We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - LISTEN TO SAVE PALESTINIAN LIVES w/ Our Friend Dr. Thaer Ahmad
Episode Date: August 14, 2025437. LISTEN TO SAVE PALESTINIAN LIVES w/ Our Friend Dr. Thaer Ahmad This is one of the most important conversations we’ve ever had. Please listen to today’s episode and donate here: https://bit....ly/HealthcareinGaza Our friend Dr. Ahmad is a Palestinian-American emergency medical physician and voice for Palestinian dignity who has provided medical relief in the world’s most devastated conflict zones, including in Gaza during the bombardments. 1. Every penny of our proceeds from this episode is going to the Palestinian American Medical Association, a 501(c)(3) tax exempt nonprofit organization providing Dr. Ahmad and his brave colleagues the supplies they need to keep healing and saving Palestinian lives. 2. ALSO, POD SQUAD: IF YOU HAVE ANY DOLLARS TO SPARE, PLEASE GIVE DIRECTLY TO THIS LIFESAVING FUND at https://bit.ly/HealthcareinGaza 3. Glennon is personally matching every dollar you give up to $100,000. These brave medical professionals — all of whom are risking their lives to provide relief, care and healing to the children, men, and women of Palestine — do not have the supplies they desperately need to save lives. We are not helpless in the face of these horrors. Please let us be the ones who say with our voices and money: WE SEE YOU. YOU ARE NOT ALONE. WE WILL SHARE WITH YOU WHAT WE HAVE SO YOU CAN CONTINUE TO HEAL YOUR PEOPLE. Follow: @thaerahmad @palestinianama To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, everybody.
Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things.
Today is maybe the most important episode we've ever done.
Before we get started with Dr. Thayer Ahmed, who is a Palestinian-American.
I want to let you know two things.
First of all, every penny that this episode makes will go to the Palestinian American Medical Association.
It's the 501c3 tax-exempt nonprofit organization that provides Dr. Ahmed and his brave colleagues the supplies they need to keep healing and saving Palestinian lives.
I also want you to know that if you have Pod Squad, if you have any dollars to spare, after you listen to this episode or now, please give directly.
to this life-saving fund, all of which will go to the doctors, the healers on the ground who have
been working so bravely and so tirelessly to heal their people. Give directly at the link in the show
notes or the link in my bio. It's like, it's called link in bio, I guess, on Instagram.
Okay, so you go to Instagram. There's a thing called link in bio. The link will be there to give.
Every penny that goes into there from you will go to the Palestinian American Medical Association.
Also, more than what you give will go because I, in addition to all the profit from this episode going,
I am personally going to be matching every single dollar that you give up to $100,000.
We are going to get these heroes, the supplies that they need to continue their life's work,
which is to save Palestinian lives.
They do not have the support nor the supplies
that they desperately need.
Please, please let us be the ones
who say with our voices and our money,
we see you, you are not alone.
We will share with you what we have
so you can continue to heal your people
because you are our people,
we belong to each other.
I love you all so much.
Secondly, the way that this episode came about
is this.
one of the ways that I am staying sane and awake during this extremely difficult time in this
country is by attending protests, by going out in the world and putting my body with other people
who care. And I'm doing that because protest works, but also because it's personally what's saving
me. And so recently I was at a pro-Palestine anti-genocide protest in Los Angeles. And a man was
speaking, and he was so beautiful and so eloquent and so moving. He was a Palestinian-American,
a father. And I posted part of his speech at that protest. And what ended up happening
is that this woman who many people know, her name's Leslie Priscilla, she's a writer, she's a thinker,
incredible, but she has an Instagram account called Latinx parenting. She saw my post of that
man's speech, and she knew him. So she DMed him and said, what are you doing on Glein Doyle's
feed? And he was like, who the fuck is Gleadne Doyle? And he ended up DMing me. His name is Omar.
We asked Omar, who should we have on the pod? What Palestinian voice would you want on the pod right
away, and he is the one who introduced us to the incredible man you're about to meet. Dr. Thayer
Ahmed. So there's the background, and here we go. Dr. Thayer Ahmed is a Palestinian American born in
Chicago, home of the greatest concentration of the Palestinian diaspora in the United States.
He is a board-certified emergency medicine physician and global health leader who has provided medical
relief in some of the world's most devastated conflict zones, including Palestine, Syria, and
Lebanon. A voice for Palestinian dignity, Dr. Ahmad has conducted multiple medical missions to Gaza,
most recently entering in January 24 in the midst of Israel's relentless bombardment.
He has since been denied entry multiple times by Israeli authorities due to his Palestinian heritage.
He delivered a powerful firsthand account during a private briefing with President Biden in 2024 and
walked out in protest after the administration rebuffed calls for an immediate ceasefire.
Dr. Ahmed, we would like to start by acknowledging and honoring and dignifying the grief
and sorrow that you hold for your family and your people due to the terror of the last
years and the suffocation of decades prior to that. You have seen the targeting and capture
and torture of your medical colleagues,
captivity of your family members,
genocide of your people,
and silence and complicity of the world.
And in the last days,
we have also witnessed Israel's targeting
an assassination of Anas al-Sharif,
the beloved heroic journalist
and his colleagues,
an attempt to silence truth and kill hope.
And we just want to meet you in that moment now.
And I don't know how you're here.
I don't know how you continue to do what you do.
But before we get into experts and facts and what is actually happening,
it's just how is your humanness in this moment?
Yeah, I mean, I really appreciate you kind of bringing that up.
I think for us, it's really, really tough right now.
It's just tough because we feel like, I think, when you're watching it from so far away
and you're seeing everything sort of unfold, it can get very, very easy to get lost in the numbers.
Yeah.
And forget about the human beings that are actually suffering and the amount of suffering that they're doing.
I think when you mention Ennis, Enos was really backbreaking.
I mean, it was really tough.
He's somebody that we were watching.
every day. Show up on the screen. He's covering the news and you saw him. And what really
hurts me about what happened with Ennis and I think all of us are reeling is his last few weeks
on this earth were so troubling. He is somebody who we watched about a week and a half ago
covering the hunger and the starvation that was happening in Gaza. And you saw it affect him. You
saw him seeing people collapse in the street, we're heading to the hospital, we're searching for
food, and it just, it was weighing so heavy that at one point during a live broadcast as the
journalist in Qatar was asking him to describe the scenes that he was seeing, he sort of breaks
down and he's got his hands in his face. And you can hear somebody in the background walking,
telling Ennis, you know, he's telling him, he's saying, you know, keep going, Ennis.
You're our voice.
Just keep going.
You know, and just this faceless person in the background, that's how all of us sort of felt about Ennis.
And, you know, I'm sorry, I just, it's, I think it's still tough to think about him.
So, you know, and he's in that moment, and I remember later on Instagram seeing him,
his wife post about him and saying, you know, she had seen him sort of break down because he had
been separated from his family at this point when he's covering the news and he has to be in these
areas that are being so violently leveled, he's not going to stay with his family. He's going to
stay in a tent. And, you know, when he was killed, he was in a tent right outside of the hospital
in Gaza City. And that's where he would be covering from. And his wife said, you know, she saw that
moment where he again is breaking down and she didn't see it as a moment of a weakness she said she
saw that as just one of his more powerful moments just the strength that he had that even though he
was witnessing what was happening to his people that he was standing up and he was standing tall and
that yes you know the emotion that he was showing is yeah not by any means a sign of weakness
but just sort of this hero that had this press vest on.
And he called on the world to sort of respond to the threats that were being leveled against him.
The fact that he was specifically being somehow legitimized as some target,
it was going to be normal if something happened to Ennis.
And he asked every but every organization, human rights organization,
every single media agency, every single press committee,
like the committee to protect journalists. He asked everyone to do something, to stop the threats
that were being levied against him, to ask Israel to abide by international humanitarian law.
And he'd said this in the last month that he was alive. And it's like as if he knew something
was going to happen. And when it happened, I remember getting the text message. I was getting
ready for work, and I couldn't believe it. I just could not believe that Anas and his colleagues,
his five colleagues, were the ones who were targeted in this strike. You know, when people say
all of Al Jazeera's Gaza City team was eliminated, and to me it's just, again, it's just much
more than that. It's just this other sort of red line that was crossed. It was a deliberate attempt
to absolutely crush our souls to just devastate sort of the will of the Palestinian
in people. It's just hard to see him, you know, watch his funeral take place, to see what had
happened to think about his daughter, Sham, and his son, Salah, and his mom. We got to see some
really intimate moments from Ennis's life and so many of the other journalists' lives that were
killed a couple of days ago. We got to see when his mom was being interviewed by another journalist
who was Ennis's close friend who had been killed last year. And I had posted just in memory
of Ismail, another journalist a year ago who had been killed.
And so, you know, you saw a video surface of Ismail interviewing Enos' mom and her saying
how Ennis was stubborn and, you know, was such a troublemaker and that as long as Enos was
refusing to leave Gaza, that his mom was going to refuse to leave Gaza.
And, you know, this is, I think for us, it's just, you know, who else are we going to lose?
It's been now close to over 22 months.
Who else are we going to lose?
Somebody that we've become intimately familiar with.
I never met Ennis.
I've never spoken to him.
I've never sent him a text message.
But he was a part of my life.
Just like I've never met Hind, the six-year-old that was in the car that called the Palestinian
Red Crescent operator and was asking for somebody to come and save her as an Israeli tank was nearby
and had unloaded 300 or some bullets into.
the car that she was in. I never met him, but I felt like I got to intimately see this child's
last moments and it's something that still haunts me. I never met her mother who was screaming
for the world to help somebody who needs to save her daughter. I never met soul of my soul,
the grandfather who he got to watch carry the body of his granddaughter. And the only thing that
he could take with him was the, was the earring that she had on. And then a year later,
watch him be killed in an airstrike?
I mean, it's just so absurd what's happening in this moment.
It just feels surreal.
Like, what timeline are we living in?
What is this, what kind of world do we exist in where it's like you get to meet some of
these people through screens or you hear about them or you see them in the hospitals?
And then you watch as time after time after time.
It's like people who seem to have the most precious souls or are the definition of what it
means to be like an innocent person. You just watch them get targeted and their killing has become
normalized. So I mean, it's a very long-winded answer to say it just you start to wonder,
you start to look out and wonder, what is it about being Palestinian or what is it that
kind of suddenly makes it okay for them to be killed or maimed or wounded or, you know,
forced to flee their homes and be herded around like sheep? It's, it's tough. I mean,
And it's tough. And I've got two daughters. So, you know, one is four, Miriam is four, and Batud is a year and a half. And I just wonder, I don't know how to explain to them when they grew up about this time period. I think about that all the time. What am I going to say to them when they grow up about this period that we're living through?
Dr. Can you tell us about your family, your family that is there and how you ended up here?
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, my family is originally from the Gaza Strip.
And they had moved around in Palestine over time.
And right now, they're mostly based in suburbs of Jerusalem.
And in the 80s, my father, in an effort to complete his education as an electrical engineer,
decided to come to the United States.
And he decided to come to Chicago because he had a cousin who was here.
And that's generally how a lot of Palestinians end up in different parts of the states.
It's like you got a cousin who's in Cleveland, Ohio, and he says, you know, it's not bad out here.
you can come and make a better life for yourself or you can earn a decent wage out here.
And so we had a cousin who was in Chicago from the 70s.
But Palestinians were sort of laying some roots down in the United States in Chicago from the 50s and 60s.
And so you'll see the diaspora is kind of segregated in the United States based on the village or the city that they're from.
And we've all got our like, you know, we've got our different kind of competitions between cities and villages.
and, you know, everybody thinks that their village is the best or that they've got, you know,
they make the best food.
And so my father came in the 80s and then my mom followed him shortly after.
She came in the late 80s.
And I ended up being born in Cook County Hospital on the south side of Chicago.
So that's really how we ended up.
We've got a decent amount of family who came over here, came to the United States, but still
the majority of them are still in.
in Palestine. And most of them are in Jerusalem in the West Bank. In fact, my wife and two daughters,
as well as my mom, they're there in the West Bank right now. And my wife and two daughters were
just in Hebron, and my mom is in Ramallah right now. But yeah, that's kind of what my childhood
looked like was most summers. Most of the time it was going back. And I remember the very first
time I visited Palestine. I went with my uncle's family. I was probably four and I was turning
five. And it was during the first Intifada. And the first Intifada is, this is like, you hear the word
intifada used a lot right now, especially against Zoran in New York. It's like he keeps saying
intifada. But growing up, I remembered it as one of those moments where, you know, it directly translates
into the word uprising. But the way I understood what Intifada was, was Palestinians across all different
parts of Palestine, Gaza, West Bank, were basically rising up and asking for the right of self-determination
to really have a chance to determine what their futures looked like. And I'll give you an example
of a moment that deeply sort of affected my family, but every family has a story from the first in
Tifolda in the late 80s and 90s. My cousin, Esam, was 17 years old. And his father was in Israeli prison.
and he joined a demonstration, nonviolent demonstration,
to ask for better rights in prisons, conditions for his father.
I mean, he wanted to be able to visit his father more.
He wanted his father to be able to have better access to health care while he was in prison.
And he was shot at one of these demonstrations.
And I was there at the time that he was shot.
And I remember he had gone to the hospital and it was clear that he was in really critical condition.
And he ended up dying.
And I just remember that moment distinctly because his father who was in prison was allowed to leave prison for one day to bury his only son, his 17-year-old son, and then had to go right back to prison.
I remember seeing my uncle as a five-year-old sort of coming out and seeing so many people were gathered around and, you know, not really understanding the gravity of this situation, but understanding something serious was happening.
And one thing I mentioned from that moment that, again, it's like this sort of discrepancy between how the, and I don't know what better word to use, but let's say the West views Palestinians and versus how I understood and got to understand what it means to be Palestinian is Asam's mom, who's no longer with us and was my aunt.
I remember that he had loved orange juice.
And at some point during his hospital stay when he was recovering, I guess he had a moment where he was awake and was lucid.
And he asked her for a glass of orange juice, but by the time she had gotten it for him,
that, you know, he had already sort of slipped back into this unconsciousness.
And I remember, like, the rest of her life, she couldn't, you know, hear somebody offer her juice
and never drank orange juice again.
And it's like, you just knew, like, you know, that's how much she loved Isam is like,
she couldn't even hear the word or somebody couldn't offer her orange juice.
Like, that's how deep the love was.
But then you like flip now, and I heard like, you know, this viral clip is circulating of like
Megan Kelly talking about how Palestinian mothers are willingly starving their children.
You're like, you have never met a Palestinian before.
You've never met a Palestinian dad or mom.
You don't get how deep and intense that love is, you know, how passionate sort of they feel about
their children.
It's the same thing with Netanyahu.
He went on this Nelkeboys podcast.
And the way he was referring to Palestinian women, in Gaza, too, specifically, he said, oh, you know, Palestinian women, their property.
That's what they are.
Their property, you know, they are nothing and they have no rights.
And you're like, dude, you have never met a Palestinian woman.
You never met my mom.
You've never met my wife, my grandma.
You don't know anything.
You don't know what you're talking about, you know?
And it's like Gaza is one of the only places in the world, by the way, that there are more women who are studying.
and graduating with computer science degrees than men.
So you don't know anything about us.
You have no idea just how intelligent, you know, Palestinians are,
but specifically Palestinian women.
Like you just don't, and I just hate hearing it.
You know, I think about all of the people that I grew up with who helped raise me,
who helped make me who I am.
And instead, you've got these people who are trying to make these caricatures
or two-dimensional characters of them, you know?
So it's, sorry, I mean, I know you just kind of asked about my family,
but it's like I feel like there's so, like there are these.
these amazing characters and stories behind them.
And, you know, you just kind of want to acknowledge them a little bit.
Yeah.
I have so many questions, but all of your answers seem to go back to this idea that there's
some, what must have been over a very long period of time, very intentional dehumanization
and otherification of Palestinian people. We don't get to this point in witnessing firsthand
an absolute intentional genocide as an international community if there isn't this pre-existing
condition where we have somehow agreed that this is okay or everything Israel says is correct.
Like when and how did that happen to us? How did we lose touch with humanity and life so specifically
with your people? Yeah. I think there's been this.
dehumanization campaign for, obviously, my entire life, but it's been going on for a very long
time. And it goes back to even some of the leaders of Israel. It goes far back as, you know,
Golda my year. There's this sort of famous quote attributed to this, the first female prime
minister of Israel. And she's this sort of figurehead that, you know, was a sort of a titan in
American politics even, the way she would influence different parts of foreign policy in America.
And in fact, they say that President Biden was really affected by kind of her, how she spoke about things.
And she influenced a lot of his disposition towards the Middle East and Palestinians.
But she had a quote.
And she had said once that there will be peace when Palestinians love their children more than they hate us.
And you can see sort of these are the roots that are being planted when you're talking about Palestinians,
when you're talking about really making them sort of these as close to animals as possible.
I mean, you can, you see it.
It's riddled not just in Israeli media, but you see it everywhere.
And there's this really, really incredible former New York Times journalist.
Her name is Mona Shalebi.
And she talked about just the words that are being used when you talk about Palestinians.
And even kind of referring to the incidents that may happen,
instead of saying somebody was killed, like Ennis was assassinated, Enos was killed, you'll say, you know, Enos died.
And then they'll also mention some ridiculous, you know, claim against these people, right?
You somehow legitimize what the Israelis are saying, right?
The Israelis are denying that they're targeting women or children or that, you know, the Israelis say that these aid workers also doubled as terrorists.
And you can just so quickly then suddenly make this death complicated, this killing complicated.
This killing complicated. It's, you know, incredibly tragic in nature. And somehow they've created that avenue to make you think like, so maybe this person was dubious somehow. And that's been going on for a very, very long time. And, you know, I think it gets at the heart of how you do what you do and how the world sort of sits idly by. If you can dehumanize these people to a point where suddenly you say, we're better than they are. And the way that they think about things,
is wrong, then you can rationalize in your mind how fighter jets can just absolutely level
an entire area, regardless of who's in that area.
And to me, I think, again, I bring up Hind Rajab so much because it was so devastating to
watch this six-year-old girl, get in a car with her family, and head towards the south
because the Israeli military said, your home is going to be bombed.
So go south.
If you want to be safe, go south.
And as she's heading south in this car, a tank fires on that car.
And you have to hear sort of her cousin Leyen, who's 15 at the time in Hend is 6,
they call 911.
And you hear that voice recording and you hear this young girl 15 years old saying,
you know, we've been shot and we've been attacked.
And everybody in the car is dead except me and my youngest cousin.
And then you hear bullets fire into a car.
You hear the yelling of these girls.
and then a moment later you hear the voice of a six-year-old saying Leyen, who initially called
she's dead, and now I'm here.
And that audio was so hard to listen to because, you know, she's this young six-year-old
who is terrified, and she separated from her mom who was in a different car.
She was with her uncle and their family.
And you hear her tell the operator, she says, I'm scared, please come get me.
Come get me right now, please, where are you?
And then she's piecing together the scenes for you, a six-year-old describing that there is a tank nearby.
And we hear this call for three hours.
She's on the phone for three hours with the operator.
And there's a moment where the operator says, let's pray together, just so you can kind of get through this.
Let's pray together.
And she's saying, you know, oh, God, keep me safe.
Oh, God, you know, protect me.
Oh, God, allow me to reach safety.
and
towards the end of the call
Hind starts to talk less and less
and it's clear that she's bleeding to death
and the operator says
she goes Hind
why are you not talking as much
keep talking to me
and she said every time I talk
blood comes out of my mouth
and I don't want to get my clothes dirty
my mom doesn't want me to get my clothes dirty
and that was it
that was the last thing that you hear
And there was this, again, this heroic crew named Ahmed and Yusuf, these two paramedics who find out that there's a girl in Gaza city that's entrapped in a car.
Family members are dead around her.
And they hop into their ambulance.
They get clearance from Israel, permission to go and reach Hind.
And when they were less than 50 meters away from Hind, their car gets hit with a missile by the Israeli military and both of them die.
And to me, we never get a chance to find out their names or who they were.
You know, you don't get to hear about who Ahmed and Yusuf is in the New York Times or the Washington Post.
You know, of course, not in Fox or any of these other programs that are trying to report on what's happening there.
Nobody hears the audio.
You don't need to speak Arabic to hear his voice and to know that this little girl doesn't deserve to be in this situation,
doesn't deserve what's happening to her.
but the reason I mentioned her story
because one of the moments in this conflict
in the genocide that was sort of being carried out
that really pissed me off
I mean like just
there was just so much rage
is when they were referring
to what happened to Hind
some newscaster on some program
I don't even remember who you can kind of
look this clip up
but she refers to as a
you know the Palestinian woman
who refers to a six year old as a Palestinian woman
like there's something almost intentional about referring to him a six-year-old like that's a baby
you know that's a little kid that's how you should be describing that person and you can find
these moments all across any time there's a reference to Palestinians I see Jake Tapper before
October 7th before anything I remember him talk you know when he's talking about Palestinian he's
making sure the word terrorist is closely followed afterwards you talk about the way that
Palestinians think about Israel anytime they talk about Palestinians, it's always some sort of
violent and attitude towards Israel. And at some point, you know, even throughout this, I just felt like,
hey, we exist without Israel. Like, you don't have to mention Israel when you're talking about
Palestinians. We've got this rich culture, this amazing history. You would, you know, I would love,
love, for example, for you guys to come to Palestine and me to take you around, just to show you
around. I would love to show you Hebron, Ramallah, Jerusalem, and show you, like, all of our little
mom-and-pop shops that you guys could try. Like, I don't even have to mention, you know, Israel or
the occupation or apartheid. You know, like, we exist independently of that. But somehow it
ties us to it always, anytime we're mentioned, and it ties us as somehow we are the aggressors
or somehow we, and I, that's something that just kind of, especially at this point, it's just so
frustrating for me. Yeah. I'm shocked by how many Americans who certainly have a responsibility
to understand what is happening because of our absolute support and complicity in this genocide.
Americans must understand more. And I am so surprised by how many people still say,
well, this started on October 7th. It's unbelievable.
Can you tell us how this started?
Yeah, of course.
And I think that's such an important point because it's so clear how major of a role the United States plays in what's happening.
And I think if, you know, there's a organization too when I was growing up, it was called like if Americans knew because the thought is if we, if Americans really understood what the context was, they probably they wouldn't be comfortable with what's happening.
They wouldn't be comfortable with essentially subsidized.
an occupation, an apartheid, and now a genocide.
Especially given some of the things that we could be focusing on here.
But, I mean, I think it's important for people to understand that,
and I don't want to kind of make it a history lesson,
but just to understand, like, from a personal perspective,
please.
You know, 1948, there is this sort of, or I should say, 1947,
post-World War II, you know, it's clear that the way things that were done
before World War II and what led to World War II can't happen anymore.
And you have this sort of all of these horrific events that take place.
You have this, they have the Holocaust, and you have sort of carpet bombing and the dropping of
atomic bombs.
I mean, humans were really terrible to each other in World War II.
And as a result of that, there's sort of this moment where things need to change.
And as a part of that, it was sort of this idea that Jewish people needed a homeland of their
own, a state of their own, especially given the sort of what anti-Semitism in Europe
facilitated. I mean, it facilitated the extermination of an entire people. And I think there was a
movement that had already existed prior to World War II that saw an opportunity to have that
homeland in Palestine. And I think it all starts, I think the injustice and unfairness all starts
with one of the first acts of the United Nations. They want to do a partition.
of Palestine. And I would just ask anybody to look at what that partition looked like.
There is an Arab majority that was existing and living on that land that was told by the
UN that you would be getting close to 46 to 48 percent of the land that you were living on
and that there would be 50 some percent of it that would be used to create the state of Israel.
And from that moment, I think, is really why you see where we're at today. Of course,
there were farmers and Palestinians and people in Jerusalem who were seeing this plan
is saying, this is absurd, there's no way we could accept it.
And then every moment from then on was just sort of riddled with dispossession of land
and this moment in our history that we refer to as the Nekba, or a.k a.k.k.a. the
catastrophe. I mean, that's how we refer to it. It's translated as the catastrophe.
And everybody has a story from the Nekba.
And in fact, we have in Chicago, we have little peasant.
Palestine. I hope you guys get to come to a little Palestine too. Honestly, I'd love to host you guys. So that's an open invitation. But you see all of these, you know, I mentioned kind of the villages and the competition. There are villages that no longer exist. And there's still people who are descendants from those villages, villages like Deriyasin. And they'll see them here in Chicago and they still refer to those moments. You see people who had actually lived in 1948 when the Nekpa took place. And they tell you kind of how,
you know, how things unfolded. And it was from that moment that we sort of get to arrive at the
point that we get. You know, 1948 is a very pivotal moment. But then in 1967, for example, my mom was
living in Jerusalem at the time in 1967. And there was this, you know, six-day war that took
place. And essentially, the Israelis, as they were growing, as this young nation was growing and
becoming more supported by the U.S. and their military is getting stronger and they're becoming more of a
power. They are also acquiring more land. But what does that mean? Like, what does it mean when this
country gets, you know, more powerful? I'll tell you from my family's perspective,
1967, my mom is living in Silwan, which is a suburb of Jerusalem. And suddenly the Israeli
military is outside of her home giving her family 15 minutes to grab any belongings that they
have. And she tells me she was a young girl at the time. She was five years old. She says she
remembers holding onto sort of her teddy bear and watching the house get demolished and crying
and her family having to find somewhere else to live. And that's kind of, this is kind of how things
have gone for so many families, losing their homes, having to move family members, losing
their lives in the process of this military growing stronger and really occupying more land
and land. And that's, I think once you understand that's the history of the last
75 years, then you can, I think, really understand how things have unfolded and the presence
of, you know, what the Israeli military means for Palestinians. I mean, the, you know, I grew up thinking
it was normal to be going through these military checkpoints as you're moving from city to city
in Palestine, as you're sort of going from Ramallah to Bethlehem or Hebron or any of these
really historic cities just having to stop at a checkpoint, a bunch of soldiers there, checking
documents and then you've got to move through it and some days it's shut down some days there's
raids that are taking it. I thought that that was really normal until I was old enough to travel
to Europe and go to other areas and realize, oh, I mean like that's what it means when they say
occupation. It's like your movements are controlled. You know, everything that you do has to
take into consideration this military entity and that's dictating kind of what happens,
whether it's going to school, work or whatever it is. And so, you know,
October 7th took place, and yes, that's a very, like, important moment in this juncture that we're at.
But before October 7th, you know, especially in the West Bank,
2023 was the deadliest year for Palestinians in, you know, in about 10 or 15 years.
I mean, there was really this massive assault happening in Janine refugee camps and across the West Bank,
the settlers that were expanding and just being able to take as much land as they need.
And I think that's another component of this is this idea of Israeli settler.
And, you know, it's actually, if you see this, if you see just how they interact with Palestinians
and this sort of entitlement that Israeli settlers have, it's bizarre.
I mean, they are showing up, you know, really just essentially taking land from Palestinians,
really saying, this is mine.
I want this now.
So I'm going to take it.
I mean, that's the attitude that you're dealing with.
And you feel it.
And, I mean, recently there was the famous.
documentary last year that won the Oscar, no other land, but one of their, sort of one of the
crew, one of the cameramen on that show, he recorded himself getting shot and being killed.
You can see it now. I mean, it's been released and it's in the public, but he got shot by
an Israeli settler. And this Israeli settler was just wanting to move Palestinians away and
grab more land than Hebron. And so that's the context that Palestinians have been living in for
the last 75 years. It's sort of like dispossession of your land, you know, the water,
scale assault on civilians that are there, the way that you're essentially given a different
system and it's all under some sort of military rule. And then it's just this abject violence
that everybody's dealt with, that everybody has experienced and has a story about. And so,
for anybody to really kind of, especially even here in the United States, it's so disingenuous,
especially if somebody's a politician or an elected official, somebody that's dealing with our
foreign policy. For you to just pretend like, hey, this is all just been taking place over the last
22 months. I mean, you're not only missing the entire story, but you're purposely framing it
in a way that you suddenly create villains and bad guys on the Palestinian side. Yes.
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Okay, so 1948, there's one way to say it as partition that's loaded as well.
But from that moment on, there are an Israel and a Palestine, but an Israel that has complete control over Palestine.
I mean, what comes in, what and who goes out, what kind of supplies, who travels where, who goes to school, who is incarcerated and for whatever arbitrary means, that occupation has been in effect since that point in time?
No. So in 1948, what I would say is from 1948 to 1967 is the ethnic cleansing phase of this, like the most devastating ethnic.
cleansing phase, which hasn't stopped. It's still going, but that's the moment where
750,000 Palestinians are dispossessed from their homes. And then the other Palestinians that
are in what is now the Gaza Strip, Jerusalem, West Bank, they are basically rejecting this UN
partition plan. However, the Israelis, before they had become the Israelis, but they fully
embraced this idea. And they're all about this and they want to move forward with it. So what
happens in 1948 is they announced an independent state of Palestine. You have different gangs
that are going city to city violently, either erasing cities. I mean, there's a lot of really
horrifying documentation about just mass slaughter in cities and the ethnic cleansing portion
of this. And there were these sort of brand new post-World War to Arab states nearby,
Egypt, Iraq, Jordan. And they decide that they are going to sort of
come in there and save the Palestinians from this, you know, ethnic cleansing.
And they just get absolutely decimated.
The Israelis handedly defeat them, of course, because they are supported at this time
by the United Kingdom, the British, and the U.S.
And so they absolutely sort of solidify, hey, we're our military presence that exists here
and we are in this new nation state that's not just going to be defeated by these
disorganized out-of armies that don't know, you know, really don't even know what they
are in terms of identity. Then, as this sort of moves forward, you have very different moments in
history that are actually pretty fascinating to see how the U.S. played a role, but that's 48.
Right away in the 50s, there's this massive crisis between Israel and Egypt and the Suez Canal.
And Eisenhower is the president at this time, and he had just suffered this heart attack and was
sort of like, you know, struggling to actually lead this country. But he's very frustrated with
the Israelis because they have suddenly taken on this role of like this expansionist kind of,
you know, entity. They really want to continue to move. They want to, you know, be a very
dominant presence. And so you see that take place while Egypt is sort of governing the Gaza Strip.
Jordan is governing the West Bank. And Jerusalem is supposed to be this sort of independent
international city, but the Israelis sort of control it. And then 67 happens where the Israelis
decide like they don't like this status quo. And from that moment, from 67, six-day war, again,
another really devastating defeat to Egypt and Jordan as well as Syria. They basically, that's when
the occupation starts of the West Bank, of the Gaza Strip, of the Golan Heights. And so, you know,
you see that's from 48 to 67. Then in, you know, 1973, there's this very surprise war that
happens. It's called the Yom Kippur War because the Egyptians and the Syrians decide that they
want to get their land back and they're going to do this surprise attack. And initially, the Israelis
are pretty surprised by this and the Egyptians make some gains. But again, their military strength
has continued to increase and they've got some decent support here. And they were able to sort of
get to a point where the gains that were initially made by the Egyptians and the Syrians were
quickly erased. And then there was this sort of deal that took place and eventually led to peace
between the Israelis and Egyptians with the Egyptians getting Sinai back, but the Israelis still
sort of maintaining occupation of Gaza Strip. And then with the Syrians, they're still occupying
the Golan Heights. And then you kind of will move through what we call a phase where these other
autops states that Israel for so long has claimed are these like, you know, there's like this sort of,
I guess, I don't know how else the phrase is, other than propaganda that's being, you know,
but they always say, we're a tiny country, we're the only democracy in the Middle East,
and everybody, all of our neighbors want to attack us.
Well, in 1979, they normalize and make peace with Egypt.
So basically their neighbor, especially along the Sinai and Gaza.
Then in the early 90s, they make peace and normalize with the Jordanians.
And so now suddenly all of the people that they border with have normalized relations with
Israel and have peace with them and in fact help secure their borders and they have all of these
relations. And we've seen that trend continue until now. So the occupation is maintained.
They become a superpower in the Middle East, one of, you know, a nuclear power that we've seen over
the last 22 months. They can unleash really hell anytime they want. And they are also at the same
time maintaining this occupation while expanding with settlements and acquiring land.
Even now in Syria, they've gotten to the point where they've been able to occupy more land.
And so that's really, again, I mean, again, it's like this is a nation that sort of now has
also had this imperial arm, this arm that's able to occupy, and that is very well-funded,
advanced military, very sophisticated nuclear power that can really unleash hell on people
that are nearer.
And so is that what you see because just in the last few days we have seen, even though Israel's military has advised against this advancement and plan because Israel's military has said our military objectives are complete, there is no remaining military objective.
And yet Netanyahu's regime has said that they are going to go and control.
all of Gaza, they are going to annex the West Bank, is all of this about acquiring through some kind of
pretext the land that was always desired? Yeah, I mean, that's spot on, especially when it comes
to the West Bank. The Gaza Strip has its own sort of significance, but the West.
Bank has this religious significance as well. And that's what you're seeing at play here. You're
watching the proliferation of settlements and you're watching the expansion of the military presence
in the West Bank. And the idea is that it's Judea and Samaria and that actually belongs to
the nation state of Israel and that the Palestinians that are present there are on borrowed time.
And even while Gaza was being absolutely flattened and erased, you see the borders of the West Bank, you see the different camps and cities that were being leveled and the people being displaced.
There was a couple of weeks where the Janine refugee camp, there were these evacuation orders, which should be referred to as displacement orders, but 40,000 people had to leave their homes forever.
And then their homes were all leveled and demolished by the Israeli military.
And the idea is it's clear what the plan is, what the intention is.
So that's the West Bank for sure.
In fact, the New York Times in 2012, I think, maybe 2011, had this article about that plan
that's at play in the West Bank.
What you do is you put settlements around all of the major city centers.
And suddenly, what Palestinian state are you talking about?
You can't go from my city.
to a city that's five minutes away
without it being interrupted by a settlement
and having to go around that settlement.
And so now you've got city states
all over the West Bank
that are not connected to each other.
There's no contiguous land.
So what are you, you know,
there is no two-state solution.
And then with respect to Gaza,
again, you, I mean, you said it perfectly too.
Military objectives for a while now have been complete.
And one thing that really bothers me, again,
because we can talk,
you can look at it from a political perspective.
It's clear, Netanyahu has no intention of ending the Gaza war because that would mean it's the end of his term or it's the end of his time as prime minister.
No one is going to forgive him for the security failure of October 7th.
No one is going to forget the fact that he is a very corrupt politician who, you know, is under trial and keeps prolonging it.
No one is going to forget that.
And I think he knows that for him, as long as there's this active war in Gaza, then he's going to kind of under the guise of, hey, we're in the middle of a war.
we're not going to, you know, it's not time for elections or it's not time for me to go.
But, yeah, it's definitely a political calculation what's happening in Gaza.
And the idea in Gaza is, you know, they, one of the moments that the Israeli government always
refers to is like some of this failure of the disengagement.
They always talk about the disengagement from Gaza.
And this was under the prime minister, Ariel Sharon, another war criminal, who decided that
8,000 Israeli settlers in Gaza would be removed from Gaza and go to the perimeter of
Gaza or what they call the enclave of Gaza. And then they would institute the blockade
that we've seen since 2007, the siege that Gaza's been under. That's like another thing that
people don't realize about the people in Gaza is they've been under this military blockade
since 2007 where the air, land, sea, and electromagnetic space is under Israeli control.
So most of the people in Gaza have never left Gaza.
Most of the people in Gaza have been confined to this space.
And it's been, you know, the conditions before October 7th weren't great.
You know, they were, it was precarious from a humanitarian perspective.
It's electricity is on and then off.
Water is on and then off.
Your supplies, maybe you get them, maybe you don't.
All of that under control.
Okay.
100%.
Yeah.
I mean, even the ability to be self-sufficient, it was under attack long before
October 7th. So the electricity comes from Israel. And Gazans are trying to have power plants,
but it's only enough to do 10% because 10% of what Gaza needs in terms of electricity needs.
Otherwise, they're depending on that electricity to come from Israel and to be able to keep the
lights on. Same thing with the water. Three major water pipelines come from Israel. The ability to have
desalination plant in Gaza, yeah, they have a couple of those, but it's not enough for the 2 million
people that are there. And so all of it is under control.
In fact, you're fishermen in Gaza, which, you know, before October 7th, you'd always see these guys early in the morning.
They're on these, like, surfboards, and they're swimming out, and they're casting their nets, and they're bringing the fish back.
Well, they are only allowed to go three nautical miles from the sea.
That's the, that's an Israeli instituted limitation for Gaza's fishermen.
If you go past that, Israeli warships, which are always stationed in the Mediterranean, fire on you, and you die.
I mean, it's that, that's, that's the reality.
that existed. Now it's much more, now there is no such thing as three nautical
mayas or fishermen going out. Otherwise, you know, the starvation wouldn't be as bad. But even
that, that was under control before October 7th. And so, yeah, I mean, that's kind of what
the plan has been in Palestine. And the reason Netanyahu even was able to rise to power
and has been, he's a really, really sort of effective politician on the global stage and domestically.
I mean, the guy knows how to, you know, he's, for example, Trump says something, this guy jumps on it and he'll manipulate it in a way that, you know, Trump doesn't want to backtrack because he cares about how he looks and his ego and all of this, but now Netanyahu's taking it in all these different directions.
This is someone who always survives and he thinks about how to manipulate things.
And one of the reasons that he's been able to maintain power is he's taken these far right extremist elements and said, I promise you, I will never allow a Palestinian state to agree.
exist. And the way that I'll do it is I'll allow Hamas to be in Gaza and have their own little
control over this area. And I'll have the Palestinian authority in the West Bank. And from time to
time, we'll do what we need to do to just make that reality, just a total dream. The reality
of a Palestinian state impossible. It'll always be a dream. And he's been very effective at that.
I think this is really important for Americans to understand because the normalization of this
will be the worst case scenario because what you're describing, and I'm going to try to think of a way
to describe it to like the American experience, but what you're describing is like, for example,
with apartheid South Africa, where they set up the Bantu stands, and they were like, look,
we're not in a partstide state because they have their own places to live.
Or in America, it's the equivalent of we will remove the...
the threat of native people. We will kill the vast majority of them. Then we will set aside
inhospitable, undesirable, small enclaves of land. And then we will call that their state.
So it would be the equivalent of saying, in the contiguous United States, there are two states.
one is America
and one is
the nation of the Native Americans
like and then
but normalize that internationally
so that people are like
that seems fair
and then America gets to control
every single thing that comes in or out
and occupies the Native American state
and that's why America doesn't want us to look hard at this
because this is how America has built itself
is through genocide.
Yeah.
So it's the
unraveling of everything if we actually look hard. What is it, Doctor, when you say, in the very
beginning of this, you said, what is it about Palestine that makes people not rise up, that
makes people say, well, it's okay that it happens to them. When you're having your honest
conversations with your friends, what is it? And what is it about Israel that makes the rest of us
allow Israel over and over again to violate every single UN mandate, every single, why is there
never any consequences and the language around it? How do we decolonize our language? So we stop,
anyway, what is it about Palestine that allows everybody to allow this? And what is it about Israel
that allows everybody to allow them? Yeah. Well, I mean, you were just, you were cooking right there.
So that was amazing to kind of see the connections that you guys made.
And that's exactly kind of what so many of Palestinian thinkers have really pointed out is really
look at the history and the inception of the United States, look at with respect to Israel,
their close ties to apartheid South Africa and just how things have played out on the ground.
And I think there's a couple of different things that are at play here.
First, I think about sort of, again, that World War II context that sort of, we,
was in this post-World War II era, there's also all of these different colonizing entities that
exist within Africa and the Middle East as well as Asia, right? I mean, people forget that
so many European nations had colonized so much of Africa and the Middle East, France and the
UK had such a major role. And so it makes sense that first, that sort of this colonial power
rises in the midst of that.
And people don't like to use that word as much anymore,
but that's sort of, I think it's an important term,
especially when you understand the definition,
and understanding that there were these,
whether you want to say,
I guess that there are like these colonial settlers
that came to Palestine, came to this land,
regardless of really the plight and the persecution
that they came from,
that's at the end of the day what happened
is this land is being colonized
and that there are hundreds of thousands of settlers pouring into it.
And I think there's sort of that context.
Yes, in the shadow of the Holocaust and the failures of the international community,
you get these leaders that come from that.
And somebody, like President Biden, is the best example.
This is a guy that was born during that time frame.
And the idea was, you failed the European Jews.
You stood by as they were huddled into gas chambers and exterminated and killed.
by a fascist government. And that is on everybody, right? The Vatican Church, the International
Committee of the Red Cross, everybody that's supposed to have stood up and defended the vulnerable
populations that were being slaughtered by Hitler and the Nazis and Stalin. Nobody did anything.
Nobody stood up. Nobody said, you know, this is morally reprehensible. And so there's that reaction
that you have from these leaders who are saying, we have to no matter what, support this project
in Palestine. We have to support it, whether that's with military weapons or whatever it is.
And guess what? The Palestinians that are there, they just have to bite that. They have to eat
that loss because of what happened here. So there's part of that. I think the other part is
sort of this incredibly effective lobby group that's international. It's not just in the United
States. I mean, you see it in the UK, you see it in Europe, you see it all in South Africa.
you see this lobby group that has also devoted an incredible amount of resources to say that when it comes to the international community and politics and diplomatic cover, we have to be in a powerful position.
And they accomplished that.
I mean, they kind of did this really effective job of making sure that Democrat, Republican, Labor Party, Tories, wherever it is in Germany now, Italy, that regardless of whoever gets elected right or left, there's going to be a tremendous amount of support for Israel.
and what is now referred to as like the exceptionalism of Israel and sort of their ability
to not have to be held to the standards or the international humanitarian law.
And all of that is taking place.
You know, and it's working together against the Palestinians that are there.
And so when we, you know, whenever we get together, it's always been like any family, any cookout
or barbecue, even before October 7th, it's always been sort of this, it does not matter.
what happens. It's not going to matter what red line is crossed. It's not going to matter what story
gets sort of any attention. It won't change the facts on the ground because there will always be
that sort of protection that's in place here. And then now, you know, if you look at it now in
2025 and you start to see people are calling for boycotts and divestment and sanctions, it really
uncovers one thing. It uncovers also how the Israelis position themselves
to have such important economic ties with so many countries.
Not the U.S. as much, but for example, Ireland or the United Kingdom or Germany,
just like that economic relationship that exists,
that made it so that you cannot take sort of that principled approach
without it being a heavy cost.
And, I mean, it's a very strategic, you know, approach to things.
So there's this, you know, political effort.
There's this also, you know, this painting it as a moral and just way to support, you know,
Israel as a Jewish state.
And then ultimately, there's that economic sort of tie-in, right?
Like, if you hear people talk about Israel, oh, it's a tech hub, and there's all of these,
you know, security software and all of these different relationships that are these deep economic roots.
And I think that's made this sort of weird position that so many people find themselves in
where you're like, wait, why are they not saying anything about what's happening here?
For example, we talk about Ennis, the journalist that was killed, but two years ago, Shereen Abu Aalek, who's an American Palestinian, was covering the Janine camp, was shot and killed by an Israeli soldier.
And, you know, she, again, was another famous Palestinian journalist.
I mean, we grew up with Shereen covering the story, and, you know, we would all mimic how she would sign off.
Everybody, every Palestinian was mimicking how Shereen would sign off, you know, on her broadcasts, you know.
but she was hit by an Israeli sniper in Janine refugee camp as she was covering what was happening
there. That was two years ago, a Palestinian-American, and there has been no accountability as a
result of that. You know, you can, all the condemnation statements can come as a result of that,
but even the Americans, if you happen to be Palestinian, you're not afforded the same sort of
protections or advocacy by your government and elected officials, which, you know, is, again, I hope people
can just at least think about that for a second and be like, and just ask why.
You know, I think that's, for me, that's at least what we talk about is we want people to
ask why. We don't want to evangelize. I don't want to convince anybody of anything. I don't want
you to feel bad for me. I just want you to critically think about what's happening here and
ask those questions. You spent three weeks at Al Nassar Hospital and you were working
when I believe it became under siege. There was bombings all around you. You were all
there well before, in keeping with our conversation, that you were working on missions
in Gaza for medically, even back in 2009, well before all of this period where we believe
things began. What do you want people to know about what you saw? What do you want people to
know about the thousand, literally thousand doctors and nurses and medical workers who have been
targeted and killed in the last couple of years, the 500 medical workers who have been
abducted. What do you want folks to know about what's happening? Yeah. I mean, I think what was
really clear over a year ago is that this was an assault on life in Gaza. And every aspect of life
had been interrupted, had been attacked, had been targeted as early as when I was entering. I mean,
I remember going through Rafah, which is the border town between Egypt and Gaza and Palestine
and not recognizing it.
I've been there multiple times before and just being absolutely floored at the fact that there were tents everywhere.
Rafah is a rural, you know, kind of like a pretty rural city.
And now it was, had over a million people there when I was there, had over a million people
who were intense.
and the second the sunset, it was totally pitch dark and black.
And you would see all of the schools that we were passing by
were filled with people who had been displaced and had been converted into these shelters.
And this is within the first couple of hours of entering Gaza.
And I remember heading to the hospital.
This is the second largest hospital.
And Gaza Nasset is the second largest hospital.
And at the time that I was there was the largest because Shifa,
which is where I would mostly work,
And it's like the academic hub.
It's like the university hospital.
It's where everybody would go had already been raided and rendered defunct.
And I remember kind of walking through Nassar.
And if you've been through, you know, these hallways of hospitals here in the United States,
Nasset is similar, except it was full of people who were displaced or injured.
I mean, families had been living in the hospital hallway for months at that time.
And there were patients who had been there, had been injured in a lot of,
an airstrike who were on the floor, and they would have all these tubes and lines in them,
you know, stuff that here we're watching, wanting to make sure that there's no infection
developing, that's super clean environment that we're monitoring them, that it's clear that that's
not possible because of just the overwhelming, you know, magnitude of patients that are coming
through NOSID as well as the displaced people. And to me, I was like, this is not the Gaza
that I know. I mean, it's just so, it's completely different.
And there are so many moments from the first seconds that I was at the hospital.
And I had to sleep at the hospital because the World Health Organization was organizing
these medical teams from entering.
And essentially they said, we have to limit movement as much as possible.
Otherwise, we can't guarantee any sort of safety.
So they're like, go to the hospital, be prepared to sleep in the hospital, live in the
hospital, eat in the hospital.
And so I went there, remember looking outside of the window of the room that I would be
staying in. It was basically like a dorm room with like six beds because all of the doctors would
stay there and just seeing all of these tents and seeing all of the different people that were just
living there trying to figure out when this horror would be over. And looking down, you see an
ambulance that had been destroyed. You're hearing the bombing in the background. I remember I was
trying to send my wife a WhatsApp voice note because she was telling me my daughter had had a fever.
And I was trying to tell her, oh, yeah, I would give Tylenol in this situation, just trying to give her to tell her what I would do.
And I couldn't get 10 seconds in the voice note without a bomb going off in the background.
And I had to lie to my family about where I was going.
I mean, I told them I would be at the border and it was going to be safe, not telling them that I was going to be deployed on the inside.
But it was absolutely just devastating.
And so I haven't even talked about any patients that I have seen yet.
It was just that, just this atmosphere that was there.
The fact that all these people had lost their homes, all these people were living out of these tents, the kids were not in school, they were all just roaming in the hallways of the hospital, some of them playing ring around the rosy.
Like, I mean, these are the scenes out of this hospital.
And every day in Chen Yunus, which was supposed to be, you know, in the south where people could go for safety, you're hearing the military just level neighborhood by neighborhood.
And at the hospital, it's getting closer every single day.
First, they're 11 blocks away, then they're 10 blocks away.
And ultimately, it culminates in them surrounding the hospital while we were there.
I mean, I have never, you know, I've never served in the military.
I've been to many different conflict areas.
Nothing was like Gaza.
I mean, you could look out the window of the hospital and you see the tanks rolling
and surrounding the hospital.
I stood outside of the emergency department.
You're hearing gunfire, and you see one of the bullets, stray bullets.
let's hit the top of the hospital building.
I mean, that's sort of what you're feeling.
It's like you're in the middle of a war zone.
But it's just this really tight area
that's a very urban and densely populated.
I mean, you know, you can walk Gaza in one day
all from north to south.
It's less than the length of a marathon.
And, you know, just kind of seeing that space
that was already so small shrink every day,
you were feeling it.
You were feeling the panic amongst the people.
You were seeing the footage
already. People were losing weight. Kids were malnourished. And you just were being overwhelmed
with how many people are rolling through. I work in the south side of Chicago at a trauma center.
We are one of the busiest trauma centers in the country. And we are, you know, we get a tremendous
amount of patients. We would not be able to keep our doors open with the volume that Nassad was
seeing in Gaza here in Chicago. We'd not be able to handle it. We would have to go on something
called bypass. Literally tell the state and the government, don't bring any more patients here,
we're at capacity. I mean, that's what would happen if we had one day in Gaza at Nosset Hospital.
But you can't do that in Gaza. And the doctors and the nurses there wouldn't allow that to happen.
They will keep receiving the patients and treating the patients, even if it's on the floor,
even if it's when they've lost any sort of gloves or alcohol swaps to clean areas.
And I watched this group of people, these doctors and these nurses, these local Palestinians
who were experiencing all of the same things that the rest of the population were experiencing.
Their kids were not able to go to school.
The bombs were dropping.
The families were living out of tents.
The elderly relatives had to walk 10, 15 minutes just to use the bathroom to find an outhouse.
And they were showing up every day, not getting paid, because everything is going to.
to hell in Gaza, not getting paid at all, and working 24-hour shifts. They would show up because, again,
you can't move back and forth as easily. They'd show up for 24 hours, be off for 24 hours,
come back for 24 hours. And there was this relentless attack on their communities, on their neighborhoods.
And they were showing up and they were doing everything that they could. And you watched as not only
were they being targeted, like you mentioned, so many of them were dying. In fact, one of the first
days I was there, I pulled one of the doctors who I knew from before us. And we went through my
pictures of Gaza. And it's a bizarre thing we were doing. I was just asking, how is this person? Is he
still alive? Is he okay? What happened to this person? What happened to this person? What happened to
this person? They are being specifically targeted. Even back when I was there, they were saying,
if you were wearing a white coat or you were a first responder or something that you were more likely
to be killed. And these guys were showing up every day on the back of donkey carts because there's no
that's entering and they can't, you know, put gas in their car to show up. They're walking two
miles early in the morning to show up for the 24-hour shift. They're hungry and they're still
showing up and they're still treating their patients and they're being handcuffed in every which
way, literally and figuratively. You know, they're not getting the medicine that they need.
They're not getting the supplies that they want. They're not getting the money that they need
to be able to support their families while they're working here. And then almost every one of the
hospitals one by one, surrounded by the Israeli military, raided, and many of these health care
workers abducted or left for dead. And, you know, I just think that they don't get, again,
you talk about dehumanization. What do you hear about any of these doctors, especially, for example,
Dr. Hussam, Abu Safia, a pediatrician from the North, he's a Hamas operative. He's a militant,
something. And you're like, this, I mean, how does this, how does anybody let this stuff fly? This guy
I wrote two op-eds in the New York Times.
This guy is a dual citizen.
He has a citizenship from Kazakhstan, and he's a Palestinian.
He could have left at any moment, but instead he's sitting in the hospital, begging the
world to allow the pediatric hospital that he is running to stay open.
He gets injured within a bombing, a shrapnel hits him in the leg.
He loses his oldest son, Ibrahim, during the siege on his hospital.
His 17-year-old son killed by an Israeli drone.
He buries him in the compound of the hospital, prays over his body.
And in the last moments before he gets abducted and he's still in an Israeli prison right now,
you watch this pediatrician in his white coat walk up to a tank.
And the tank door opens and it's these three soldiers basically shaking his hand
and kind of trying to laugh with him.
And then they abduct him.
No charges, nothing.
I mean, that's, he's, you know, one thing we always talk about is in the north of Gaza,
every single director of a hospital has either been killed or has been arrested and is still
in Israeli prison for all these northern hospitals.
I mean, are all of these doctors who spent 10 years getting educated, somehow they're all,
we were supposed to believe that they're all military people?
I mean, as somebody who's been there multiple times and met multiple people of them,
I will put my neck on the line and say, it's all garbage, it's all nonsense.
But the fact that we've gotten to that point where it's like, hey, this pediatrician that you
saw every day coming from the hospital asking for the babies who are in the incubators to be
protected, you know, oh, he's not a terrorist. I just hate that we even have to have that
conversation. It's such a distraction. Even within us, the journalist, it's like, the guy was covering
every single day, every day he's on the mic, every day he's showing you what's going on. He's
going to areas that we're about, this is the guy that you're telling me is the necessary military
target? Like, no. And that's one thing I wish I could just tell you all of their, all of the
stories of who these people were. You know, like to me, Anas, I'm not going to respond to you calling
him, whatever it is. No, he's a father of two. He's a loyal son. He's a loving husband. He's a guy
that's in his late 20s who was so well spoken, so eloquent, just knew, had his way with words.
That's who he was. Not whatever the hell the Israeli military is trying to say about him.
Dr. Hussam, just one of the most incredibly talented physicians that you could see, just relentless.
A bomb hits the hospital.
I text him and ask how he's doing and is everything okay.
And he responds and he tells me, I think in two days I'll have things back up again and we'll be able to have the lights on.
Like that's his mindset.
Like there's no way I'm going to let this hospital go down.
There's no way I'm going to let these kids down that are over here.
You know, I mean, there's just so many of these different folks who are just incredible people.
I just, you know, you just have so much love for them.
It's like, no, instead we're dealing with these accusations.
Like, that's what I have to respond.
I can't tell you about, you know, Fabat Salim, this young newborn nursery doctor.
She's brilliant.
One of so many doctors, international doctors, got to work with her.
And they would just talk about, like, you know, as doctors, sometimes you talk about, like,
the clinical skills.
And they're just like, the way she did it, I mean, just incredible.
She's in her 20s.
You know, she's a brand new doctor.
And you're watching some of these experienced neo-natal doctors just watching this young Palestinian just show up every day.
And it's just amazing with the kids, amazing with these newborn babies, these sick kids, doing the right thing, giving them a chance at surviving.
Then you find out that she goes home to her tent and gets hit and gets killed in the process of this.
And it's like, no one is mentioning Thabat.
No one is mentioning any of these other workers that, you know, we just lost.
And it's not just a Palestinian loss.
I always, having worked literally with these people and seeing how brilliant and just innovative
they are, it's like it's a loss for humanity and nobody gets it.
Nobody wants to say that out loud because instead you're dealing with some propagandists
who's trying to divert and distract.
And one last thing I'll say about that, about my experience and the experience of everybody
that's sort of come back to is, you know, there's not, it's very clear what was taking
place in Gaza, like just clear-cut, like, it doesn't matter whether you are a hospital,
a school, a house, an apartment building, a restaurant, it was going to be attacked, it was
going to be demolished, it was going to be destroyed, and your ability to sort of exist in Gaza
was being attacked. But there's something especially cruel and evil about going after
the healers. It's like, you definitely want to make sure that.
if you survive something, that you suffer intensely, and then you die.
Like there's a period of suffering that's going to be inflicted on you because we're going to
kill the doctors and the nurses.
We're going to destroy the ambulances.
We're going to abduct them.
And we're going to make sure the hospitals don't have what they need.
And that's why this malnutrition starvation thing was so devastating, especially with these
premature babies.
It's like you're watching these kids suffer because the, you're not.
The hospital and the doctor is not able to do their job.
And the reason they're not able to do their job is because there's some general
or the prime minister or the defense minister has decided that they're going to keep
the things that you need to save this person's life.
And to me, you know, that sort of lack of any sort of concern for human life,
that sacredness of human life, that preciousness, that being disregarded to accomplish
whatever it is that you want to accomplish.
I mean, to me, that's what I struggle with as a physician
and I was only there for a short period of time.
I can't imagine the people that are putting up with this every single day,
like the moral injury that you suffer as a result of that.
You said that there is no red line.
When you are talking to your friends,
you all understand that it doesn't seem to matter what happens.
that there is no line where everyone will say that is enough and rally.
What are we working towards then?
What is the hope?
What is the vision?
Is there one?
And what do you need or hope for from Americans who are slowly becoming unpropagandized
and starting to understand for real what's going on
and don't want to stand for it.
Yeah, I mean, I think that's such an important question
because I think at this stage, I'll just be honest.
I mean, I feel so broken and beaten down, you know,
and I ask myself that all the time.
Like, what are we doing here?
I've met with over 200 congressional offices.
Obviously, I've met with multiple members
of the Biden administration,
multiple EU and United Nations leaders.
And you feel like you're speaking.
into this void, you're yelling into this void. And I've changed my approach to now wanting to be
able to share the stories and the voices, because I don't want them to be numbers. I don't want
them to just sort of be these casualties of war when they're actually victims of genocide.
And it's like, I want to just honor them by saying who they were, talking about them,
sharing their stories. And I feel like that's a role that many Americans can play and will
lead to more justice, I hope at least.
You know, just being able to say who these people were, where they came from, how they are
so similar to you as a person and the things that you want in your life and the things
that you want for your family members, there's no difference there.
And these are who they were.
They're artists, they're musicians, their doctors, their nurses, their engineers.
And I really want to tackle that dehumanization piece that we kind of talked about.
To me, like that is, that needs to be the center of the.
the fight here. But we've got, I think, this movement that's growing that's wondering here in the
United States specifically. It's like, wait, what is the purpose of this relationship right now?
Like, what are we actually doing here? We have so many problems, obviously, at home. And so I think
just starting to ask the question of like, why are we paying so much money for fighter jets and
1,000 and 2,000 pound bombs and these tank shells and the artillery and the ammunition,
why are we paying so much money for this? Why are we sending it overseas to this country?
When we've got this homeless epidemic here in the United States, when we don't even have
health care for all, you know, Israel has universal health care, it's like, what are we doing here?
And do we really also want to be dragged in by this maniac Prime Minister Netanyahu and
Israel cats and all of the people
members of his cabinet. We really
want to make American soldiers be
dragged into another Middle East war, like
what was going to be the case with Iran?
So, like, if we can ask those questions,
I think it leads you also
to wondering who Palestinians are.
Just being critical
and wondering, how is everything
in this country
bipartisan? Like, I mean, everything
in this country is very partisan, I should say.
There's all of these polarizing issues that we
talk about. Everything is, the Democrats feel
this way, Republicans feel this. Why is this one issue? Why is it so universally accepted by both
parties, the majority of both parties? Why are we signing off on these limitless checks? It seems like
everything in this country is not going so great right now, but instead, the steadfastness of
supporting the Israeli military and the Israeli policies. And why is that the case? Why is that
happening? And so that's what I think it starts there. I think it starts with asking your
representative. Why did you vote this way? Why did you vote for $30 billion?
Why did you vote and say that, for example, that one of the votes that came in, and I know it's symbolic, but it's still, it tells you something.
Why did we vote to rename the West Bank, Judean, Samaria?
That was actually something that was introduced into Congress.
Why is Ambassador Huckabee, the U.S. ambassador to Israel, why does he sound like the Israeli ambassador to the world?
Yes.
I mean, you should see how this guy talks.
I mean, it's insane.
The way he's talking about Palestinians and starvation.
I mean, he is on X the other day, he's picking a fight with the British prime minister on Israel's behalf.
Like, what are you doing?
Aren't you supposed to be this diplomat, this ambassador, the top diplomat in Israel?
And instead, you're fighting Kier-Starmer and making fun of him and telling him that he's stupid.
Like, I mean, why is that?
I think Americans should be asking, like, what's going on here?
Why is that the case?
And also, I mean, at the end of the day, ask ourselves, like, our country, especially if you're like a patriot.
If you're like, I love the United States, red, white and blue, like, think about what this country is doing and how we're, what that means for this country's sort of position in the world, authority in the world.
This is something that I think is affecting America's standing in the world, separate from the moral, the moral ramifications of supporting a genocide.
Like, you're never going to recover from that.
But you're standing in the world, I mean, you are leaving a void for other nefarious or bad actors to fill that void.
And to me, that world for our children or that world for future generations is going to look a lot
worse if we continue this path as Americans, as the United States.
Yeah.
So I think that's the steps that I really think most Americans should consider.
I mean, you have every right to ask your representative why they're voting the way that they're
voting or why they're making the statements.
They work for you.
They don't work for the Israeli lobby.
So ask them, they owe you those answers.
They should be taking your meetings, especially.
these reps in Congress and your senators. I mean, obviously ask them that. But it also gets even more
hyper-local than that. I mean, I'll tell you in Illinois, I found out pretty recently that we're a
huge purchaser of Israeli bonds. And after October 7th, to support the Israeli economy, we bought
millions of more Israeli bonds. Why is that the case when you're telling me that the city of
Chicago may not be able to fulfill its pensions for people that have worked for the city for 30 or 40
years. Why is that the case when there's a budget crisis in Illinois? I mean, that's, I don't think
people understand, and this is on purpose, they're purposely being left in the dark. I don't think
they understand how deep it gets here in the United States and how hyper-local it can get,
especially when you talk about a powerful entity like APEC. They don't play games. They're not
just showing up for the presidential election. They're there for your local elections, for your
mayors, and then all the way up for your state senate and your state reps, all the way until they
are ready to be in Congress and Senate, and then they show up and say, hey, remember us?
We made you. Now we own you. Like, I mean, that's, you know, I think, I think most Americans
are not interested in that. And I, you're starting to see it. You're starting to see some
really surprising voices, right? Like, I mean, Marjorie Taylor Green calling it a genocide,
saying America first, saying no lobby groups. I mean, I give her credit for that. And I'm also a little
upset or annoyed with, I think, the progressive, like, I guess there's, what's the word, I forgot what
the title is, but like progressive except for Israel. Like, I'm a progressive, here are the values
that I espouse except when it comes to Israel. I'm not an aggressive. I'm actually a conservative
or I'm a neocon or I'm a warhawk. But like these voices are fascinating to me. And I don't think
that as, if you're on the left, I don't think that we should be just sitting there and say,
well, Marjorie Taylor Green, she believes in certain fascist policies or has these racist opinions.
We should be asking ourselves, why did she take this position? Why does she say that?
that's very random why somebody like Marjorie Taylor Green, Tucker Carlson, Joe Rogan, or Theo Von,
this like on the right group of people, why are they taking this position?
Is there something that's there?
And why are people like Pete Buttigieg who is so eloquent, so well spoken on everything
else when it comes to this issue suddenly is not able to give you a clear answer?
Cory Booker.
Oh my God, Cory Booker.
I mean, like all of these people who want to like wave.
the flag of liberty forever. I mean, it does tell you. But why? Like, why are they doing this?
Because, like, I try to explain to the kids. Don't be like Gen X. Don't be like me and go through your
whole life and think, the government represents the people. No, we understand capitalism. We know
when a celebrity starts speaking about American Eagle forever. We know it's because they're being
paid by a company. And that's why they are suddenly obsessed with this thing. Okay.
The politicians are just like celebrities who get sponsored by a company.
They are not representing us.
That's the terror.
It's like, oh, it doesn't matter what the majority of Americans are for or against anymore.
Yeah.
Because they don't care.
They are bought and paid for by APEC.
And so that's it.
For me, it's like complete campaign reform or we're fucked forever.
We had it.
We had a chance at campaign finance reform, right?
And then Citizens United, our Supreme Court,
decided that corporations were people.
This is something that happened
and is exactly why we're in the position that we're in.
It's exactly why Obama had to instead go for the marketplace
instead of universal health care.
It's exactly why you have the most recent,
what was it, I forgot how many,
but close to a billion dollars was raised
for this last election for each presidential candidate.
I mean, that's an insane amount of money
that you're spending on elections.
I mean, it's insane to me.
What could you do with that money?
The campaign finance reform has to happen.
And I remember being at the DNC in July.
And, you know, Biden had announced, I'm not going to run again.
And there were a lot of people who were really upset with this policy in Palestine
and saying we're never going to vote for Biden and saw Kamala and said,
give us something to rally behind you.
I remember I was there.
I mean, there's this uncommitted vote in Michigan, which is a huge.
Obviously, it's a swing state.
And you have this group that represents over 100,000 Michigan people that are
ready, looking for anything to get behind Kamala. They don't want to support the other guy.
And I just remember that you are showing up, it's in Chicago, the United Center is where all
the events are happening. And you just look up at the suites. And all of these sweets were being
sold to the highest bidder, $20, $30, $40,000, $50,000, whether it was, you know, Wall Street,
or it was pharmaceutical companies, or it was whatever special interests you can think about.
and then her refusing to platform a Palestinian on that stage, it's, I don't know what Kamala thinks
about Palestinians, but I know who she's answering to and making sure that they're not on
that stage at that point. Like, it's clear, these are the groups that are dictating what's
happening, you know, to the Democratic Party, to the Republican Party. It's why our speaker,
Mike Johnson, was in Israel a few days ago. He's sitting there and he's at the wall and he's
talking about why the West Bank is not the West Bank anymore. You know, he's
saying these things and you're like,
this guy is, it's very random.
You're the Speaker of the House.
Like, shouldn't you be in the United States,
you know, talking to constituents,
figuring out what Americans need,
but instead you're like sitting there lobbying
for this foreign country.
So, again, I think you're 100% right.
I think you've got to get the money out of politics.
You've got, and I see some changes.
I mean, like the Zoran Mamdani campaign in New York City is huge.
It shows you that there is still power in the people.
And it's really about if we organize,
well, as a collective, and we say these are the demands that we have as your constituents. That
matters. You know, I mean, all the door dash money couldn't get Andrew Cuomo near, you know,
Mamdani in the polls. You know, all of the billionaires that were threatening to leave New York
City, it did not make a difference when people showed up to vote. It was about rent affordability.
It was about the fact that you weren't going to, Gaza was a big, it was a big portion of that
in New York City. And I mean, that's, I do see like, that's like the light at the end of the tunnel for me.
Wow.
I cannot tell you how grateful we are to you for this time.
And I can tell you that we are committed.
We are with you.
Amanda and I are fifth generation Irish-American.
So we know what occupation looks like.
We know what manufactured famine looks like.
We know what all this horseshit looks like.
And we are with you.
And we're going to keep going.
do you have any ideas for people who have just listened to this
and would like to continue to learn and hear from Palestinian voices?
Are there books that you would recommend?
Does anyone come to mind right away that would be a next step
to continue resisting the dehumanization?
Because also, I was also at the DNC.
That was my breaking point with the Democratic Party.
That was the platforming of that beautiful Israeli family
who spoke so beautifully about.
and then the refusal to put a Palestinian up on stage and everyone's saying, well, the Israeli family
talked about Palestinians. I mean, of course, because that made them feel even more human
to the world. And the reason why we don't put a Palestinian up there is because the last thing
we need is for people to start seeing Palestinians as human beings. Because then the questions
will come. So great strategy of just continuing the beautiful stories.
where do people go next?
I have really two very strong recommendations about this.
First, if you're like kind of a history buff, Roshid Khalidi has a book called Hundred Years War.
Yes.
It's a phenomenal book.
He's a Columbia professor.
He was at University of Chicago.
His family actually, he has an uncle, great uncle, who was the mayor of Jerusalem at the times that we were talking about in 48 and so on.
And he even has letters from his uncle to Theodore Herzl, who's kind of like the father of Zionism.
There's like letters back and forth.
It's a phenomenal book, strongly, strongly recommend that.
And then there is a documentary that was released and distributed by watermelon pictures.
And it's called From Ground Zero.
And the reason I love this documentary, it's taking place during the current war, but it's 21 different stories of Palestinians.
They themselves are the ones filming it.
They're talking about it.
And they're talking to you about who they are.
And it's all these different stories.
I mean, one of them, it's like one was a five-minute story.
of a guy who was engaged to the love of his life and she was killed in this.
And you just see this young, 20-something-year-old, just agonizing over the loss of the love of his life.
And then there's another story about a band that's sticking together in Gaza even through the displacement,
even through them being forced into other areas, and they're still practicing together.
I mean, it's beautiful, beautiful.
And it really captures just how diverse we are as a people.
You know, and I think those two things absolutely, totally, totally recommend.
And then the other thing is, I mean, I think I have to say, I really am so deeply, deeply appreciative that you guys gave me an opportunity to come on and speak to you.
I mean, I can't tell you how much that means.
And if other people are able to do something similar, it's just, it's amazing to be with people who see you.
I mean, you just, I feel like as Palestinians, you guys see us, like you guys were able to, you know, at least.
see us for who we are, for good and for worse. I mean, that to me means so much. So I really can't
thank you all enough. I mean, that it's just so, so meaningful. And, you know, you talk about
platforming and stuff like that. And anytime, even if somebody's very sympathetic to the Palestinian
cause, it's very rarely you hear the Palestinian voice or perspective. Even it's like on, you know,
Abby Phillips on CNN, she has like that roundtable. And you've got all the different points of view.
but it's like they talk about this issue a lot because it's important,
but I've never seen a Palestinian on there be able to respond and give you analysis.
I promise they're pretty good.
I mean, they can, you know, so that's why I just, it means a lot.
You know, and I understand just how sensitive the topic is.
And I also understand how much heat and pressure and criticism you guys can receive as a result of this.
So from the bottom of my heart, thank you.
I mean, just thank you for allowing me to say their names.
Thank you for allowing me to be able to share some of their stories.
It's just you don't get to see that very often.
And so very much appreciated.
So then based on that, I'm going to guess you're serious about we can visit you
and you'll take us to Little Palestine and Chicago.
I would like to just seal that deal right now.
No, absolutely.
I mean, honestly, you absolutely have to come through at any point.
And I would love to show you around.
I'd love to show you all of the different folks that are out here.
it's a different experience.
And so you at any time, and you can absolutely stay at my place.
So you have a place to stay.
And I would love, love, love for you guys to come out here.
And eventually it can be the precursor to maybe a visit to Palestine.
It would be love to show you, kind of, you know, our family's village and everything.
It would be awesome.
It would be great.
I'm delighted by this.
I will also be using the strategy you use, which I will tell my family after we get back.
Exactly.
Yep.
Yeah, just heading to this place.
I'll be back soon enough.
Don't worry about it.
Don't worry about where I'm at.
All right.
We're in.
We're going to be in close touch.
Just completely, I'm blown away by you.
I am so grateful for you.
We are with you.
And I hope we're just beginning.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Oh.
How beautiful was that?
How brutal was that?
What an incredible human being.
Don't forget that every penny of profit.
from this episode is going to the Palestinian American Medical Association,
which is the 501c3 tax-exempt nonprofit that provides Dr. Ahmad and his incredibly brave colleagues
supplies they need to keep healing and saving Palestinian lives. Also, please don't forget
that if you have any extra dollars to spare personally, please go to the link in the show
notes or go to my link in bio on Instagram. You go to my Instagram page. You find at the very
top, it says link in bio, and then you click on it. That is the link. Every penny you give there
will go directly to the Palestinian American Medical Association. Also, I will be personally
matching every single dollar you give up to $100,000. Let's please get Dr. Ahmed and his incredible
colleagues who are saving lives on the ground in Palestine, the support and the supplies that they
need, and the love and the just attention and solidarity that these people need, they must know
that they're not alone so that they can keep going. I'm really grateful to all of you. Let's do
this. We belong to each other.
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