because, yeah, why were Palestinians not doing that?
And I think in a way, the answer, either way, whether it was going to be a justification
or whether it's going to be sort of an apology
for why Palestinians do not resist.
Either way, it was not going to be like a proper answer, right?
So, and this has to go, this has to do with basically
the sort of Oslo paradigm and what it had put for Palestinians
from the signing of the Oslo until today.
And so what the PA has done for us is that it had painted a Palestine in the lens of one goal,
which is the goal of statehood, right?
And the statehood on 1967 border, and that would be basically the two-state solution for them, right?
So in a way, they made concessions on what Palestine is when they signed or what capacity.
Palestine can be, or how we can imagine Palestine in the Oslo Accords, right?
And so doing that, a process, we had a process of this so-called state building.
We've had the process where Salam Fayyad, for example, created the strategy,
sort of financial economic strategy of Fayadism, which meant to introduce a vast amount of
sort of
economic
project and
uiization of
Palestinian society
sort of a strong
civil society, good governance
and whatever you want to call it
to
enable sort of
the building of
the state. So it was
always about building a state
right? But all of these measures, right?
Including measures of dialogue
projects, right? The funding of billions and of dollars and from many countries and from many
institutions and donors and funders to sort of normalize the existence of the Zionist
entity. All of these measures have served as counterinsurgency, right? Ever since the
ATSA paradigm and ever since the signing of the security coordination in writing in the
Y River Memorandum, it was very important that anything the PA does, anything that they want to do
has only one limit to prevent Palestinians from reaching a radical imagination of liberation of
Palestine from the river to the sea.
They want to imprison Palestine in a two-state solution framework.
Palestine besides the Zionist state, right?
That is how they imagined it.
That's how they wanted us to imagine Palestine.
So in a way, the PA became sort of a representative of the ruling class.
It no longer represented Palestinians and their wishes.
it no longer wanted to defend Palestine and Palestinians,
resist on behalf of Palestinians,
and it signed itself as a Comprador and a collaborator with the Zionist entity.
So because of that, the Zionist had sort of a friend, right,
that live the most Palestinians
you know
we have we have
every family in Palestine
has a member or a couple of members
that work in the PA
right so it's very ingrained
into the Palestinian community
and controls the intelligence
controls every
aspect of Palestinian life
can decide
whether you for example
get as a Palestinian
are able to get a really good job or not, you know, whether you're blacklisted or not,
whether you are arrested or not, whether you are able to travel or not, it controlled every
advocate of your life, right? So all of these measures again, they were meant to contain resistance
to the Zionist entity. So in a way, it was sort of a normal outcome that the resistance
in the pockets
were going to be
fought by the PA.
PA was going to be in fact
more so
of, you know, have more so
violent projection of
colonialism, sorry, of
resistance than
the, so it was
necessary that
the PA and
resistance forces have become
sort of oppositional
sort of polar opposites, right?
And now, in a way, if you were looking at it,
the PAs no longer protected the Palestinians,
they started to protect the settlers, right?
And he's an example.
A settler enters a Palestinian city by accident.
They're suddenly, you know, taken by the PA forces
and delivered in safety to the sector.
or to, you know, Israeli forces in coordination.
On the other hand, you see an invasion of a Palestinian city in broad daylight.
They call in, they come in and the Zionist forces, they call in to the PA forces.
They say, look, we are going to invade this area.
We want you to leave the area so that we can ensure the fulfillment
of our military or what's not objective, right?
Completely.
Like, we see images.
We've seen those images of the card of the PA forces,
leaving areas, knowing that when they left,
there was going to be an invasion.
It is an easy way, by the way, for resistance fighters to know
whether there's an invasion or not.
It's that, it's that prominent, right?
That it becomes so normalized sort of collaboration,
normalization of the Zionist entity.
And so that's why when we see our allies
or, you know, so-called solidarity activists
normalizing the Palestinian Authority,
we just ask them, what you're normalizing is Zionism
with the Palestinian faith.
Like, that is, that's what it is, you know?
And you, again, you know,
we see this so more prominent in the West than it is in Palestine,
this sort of, what do you call it, like identity reductionism.
But, you know, they're Palestinians, so we can't really fight against the PA.
We cannot really say bad things about the PA.
We cannot alienate the PA because they still are Palestinians.
And we're not in the position to oppose the PA.
But we tell them as Palestinians do so.
In fact, please save us from PA as you would save us, as you want, as he should want,
to also save us from Zionism, right?
from the genocidal entity of dynism.
You should also want to save us from its collaborator,
the Palestinian Authority.
So this is how we feel about it.
We feel that the normalization of the PA
is also the normalization of dynos.
Laura, anything that you want to add?
I think Banna did an excellent job,
but maybe I'll just say,
I think there are also the elements
that are even less formal, right?
That the PA, I was trying to find the statistics
while Banna was speaking
but I wasn't able to find them
but the PA is a major employer
in the West Bank as well right
so even beyond the formal
elements that Banna mentioned
of you know they control
your access to mobility
they control if you get an ID
they control all of these things
it's also that
everyone knows someone who's employed
by the PA right
and so if you speak out
or act out against them
And not even to the extent that that is, you know, something you're known for or you'll be arrested for or killed for,
there are always, you know, there's always the potential for repercussions on your family members or people who are related to who are connected in some official way to the PA.
So I think that's an important element for folks to understand is like, Bana really, like, explained it really well, but this embeddedness, you know, that it's not, that there is like a co-op.
that is like it's like an entrapped population that's being co-opted, right?
But I also wanted to give this example that I think is really important because it's also been difficult to see the ways that folks in Palestine negotiate or don't negotiate, you know, resistance to the PA.
and of course, I understand it, but, you know, it's difficult sometimes to see it.
But I was just looking up the exact date of this incident, and there was a March in Ramallah.
No, in Janine, I'm sorry.
In Janine on October 18, 2023.
So this is 11 days after October 7th and the start the genocide.
There was a March in Janine in solidarity with.
Gaza and against actually this might have even been in response to the al-Ahele bombing but there was a
march anyway in solidarity with Gaza and the PA shot off live fire and it killed a young
Palestinian girl a 12-year-old girl Razan Nasrallah and so I think there's also these very
physical painful you know present ways that people see
very early like even in this case right very early on not even two weeks into the genocide a young girl
is killed for marching with her family and protesting against what we already knew was going to be a
genocide and was already starting to take the shape of a genocide so yeah I mean the violence
is very real and it's very tangible even from you know the Palestinian authority which I think
people don't always imagine maybe people imagine as being like bumbling or
useless or like a part of a comrade or a class,
but don't always see that there's also this very real element of violence as well.
I'm going to push back on you, Laura, on one thing you said specifically.
Don't worry, it's in a friendly way.
You know, you said less than two weeks after the start of the genocide,
this is where I'm going to push back.
Settler colonialism is genocide.
It's this phase of the genocide.
It's a good pushback.
Yes.
I know that you are absolutely aware of it, but I'm very aware of the way that this is, that this is phrased and the way that this is then portrayed in more broad consciousness, popular consciousness, is that this genocide came from nowhere.
This genocide came as a result of October 7.
I have a huge problem with that portrayal.
And I'm not saying with your portrayal of it, Lara, but with this with this portrayal of it coming from nowhere.
And so I always make sure, at least when it, you know, it strikes me that we are portraying this genocide as coming from October 7th.
I always want to phrase it as this phase of the genocide because settler colonialism inherently is a genocidal project, not just in Palestine.
you know, the United States is a genocidal project. Canada is a genocidal project. Australia is a genocidal project. Settler colonialism is a genocidal project from its inception. And so this genocidal project began with the settlement of occupied Palestine. But, you know, October 7, 2023 was a new phase, a much more blatant and obvious and visible phase.
of the genocide that had been ongoing.
No, I totally agree, Henry, and I just want to say that was a very good pushback,
and that was a bad mispeak on my part, but I appreciate it because you're completely right,
and I would be remiss if it was, you know, we would all maybe be remiss if it was left that way.
So I really appreciate it because you're right.
It's all good.
I see my co-host Adnan is having to leave Adnan.
It was great having you here for this conversation,
and we will have you back for the next episode very soon,
but we'll carry on for one or two more questions.
So, yes, I, like I said,
it was friendly because one of the things that I've been studying
quite a bit lately is narrative and rhetoric.
And so it's something that has been very useful for me
in that I'm hyper aware of not only
the rhetoric that is being utilized by our enemies, you know, talking about these 100 Jewish babies
rather than 100 Zionist babies. Like, again, there is a rhetorical move there. And that's something
that is obvious when you think about it. But, you know, actually studying this independently has
made me even more acutely aware of these sorts of things. But also it makes me more acutely aware
of the way that we're phrasing and framing our arguments and our analysis, because without this
proper framing, it often can be lost on those who are not as engaged with this material as
we perhaps are. And I know many guerrilla history listeners are hyper engaged with this
material as well, but we intend this material to be of use to activists who don't
necessarily have the time or the ability to go through the amount of material historically
and analytically as we're able to. So what we're trying to do is provide a resource much
in the same way that the Good Shepherd Collective does. And so yeah, that was my kind of point
on that is that being aware of the framing is always super, super important for us in order to
ensure that our message is not being lost or being obfuscated in some way that it would be
able to be twisted by our enemies, you know, Zionists, settler, colonialists.
So I want to turn towards something of a closing question.
You know, we may have some things that branch off of this, but we can think of it as a closing
question, which is when we're talking about resistance, obviously the greatest resistance
and the primary resistance is by Palestinians themselves.
But as we see, we have resistance taking other forms as well.
We have resistance taking forms in terms of regional allies of the Palestinian people who are showing a tremendous bravery in their resistance.
And then we also have individuals across around the world who are standing up and showing resistance in the ways that are possible for them.
Now, many ways in which we see resistance being displayed are not necessarily.
the most useful. And so that's where this question comes in, which is, what does resistance
look like? What should resistance look like? Not just in the context of the Palestinian people who,
again, their resistance is the primary driving factor and should be, and not necessarily in terms
of the regional allies. I'd love it. I know we have some listeners in Iran, for example. I have
Some reach out to me, and that's wonderful.
But I also am aware that this being an English-speaking podcast is going to be primarily listened to by people in, well, let's just be honest about it.
Countries that are not showing solidarity with the Palestinian people are instead currently and historically arming and aiding the genocide of the Palestinian people.
So what does resistance look like and what should resistance look like in these various contexts, particularly in the case of our listeners who perhaps would like to hear the perspectives of Palestinians that in terms of what their resistance should be taking the form of?
Such a good question, Henry.
And yeah, I think I'll just say like before I get into that a bit, I think the point about being really.
clear about what we mean when things started, what terms mean, right?
We don't all need to be able to necessarily like define settler colonialism in an academic
way or define genocide in an academic way to be able to see it and know it, right?
Because we can see injustice and know what we can see starving children and know it's bad.
Sorry, can I make a very flippant comment?
It's like porn.
Yes, we do need to be able to define the academic.
I'm like clean one. No, no, no, no. It's like porn. You know, there's that famous quotation. I believe it was from the United States Supreme Court where they asked the Supreme Court justice what he meant by porn and he says, I cannot define it, but I know it when I see it. This is exactly what we're talking about. You can know what settler colonialism is without being able to write an academic paper on settler colonialism, much in the same way that if you see porn, you can know what it is without being able to write a
dissertation on it, you know? Right. No, exactly. But I think that this clarity is really important.
And it goes back to sort of what we were talking about in the beginning, right? That we,
that this is part of what we want to do, that this is part of what you're doing here, which I think is really important.
And I will pray, like, we'll talk about that when we're actually ending because we are all big fans of this podcast and really appreciate it.
But this is also part of what our work is, right, that a lot of times, and I think I alluded to it earlier, we get into these conversations because we publish pieces.
We try to give our analysis that way, but we're in this era of social media and people are also making their name and their popularity and their celebrity online, right?
So this is where a lot of the conversations are happening.
And a lot of times we do get into these discussions that I think it can sound like to people outside or people who aren't reading everything or aren't, you know, really paying attention, nitpicky, right?
Like this thing of, oh, well, when did genocide start?
But this is really important because this is part of framing not only what's going on now, but what we need for the future, right?
what we're asking for, what we're demanding, what we're working towards.
So, like, I'll get into the actual answer to the question, but I think the start was really
important, too, because part of what people need to do, like, really, and not just outsiders,
like also Palestinians in the diaspora and myself and other people as well, you know,
really need to do is think about these things, read about these things.
they can and be thoughtful, right? And take correction, take input when it's given. Because I think
you know, that's one of the things that we also try to push is allowing correction, allowing
evolution, allowing critique and responding to it thoughtfully. And that's really an important
element that I think we're seeing, especially in a lot of younger folks who are, you know,
organizing in really important ways, but that we don't see a lot with these, you know, it's not all
older folks, but a lot of folks who are making money, are making careers being, you know,
in these different roles. So I just wanted to mention that. But about the sort of resistance
element outside of Palestine. I mean, I think talking to viewers in the U.S., which is our base as
well, or Canada or Europe, there has been so much that's been done in the last year that I think
is really new or at least, like, has brought in new energy, brought in new developments, right?
So there has been, as we mentioned, like this new conversation about Zionism where we're no
longer just talking about Nanyahu or settlers in the West Bank. And that's really important,
right? That's something that we've been talking about for a long time that seems to be coming
more out in the open and should continue. But something that's been really cool to see as well
is like folks taking on more personal responsibility and personal risks in these ways.
I mean, you asked what should folks be working towards, and I think really simply, resistance from the outside has to be connected to something material.
It has to be. Because for too long, it's been dominated by these NGOs who are funded by, you know, large donors.
It's all connected to lobbying and international law, has to fall within the Oslo framework, has to be about, you know,
calling your representatives and what has calling our representatives done for about for a
Palestine for the last year nothing exactly so you know this is really important for folks to to
realize but but but but a lot of these people have been moving outside of that right we saw that
with the encampments which was very much about material not just about taking up the space but
about demanding that universities around the world divest and that is really important right even if
I heard people saying things like, well, that's not going to end the genocide.
Well, that is a really important element of pressure that people can do, that people can take responsibility for, right, in their own community, that their money is going towards.
That is incredibly important.
And that's not the only thing I've had friends in the U.S. and around the world who have been involved in blocking the boats, you know, trying to keep the weapons from going.
There's, I read about this today.
there's a, there's a strike right now by some union of dock workers in the U.S.
That's striking.
Yeah, it's the International Longshore Union.
Okay.
I didn't know their name.
But what I saw is they're making an exception to make sure that weapons come to Israel to kill
Palestinians and Lebanese people.
It's literally the only exception in that strike, which is hilariously depressing.
You know, like, it is both hilarious and depressing that, you know, we will not cross this picket line for anything except for bombs to drop on children.
That's the one exception we're going to make.
No, exactly.
And so I think, like, these are areas people can push, right?
Because people who are in solidarity with Palestine should be in solidarity, should be, you know, working with unions in solidarity with unions in connection with unions and should be telling people this is wrong.
This is not class solidarity.
This is not helping anyone.
This is solidarity with imperialism and colonialism.
And this is wrong.
And that's something that people can do, right?
But I just want to mention as well because there's also this other element that I think touches on things you brought up around settler colonialism in the rest of the world.
And maybe it's like a question I'm raising, but I want to talk about it.
Anyway, like there's been this renunciation movement by folks outside of Palestine as well, folks who are Israeli citizens who hold Israeli citizenship, or held Israeli citizenship, I should say, who are materially divesting from the state.
And maybe it's people who haven't lived here in a long time, you know, maybe aren't getting any benefits, maybe never participated in any of the, you know, is served in the military at least or anything like that.
But it means something. It's a big deal to see, I mean, I'll say as a Palestinian, it means something to see people divesting from the colonial project here.
Because as we've written and talked about, it's not just right that Zionism depends on Palestinian elimination.
It's also that Zionism only exists because Israel only exists because Palestinians are every day enduring the violence.
violence of dispossession. So every day, even if there's no bombs, no killing, no imprisonment,
no withholding of the bodies or, you know, tear gas or anything settlement, it is still violence
by the fact that all of our families who aren't currently in the land that they belong to are denied
access. By its existence, Israel is an act of aggression, right? Which you said. All right. But so this is
So people engaged in these really material sacrifices are also important.
So there are different areas that I think people have started with.
But as Banna mentioned, there has kind of been this, I think, a bit of a feeling of defeatism from the outside.
You know, on the one hand, like we should admit to ourselves it's almost a year and the genocide is very much ongoing.
and expanding and that's something we should be honest about and we should also be honest about
why which is that we need to focus more on disrupting material support for colonialism right
that folks can't just organize you know in in direction you know facing the democratic
party and hoping in the U.S. context and or the labor party or any political party hoping that
this is going to be the answer because it's not. Folks really need to be organizing and creating
lasting revolutionary infrastructure in their own communities based on principles and not just
based on talking points with the, you know, with the goal being material impacts on the ground
here. And there are examples of that, but I know I've talked a long time, so I'll leave it
there. Yeah, it's okay. I'm going to turn it over to Bana, but first, the one thing I just also
want to add very briefly, and I say briefly, but you know, you listen to the show, so you know
when I say briefly, it could be any length of time. I'll try. When we're talking about
the longshore union strike, making an exemption for weapons to be transmitted.
The other thing that is kind of hilariously depressing is the fact that these logistics centers, these choke points to use a term that I got from my friend Manny Ness, who we've recorded with earlier this week, but I think this episode will come out first.
He co-edited a book called choke points.
It's about logistics workers being able to act in unison with one another in order to affect political change.
and, you know, theory behind that and also practice.
One of the things that comes to mind I know for it, for instance, the port of Livorno in Italy.
Livorno is a very famous city in Italy for being the hotbed of socialist and communist action within the country.
Port City.
And when this phase of the genocide in Gaza began, they were the first ones to call.
close down their port to any weapon shipments going out to Israel.
I also know that there was another port city in Greece that did the same thing, like, within
the same week that the port of Livorno did, but there were various ports that were basically
blocking any weapons from going out.
Now, keeping in mind that if we're talking about transmitting weaponry, that has to go out
through some international point of exit, not necessarily port of exit. It can be air, can be
sea. But with many of these things, the easiest way to transport them is via sea. And so if you're
choking off the ability to transmit weaponry that is complicit in AIDS and abet's genocide,
that is the point at which you can affect the most change as just a work.
You know, if you're working at a port or at an airport that is the area that is transmitting the weaponry to a genocidal settler colony, by closing that down, you are having a material impact that greatly outweighs the ability of most other people to have a material impact if they are not actively in the region where they could do some other form of action.
But in the case of this longshore union, they're doing the exact opposite of showing solidarity, the exact opposite of acting as a choke point.
They are acting only in defense of their own collective bargaining and not showing any form of solidarity with the people that are being genocided and have been genocided for decades.
It's the absolute opposite of what we see.
And so when we think about the ability of these workers at choke points to affect political.
change. This is the effect that we see in the case of settler colonies is that too often the
individuals are only concerned with their imperial mode of living and don't have any consideration or
concern for a people that are being genocided outside of their own country, outside of their
own union. And that is something that I take great umbrage with and something that really
frustrates me because of the potential that they could have and the fact that they are not only
squandering that opportunity, but actively becoming complicit in the genocide themselves.
Like I said, that was supposed to be short, but oh well, Ben, please.
No, but it's a great point. It's a great point because it's true. It's showing solidarity not
with enough class solidarity or solidarity with, you know, anyone, but the imperialists and the and the
colonists. It's not, it's not, yeah, it's disgusting. I'm glad that you knew what I was talking
about so you could explain it. I actually just want to add one thing on what you were saying on
this, like trade unions, just a big exclamation part on that. Because, I mean, as far as I know,
like the obvious
like the most sort of
in your face
elements
that are that could be targeted
or have actual material effect
are not just weapons factories
but anything capitalism really
so
the fact that trade unions have been
in fact very much so
like not devastating
but have all
also been
complicit in a way
is problematic. Not only are they
like constraining and
sort of eliminating
an important aspect of
like anti-imperialist
organizing, which is basically
strike action and
you know, basically
revolutionary potential of workers.
They are also like
not allowing for probably the most effective measure of, like, putting pressure.
And that's how it is.
Like, if we were to actually look into this, yes protests, and we talk about this by the way
at the GST, yes protests can be like nice, you know, a space where, you know, where you show
in number
a form of rejection
sort of like
what we call like a math movement
and whatnot. Yes, that may be
good in a way
but at the end of the day
a protest is not really
going to put as much
sort of
pressure
that a strike action
would do
imagine imagine
imagine a sector-wide strike action of workers and supported by unions.
I imagine that.
I would love to imagine that.
In fact, we know this in the way.
But, you know, because of trade union bureaucracy,
because of how trade unions have sort of become spaces as well
of sort of collaboration with the ruling class as opposed to, you know,
you know, as we said, a bargain tool with the ruling class as opposed to a revolutionary
tool against the ruling class. So it's all really interesting because, I mean, we have a
specific case in Ireland where there's this law called the Industrial Relations Act,
which basically prevents unions from committing or supporting strike action for political reasons,
right? So imagine, like imagine even like that
that there are laws like these that are just like just in existence basically and we're just allowing them to be and basically trade unions are preventing such immense power and withholding such immense power of workers so so again like trade unions in this sense unfortunately in in the movement and we have to be honest they have been apart from some of
because I'm not going to name every
trade union because some were actually
quite positive. They were in fact
the majority were in fact
counter-revolutionary, right?
And they acted as
counter-insurgents and tools
of drooling class.
And so we have
to be, we have to
call it that this is the tool
that has so far yet to be
fully used in its full potential
that could also
assist in
the current resistance that is happening on the ground
with the different fronts.
So we have to be clear about that,
that there are ways that, you know,
there are still ways that we haven't really developed
and looked into and advanced further on
in the struggle for, you know,
in solidarity as well with Palestinians,
but also in the anti-imperialist struggle as a whole.
Because, again, this is not just about Palestine, right?
this is just about the world.
Can we live in a world that just allows genocide to happen?
Like, anymore, can we really allow this to happen?
If Israel is able to do, commit this genocidal violence against its enemies,
so can the US against, you know, dissidents in the US itself.
Like, you know, we can, I mean, if they've done it obviously in the past,
so you don't come at me, Henry.
this is obviously part of
colonialism. I can see you laughing. You can't see
Henry laughing, but I can.
Just to say that this will,
this is basically
the promise of
imperialism. The promise of
imperialism is, or sorry, the promise of tolerance
for imperialism. Breeds
fascism and breeds genocide. It breeds
immense
illiminatory
violence
and just
what's the word
for it?
Omnicide?
Maybe the
destruction of everything
if we can be honest
so I would just like
to also
lastly mention that
there are so many people that come up
to us and tell us that they've been
suspended because of their
activism that they've been
you know,
docs and they've been also
followed, you know,
and harassed as well by
Zionist forces. And we must
say to these, you know,
and show these
activists grace and
support and, you know,
solidarity because they put
themselves in their lives on the line for
Palestine. So we do at the
GSD always say, you know,
if you have, you know, if you've
been targeted, come up to us, we'll uplift your
campaign for, you know, for more publicity, for your issue and how, and we will try our best to
support you because, and we've seen also obviously different levels of, you know, community
support for those dash bin, even, I mean, even a terror professor was, you know, fired
drift at least. So we can see how, you know, you know, Zionism and the ruling class is just
absolutely fed up of the strength of this movement. So, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and,
the ways that we're exposing their
hypocrisy, but we have
to, we have to support these people
and we have to also pressure
trade unions and we also have
to uplift the
positive and also as we always
like to do, if in the
GST hope that the
negative and show that the negative
are there
because
so people cannot soften
the edges of those negatives
and normalize them
because it's important that clarity remains a clarity.
There's no more tolerance and normalization for anything,
anything less than, you know, complete, you know,
designification, liberation of Palestine from the river to the sea.
That was so good.
I don't know if I want to add anything anymore.
What a good, like, oh, what a powerful ending.
I just wanted to add really quick.
that I will make it quick. There have been recent victories in Canada, especially, that are
very material victories that we should talk about really quickly because I think it is important
that people don't fall into defeatism and seaways, right, that are already happening and that
they can plug into in their own communities. So I just wanted to quickly mention, I just wanted
to quickly mention that. So a few years ago, a Palestinian coalition in Palestine, including
the Good Shepherd Collective, launched the defund racism campaign. And I won't get into it. You can find
the website defundracism.org. But basically, part of the point was just reminding people that
some of these settler organizations that I've mentioned earlier in the conversation are having a very
powerful material impact, not only on the ground in the sense that they are actively engaged
in settlement and legal efforts, but also they are finding their way into more and more powerful
positions. We know that Israel is a settler colonial state. It cannot be, I can't think of the
proper word, but can't be reformed. But nonetheless, it becomes more dangerous all the time.
And so we pointed out, you know, we made a list of some of these.
organizations that are having a very tangible impact on the ground.
And there's actually a case, which I won't get into now,
but there's an ongoing case just north of Bethlehem in El Mahrour Valley,
of a family, Al-Qaisea family, whose land,
they're a Palestinian Christian family,
who have been in this battle for 20 years against the JNF and Himunuta,
their subsidiary that I mentioned before,
that has been suing them saying they bought their land
and basically has effectively sort of forced the family off of their land after multiple, multiple attacks, demolitions of their home.
And this isn't a unique story.
But just to show what a, you know, powerful role these organizations play.
Now, these organizations, many, many of them, received charitable donations through fiscal sponsorship,
through other charities that are registered in places like the United States,
like Canada, the UK, other countries.
And in Canada recently, so the Defund Racism campaign, I should say,
was an effort trying to point folks, you know, in this direction to basically say,
you know, you can make this a political issue.
You can raise this issue with your attorney general in the U.S. or elsewhere in other countries
and strip the funding of these organizations in different ways.
And in Canada, there's been quite a bit of success with this.
So earlier this year, and this is like even hard for me to believe I had to double check,
JNF Canada was stripped of their charitable status, right?
That's a really big deal.
Think about how much money the JNF brings in every year.
I'm not sure of Canada is its biggest donor population, but it's a really big deal.
And more recently than that, Neiman Canada, which is another sort of organization that funnels money to settler organizations here and the Amunim Fund have had their status revoked.
And in part, this has been explicitly because they are sending money to organizations.
One of them is an organization we have listed on that website, El Ad or Irdavid, it's the same name.
And the decision has explicitly named these organizations as not being, like, able to receive this money.
So I just wanted to point this out because this is one of the successes that is happening that maybe is going under the radar because it doesn't have, you know, a lot to do with the current genocide, current phase of the genocide in Gaza, but very much can have an impact on the ground tomorrow in Palestine because a lot of these organizations, they're not, I mean, J&F aside.
They aren't organizations getting billions of dollars a year.
You know, maybe it's millions of shekels a year.
And they don't have huge staff.
But because of the way the state works and because of the fact that this is a settler colonial project,
they're able to do a lot with a little.
And the less we can make sure that they get, the more we can support Palestinians on the ground.
So these are campaigns that people can pick up wherever they are,
because I promise you, in most places where your listeners are,
there's some charitable, you know, money going to a settler organization. And they can look it up.
They can ask for help from us or other people, you know, if they're interested in doing this.
And they can make it happen. So I just wanted to name that as one of the possibilities. If you
don't know a union or you aren't part of one, you aren't at a university, here's another idea for you.
Marvelous. So at risk of this episode going on forever, because there are many other questions that I had
planned for us, but we'll bring you back on in the future. What I want to do is give you each
the opportunity to maybe have some brief closing thoughts and let the listeners know where they
can find more of your work. So yeah, I'll just leave it at that. Laura, I'll turn it to you first.
Make sure that you tell people where they can find the article anti-Zionism is the colonization
because that is an article. I know I buried the lead by not mentioning it at the beginning.
of this episode but that's an article i have shared with dozens of people uh personally so let me
when you tell people where they can find more of your work make sure that at least somebody needs
to tell everyone where they can find that article because it really is terrific thank you so much
that's so nice that's so like lovely to hear because i feel like that piece of work which
everyone can find at ebb.com.
Ben, am I right?
It's at ebb.com.
It's on our website.
You can go to our website and it's linked.
And that's where I believe.
Ebmagine.com.
Okay.
Atmagizing.com.
You can look up Laura Killani as well, I think,
anti-Zionism as decolonization,
or you can find it on our website,
good shepherdcollective.org.
But that's so nice.
It's a view, Henry,
because I really feel like that piece of work
was something that we had been, like, developing over a long time, you know, over our own
personal experiences that we had learned things through and other people around us, right?
And I think that's part of, like, what we want to leave people with is it's okay not to know
everything, right? That's why we're listening to the podcast. That's why I listen to your
podcasts because I love to learn and hear from your guests and see the connections and where
there are disconnections. And I think that's really important, you know. But yeah, so folks can, so
thank you so much for having us. We love your podcast. Folks can find us at, like I said,
goodshepardcollective.org. On Twitter, I think it's shepherds for the number for good. And also
we're on Instagram, Good Shepherd Collective. And if you still use Facebook, you can also find us there,
but we're not very active,
not as active on Facebook.
Folks can also email me
and that I don't know if you want to give your email,
but you can email me at laura at goodshepardcollective.org
if you have any complaints or comments.
I think if it's okay, Henry,
and you can cut this out if it's not okay,
but I'll just also add.
The Good Shepherd Collective is, so this is a difficult time, right?
There are lots of places.
we can lend our support. But if you've heard what we do and you're interested, the Good Shepherd Collective
part of our founding, like I said, was sort of to provide an alternative to these NGOs that
have mass amounts of funding, but do effectively very little politically. Maybe they provide
humanitarian support, but they play into a lot of these really problematic paradigms. So in order
to prevent that, Good Shepherd Collective runs almost entirely on individual donations
of $5, $10 a month, $2 a month. And that allows us to be independent and also be accountable
to the people around us and the people who we support and the people who support us as well,
right? And so I just want to, you know, say that because it's been difficult.
in Palestine, right? It's been a difficult time. And also being honest and trying to remain
principled makes it hard to be invited in all of these spaces where you might have access to
different forms of funding, right, that lean more liberal Zionist or something like that. So
if that's not okay, feel free to cut it out. But I just wanted to mention that because it's an important
part of the way we do our work. Not only is it okay and I'm not cutting it out. I'm going to
highly encourage the listeners to do so. You know, I personally have been wanting to, but of course
I live in a sanctioned country. So like money going in, money going out is very, very tricky
these days. But I absolutely recommend the listeners to contribute if they are able to do so.
and the information, not only the article and, you know, the Good Shepherd information,
but also I'll make sure to have a link in the show notes that'll bring you right to
where you can help contribute.
So be sure, if you have the ability to do so, just check out those show notes and you'll
be able to just click one link and it'll bring you right to there.
Banna, how can the listeners find you and more of your work, anything that you would
like to direct them to?
Yeah, I do also publish pieces as well with the Good Shepherd Collective,
but I think the most important, like, source that we have at the Good Shepherd Collective at the moment is the website.
So I do want to mention again that the Gochepercollective.org has extensive information and data that you would not be able to find at least collated into one.
And also we do have analysis of that data as well.
that anybody basically can avail of.
We know that documentation can be very difficult,
especially for researchers who are based abroad,
who cannot access information if it's also in Arabic or in other languages,
so it will make it much easier for them.
We also love when researchers contact us as well
for information, resources, graphics, and things like that.
we're happy to help and but most importantly I think on the website is that we have a constant
pieces of analysis that come up every once in a while and I think we want to keep that
tradition and we do have also one more a subject that we would want to talk about in the future
possibly in a webinar curated by us maybe in a future podcast if we if we have the energy to
create one on defeatism in the movement so and like what leads to defeatism and all of that but also
like how to avoid defeatism in such moments because obviously we don't have the luxury at that
and the last thing I would also like to say I'm not paid to say that but do support the guerrilla
history podcast do support them if they have Patrion and I don't know if I'm saying that
correctly the word and they and they are basically have they have wonderful podcasts a huge fun
and they're doing really amazing important and critical work and so do support us but also support
them and thanks for inviting us a comrade after my own heart in any case you know that
webinar on defeatism and combating defeatism sounds very interesting we have an
episode that's on a similar topic a long time ago now, probably two, two and a half years back
on revolutionary optimism and combating defeatism and eco-despair specifically was, you know,
the underlying root of that conversation. So listeners, I'm calling back, that episode's got
to be at least two and a half years old at this point, but do check that out. And I am
certainly looking forward to your webinar that you're going to be putting together. And as I
mention, thank you very much for the shout out for our show. It's greatly appreciated. And as I've
mentioned throughout this episode and also in our private correspondences, I really appreciate the work
that you, too, and all of the Good Shepherd Collective are doing really invaluable material. And I hope
that you'll agree to come back on the show in the future. So, I know I have to read out Adnan
because he is a professor and has professorly things to do. And has, and has,
to leave the call early, but you can find Adnan on Twitter at Adnan A-Husain, that's H-U-S-A-I-N.
You should follow his other podcast, The M-A-J-L-I-S, not the one that's hosted from Radio Free Central Asia,
but the one that is from MSG-P-Q-U, which is Muslim Society Global Perspectives Project at Queen's University,
not the CIA run one. Don't listen to that one. Listen to Adn's. It's much better.
As for me, listeners, you can find me on Twitter at Huck 1995.
That's H-U-C-K-1-995.
You can help support guerrilla history, as Banna mentioned that you could
at patreon.com forward slash guerrilla history, G-U-E-R-R-I-L-A history.
And you can keep up to date with everything that we're doing individually and collectively
by following us on Twitter at Gorilla underscore pod,
G-U-E-R-R-I-L-A- underscore pod.
I should also mention that we do have an Instagram page, which we do update with the new
episodes.
I always forget what our handle is on there because I hate social media.
I think it's guerrilla underscore history.
Guerrilla history.
It's, I think, gorilla- underscore history.
Oh, me to check?
Ah, no, the listeners can find it.
It's your scavenger hunt for the day.
G-U-E-R-I-L-L-A, I think, underscore history.
So, you know, let us know if you follow us there.
We do update it.
So give us a follow there.
That would be greatly appreciated as well.
And until next time, listeners, solidarity.
Thank you.