SAILAK (1)

Dehumanization and the Ongoing Nakba in Palestine: Ussama Makdisi, Sherene Seikaly, Nathan Thrall

Bideoa: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IyzepHLs7hE

‘Where Olive Trees Weep’ June 6-27, 2024 https://whereolivetreesweep.com

This conversation is released with the premiere of the documentary ‘Where Olive Trees Weep,’ along with 21 days of talks on Palestine with leading historians, spiritual teachers, trauma therapists, poets, artists and more.

Dehumanization and the Ongoing Nakba in Palestine With Ussama Makdisi, Sherene Seikaly, and Nathan Thrall

Preeminent scholars Ussama Makdisi and Sherene Seikaly examine the insidious processes of dehumanization underpinning the ongoing Nakba and displacement of the Palestinian people.

Makdisi, a renowned historian of Arab cultural studies, draws upon his extensive research into Orientalist narratives and ideological forces that have enabled the systemic denial of Palestinian human rights.

Seikaly, an expert on modern Palestinian history and social movements, connects these forces to the lived realities and continuities of expulsion, occupation, and struggle confronted by Palestinians since the original Nakba of 1948.

Together, these eminent scholars address how dehumanizing logics and settler-colonial mythologies enable endless cycles of violence, land confiscation, and the negation of Palestinian self-determination. They also explain how reasserting Palestinian humanity, memory, and presence is vital to securing a just and peaceful future.

‘Where Olive Trees Weep’ is a poignant, heartbreaking film about the struggles and resilience of Palestinian people under Israeli occupation. It explores themes of loss, trauma, and the quest for justice. We follow, among others, Palestinian journalist and therapist Ashira Darwish, grassroots activist Ahed Tamimi, and Israeli journalist Amira Hass. It features Dr. Gabor Maté as he offers trauma-healing work to Palestinian women tortured in Israeli prisons.

The program expands on the themes explored in the film and provides a larger historical and social context.

0:23

[Music]

1:24

[Music]

1:54

[Music]

2:14

good morning good afternoon good evening welcome everybody my name is maito

2:19

benatu my name is zaia benatu we are here in thean the territory of the

2:25

castal Miwok people in South Palo so called the colonial name Sebastapol

2:32

California and actually um when we visited the occupied Westbank two years

2:38

ago for the film and we got back to California we were like wow we are

2:44

settlers but we had to go there to realize the history here that was our

2:51

journey well we’re really settler yeah I remember driving on the road and seeing

2:56

like like being in the West Bank with this road for the I I I was like completely blew my mind it’s completely

3:03

change any so today is a day two of the

3:09

film Premiere where olive trees weep um yesterday we had our first conversation

3:16

with the main character Ashira derwish and if you missed the conversation is

3:21

still available on YouTube so you can watch it later today yeah and today the conversation

3:29

panel the is De humanization and the ongoing nakba in Palestine we have three

3:35

guest I’m going to briefly read a a short bio of each and every one of them

3:41

before we enter the the conversation so Shereen

3:46

seali PhD associate professor of history at UC Santa Barbara PhD in history and

3:53

Middle Eastern and Islamic study from NYU and a master from Georgetown University a former director of Middle

4:01

East studies Center at American University in Cairo held fellowship at Georg toown with shaft Zu

4:11

Berlin thank you sheren I hope I I didn’t destroy all the names appreciate

4:19

thank you then we have Usama mck PhD professor of history and

4:26

Chancellor chair at UC Berkeley Carnegie scholar in 2009 for work on

4:33

Muslim societies author of awardwinning books including the age of coexistence

4:40

age of coexistence in 2019 and artillery of Heaven in

4:45

2008 expert in Middle Eastern history and US Arab

4:50

relation thank you s thank you and last but not least we have Nathan throl

4:59

Jerusalem based American author and journalist his book A Day in the Life of

5:05

Abed Salama won the 2024 Pulitzer for non-fiction contributed to the New York

5:12

Time Magazine La the review of books and and New York Review of Books he a former

5:19

director at the international crisis group and a professor at Bard College

5:25

welcome Nathan thank you and you in Berlin now Nathan right not in Jerusalem

5:31

no no I’m in Jerusalem oh you are okay wonderful okay

5:36

yeah okay well welcome everyone and what a pleasure to have the three of you in

5:42

conversation we’ve prepared some questions but um we can also just flow

5:47

what what feels alive in the conversation and we will leave questions to hear also from the audience at the

5:54

end for the last 30 minutes to share your question please pleas type it in

6:00

the Q&A uh box and raise your hand ideally you’ll have your video on and we

6:07

can bring you on camera or we can read your question you can indicate which one you prefer and please keep the questions

6:15

very suin you will yeah exactly somebody already practice um great so Osama maybe

6:23

we’ll start with you first since you have the Deep history look on the where

6:31

we at today in your book age of coexistence you explored a historical

6:37

context of interfaith and intercommunal relationships in the Middle East how

6:45

European colonialism and the emergence of colonial Zionist Zionism has

6:53

disrupted the age of coexistence without idealizing the age

6:58

of coexistence too and has led to the occupation to the upper TI the ongoing

7:05

Naga and to the genocide in Gaza today if you yeah sure uh well thank you

7:14

for having me it’s good to see my fellow panelists thank you also for the film that you that you made and thank you of

7:21

course um for the for the the question um and basically the the answer is very

7:26

simple there is of course in the Middle East an extraordinarily long and Rich

7:31

history of coexistence as you said that shouldn’t be romanticized but should be

7:37

underscored and appreciated for the depth and the interactions over

7:42

centuries in very different ways between Muslims Christians Jews among Muslims

7:49

among Christians among Jews all sorts of peoples whove lived together in various conditions um and there’s a depth of of

7:57

uh of intimacy that that we barely even know about and

8:03

acknowledge we’ve barely studied we have the broad outline but we don’t have a very strong sense and what’s interesting

8:08

is that by the end of the 19th century early 20th century in the Arab uh part

8:15

of the otoman Empire there was in fact an extraordinary um coming together of

8:20

Muslim and non-muslim uh the very sense of being Arab in a modern sense developed in the late 19th century in

8:27

Palestine in Lebanon or in place that would become Palestine Lebanon Syria

8:32

Egypt Jordan all these places Iraq an extraordinary ability and willingness

8:38

and desire on the part of people to actually take their own destiny in their own hands and shape a future

8:46

together and and so that’s where you have the sense of being really honestly a Christian Arab in a modern sense a

8:52

Muslim Arab in a modern sense and were it not for Colonial Zionism there would have also been a Jewish Arab belonging

8:58

and being and what’s interesting is how then Zionism which emerged not in the Middle

9:05

East not among the Jewish communities of the Middle East not among uh any of the

9:10

indigenous communities of the Middle East including the Jewish communities but in Europe answering European

9:15

questions Zionism proposed a completely different model of of politics which is

9:21

an exclusive ethn religious nationalist project which came into Palestine

9:26

insisted on recreating a multi-religious space as and destroying a multi-religious

9:31

space and recreating it as an exclusive an exclusionary Jewish nationalist

9:37

project through the help of British colonialism and then the rest is history in a sense so it’s really that that

9:43

sense of a contrast between a profound history of coexistence and a multi-religious

9:49

area and a European project that that was conceived to answer European anti-Semitism European Romanticism

9:56

European nationalism and then borrowed European Colonial techniques and ideologies to actually remake Palestine

10:05

and and the result was Thea and where we are

10:10

today and the borders where we drawn first by European colonialists right

10:16

before they AR to the region um for sure yeah the borders were

10:22

remade I mean all the modern Middle East the modern Arab world as we know it today the modern Middle East was remade

10:28

by European powers after World War I especially the Arab East so all the the

10:35

modern States the mandates that were called so-called mandates European colonies basically so the Europeans had

10:42

to figure out how do we colonize this part of the world and at the same time pay lip

10:47

service to the idea of self-determination which was a new idea that came out in the after World War I

10:54

and so the way they came up with this is to create this fiction of mandates this idea of

10:59

European civilized allegedly civilized tutors to help natives achieve independence and that was the fiction

11:07

the the late colonialism the fiction of how Syria Lebanon eventually Jordan and

11:13

Iraq were created as States and the interesting thing is that they they drew these borders and maps and and um and

11:21

States they dominated these areas with the idea that each of these places would eventually lead to Independence except

11:28

for Palestine I mean sh knows this and Nathan I’m sure knows this and your listeners and viewers should know this except

11:34

Palestine it’s the one mandate the one area the one colony where the natives were completely ignored as a political

11:41

people and they were they were and so the the Europeans came in and said no in Palestine alone unlike Syria unlike

11:48

Lebanon unlike Jordan unlike Egypt unlike Iraq in Palestine alone the the

11:54

the Zionist movement will be privileged and a Jewish National home will be established irrespective of The Wishes

12:01

of the vast majority of the indigenous population it’s it’s kind of a scandal when you actually like read the history

12:08

and know the history and Shireen you have done a lot

12:13

of research on the more uh recent history and how the suppression of the

12:21

Palestinian narratives and Palestinian history and experiences has led to the

12:30

dehumanization of Palestinian people um from your work like how do you see that

12:37

connection of suppression of history and narrative leading to

12:43

dehumanization um thank you on you were muted again hold on one

12:50

second no okay thanks um thank you very

12:55

much it’s an honor to be here um actually like Osama I do work in the late 19th century um and up until the

13:03

20th so I’m not that much more contemporary than that I’m also a historian and um My Book Men of capital

13:12

scarcity and economy and mandate Palestine was a book that was about the

13:18

period between 1917 and 1948 when um the very period that Usama

13:25

was describing as the um initiation of the politics of deferral that we see

13:32

that Palestinians are living under until today what I mean by that politics of

13:37

deferral is to draw on uh what Usama was suggesting which is the the ways that um

13:45

in the Mandate structure itself a structure that was based on a civilizational logic that was racialized

13:52

um it’s important to note here that the Eastern Mediterranean the Arab provinces of the former ottoman Empire that had

14:00

then at that point been dismantled along with the um German um territories um uh

14:10

the German and Austrian territories in Asia and Africa all came under a mandate

14:16

structure and those mandate structures were themselves racialized categories uh

14:22

um under categorized as either a b or c the Eastern Mediterranean and the Arab

14:28

provinces were deemed area a that is um they were deemed that they were uh

14:35

uh uh available to eventual self rule right and so just as AMA said this

14:42

mandate structure which was put together by the League of Nations the precursor to the United Nations was based on a

14:49

civilizational hierarchy the exception in Palestine was that civilizational

14:55

hierarchy was further erased because of the ways that British mandate rule was

15:02

committed from the outset to the Zionist project of creating a Jewish State on a

15:08

piece of land where the majority of the people were not Jewish in the permanent mandates commission which was the

15:15

overseer of this mandate structure Palestine was the sole space in which uh

15:22

the permanent mandates commission signed onto settler Colonial

15:27

dispossession as for your second point about dehumanization I’d like to really also

15:34

um insist that we step out of this formula I think the formula in which we

15:41

as Palestinians are evidencing our humanity is long it is it is a long time

15:48

to reject this formula I don’t want to use the language of humanization and

15:54

dehumanization I will consist to continue to insist on our Humanity what

16:00

Palestinians in the Gaza Strip are doing now how they are making life despite

16:06

death you can see in these makeshift tents that are coming up right and we’ve seen these makeshift tents of schools uh

16:15

um since 1948 where education is understood as a

16:21

if not the key to our Liberation and return and so in that in that sense I

16:27

think one of the lessons that we’ve learned and as historians we know that every single Israeli assault on

16:34

Palestine and the Palestinians have has targeted archives has targeted

16:40

Palestinian archives has held them captive has held those captive those archives themselves captive and in that

16:49

sense we understand that settler colonialism is most threatened by our

16:54

existence is most threatened by our capacity to narrate our power past to

17:00

understand our present and to imagine a future and and I think what settler Colonial regimes from a Palestine to

17:08

Turtle Island don’t understand is that however hard you try to destroy those

17:15

those archives we are the archive we actually embody the archive and our

17:21

capacity to tell stories is not going to be extinguished by this genocide and

17:26

this is in particular why you see journalists being targeted we have to think of all of the thousands of people

17:34

that have been targeted University professors poets writers creatives

17:39

journalists all the people who are there to Bear witness and tell the story

17:44

because it is the story itself that is the biggest source of threat wow absolutely

17:54

yeah and if there is humanity the gazans can teach us

18:00

Humanity what humanity is that’s what I have seen every time I tune in to those videos coming through Gaza is this is

18:08

Humanity we have forgotten what it is actually to feel and to be a human being

18:13

and to be connected and to be ready to give your life for somebody else or yeah

18:21

yeah and I would just I want to just lift up my colleague Sam smir who’s also s’s colleague and she you know she’s

18:28

taught us in in her work and especially in her book judical Humanity that it’s that very formula that if we accept that

18:36

formula of human non-human dehumanized not you know the colonial project cannot

18:44

give us our humanity and it cannot take it away either so this is a plea to

18:50

really try to move beyond that formula beautiful thank you

18:56

beautiful before we move to Nan I’m just curious like Osama where did this story

19:03

about Arabs being associated with vience and like how did this story began how

19:09

did This Racist view of of this part of the world

19:15

started like historically do you have any I’m sure you have well I mean it’s

19:21

it’s quite it’s obviously it’s a quite old story and a narrative that that goes back to islamophobia that goes back to

19:28

represent presentation of Islam that goes back to the the idea of what Islam is in European Christian culture um but

19:37

then of course it took on a very sort of uh an even more malign I would say salience in the 19th and 20th centuries

19:45

when the idea that people in the Middle East are inherently sectarian that they’re inherently violent that they are

19:51

live only by their religious difference and so on and so forth and the and the most extraordinary myth uh came racist

19:59

myth came over and helped to justify Aina saying the Zionist project in Palestine which is to say that in our

20:06

part of the world despite in in the Middle East in other words despite the enormous history of coexistence and

20:12

religious difference and pluralism religious ethnic and so on and so forth without minimizing the tensions and the

20:18

contradictions I don’t we’re historians in the end but this extraordinary history of coexistence somehow people in

20:25

the Middle East were defined monolithically by their religious identities so that people are thought of

20:30

only as Sunni or sh or Arab or Jewish or do you see what I’m saying and this idea

20:36

somehow that Europeans and Americans as in the United States the idea of people

20:41

who had slavery who had colonialism who had racism who had anti-Semitism who who killed Protestants

20:47

and killed Catholics and killed Jews and did all these things to horrific things to indigenous populations somehow they

20:53

were able to be pluralist but our part of the world was considered to be inherently and perpetually sectarian and

21:00

that’s the myth that then allows Europeans to come in after World War I and divide up our part of the world the

21:06

Middle East and and specifically then justifying legitimate Zionism in Palestine so it’s a very old myth but it

21:13

took on and it was weaponized in in a very destructive way after World War I

21:20

in the Arab East the meat of the Civilized Western

21:25

yeah as the word the myth that in the west religion just pluralism and in the Middle East there’s only sectarianism is

21:31

really what it is it’s it’s that myth that goes on we’ve seen it everywhere

21:37

yeah yeah and in the other indigenous part of the world we brought our

21:42

religion Christianity right or and and we taught Christianity the indigenous

21:48

people because their belief in spirituality was not civilized yeah

21:54

that’s what we’ve seen traveling filming our next movie oh that and and the idea that that

22:01

Christians that Christianity is Western is like one of the great myths as well the Christianity and Islam and Judaism

22:08

come from the Middle East and you’ll be surprised how many people don’t understand this very basic idea that

22:14

Palestinians many of them are Christian many people in the Middle East are Christian uh many people in the Middle

22:19

East are Jewish many people are Muslim many people are secular and there’s a whole range of diversity that we just

22:25

never that we we tend to forget about yeah

22:31

conveniently yeah so Nathan your your your book pser price wining book the day

22:38

in the life of a b Salama he provide a powerful portrait of

22:43

the impact on a daily life of the Israeli occupation and the apartheid system in on the Palestinian life how do

22:50

you see your work contributing to to The Liberation to

22:56

the to the new world we want to say how do you see it in the in the perspective

23:01

of and why did you choose to write a story that’s seemingly an ordinary story

23:09

uh to to review the reality of occupation in the West Bank and

23:18

Jerusalem thank you um I’m uh honored to be here I’m longtime uh reader and

23:25

admirer of my uh co-panelists and um I love the film I thought it was very well

23:32

done and very moving um you know the the um the way that I

23:40

see narrative non-fiction in uh this place is really about reaching a broad

23:48

uh audience I spent a lot of my career writing reports for um an international

23:55

NGO called the international crisis group and um they would write very detailed on the ground reports about

24:02

what was happening here and and in other areas all over the world and um I was

24:09

enormously frustrated by um the conversations that I had in the uh

24:14

writing of those reports and and then in uh discussing them with policy makers and

24:20

other um Elites that were involved in uh in Israel Palestine um because

24:29

the the issue for them was not really a lack of understanding many of them did

24:34

understand what was going on they did understand that there is a system of ethnic domination here that it meets the

24:41

uh definition of a parthe um in international law and um and the issue

24:48

and and that they are complicit in it the senior US policy makers who would say to me uh behind the scenes of course

24:56

uh we are supporting something that is tot immoral and we are helping to perpetuate the system so I had enough of

25:03

those conversations that I really came to the conclusion that I was wasting my time uh writing reports for those people

25:10

and what I really needed to do was to try and uh reach a broader uh audience

25:16

because only if they if these policy makers felt that there was a different public climate that would accept them

25:22

taking a different attitude uh enacting different policies toward Israel Palestine could they even begin to

25:29

imagine doing something like that and some of them would frankly say to me you know the kinds of steps that I could

25:34

take in the direction that you would like are tiny and you would laugh at them you would you would you would mock

25:41

me for the kind of thing that I might propose realistically in my job um and I

25:46

could lose my job over it I could actually sacrifice my career um so for

25:52

all of these reasons you know I came very late to a conclusion I probably should have come to without even

25:57

starting uh this work um this is a pretty obvious point I think uh but it took me a while

26:04

to to reach the conclusion that really what we needed was a change in public

26:09

Consciousness and and so that’s how I view the work of this book is is really

26:15

to try and um change the the environment in which uh policy makers are acting um

26:24

and uh I forgot there was a second part of your question and I I can’t uh oh why did I choose choose to tell about an

26:31

accident um you know I I think that um part of the aim of my book is to um

26:39

describe something that’s systematic um and if if one focuses on some uh

26:48

horrific event it’s very easy to exceptional it and say that this was

26:53

some horrible uh event but it’s it doesn’t it’s not the everyday reality um I was

27:01

just uh watching actually a documentary that’s that’s going to uh come out um

27:07

someone I know is working on it about the uh kaf kasum massacre in

27:14

1956 when uh at the start of the 1956 War Israel very

27:21

deliberately um imposed a curfew on a town of Palestinian citizens of Israel

27:28

um it there these people were always living under a curfew but they lowered the time of the curfew I forgot what it

27:35

was normally they lowered it to 5:00 pm and they made this announcement after

27:40

all of the workers had gone off to work outside of the village so anybody who

27:47

was returning as they normally would after 5:00 p.m was in violation of the

27:52

curfew and the order was to shoot and kill them and 47 people uh were killed

27:58

In Cold Blood uh in this uh Massacre and and it’s a huge and very important event

28:06

um and it was part of a larger plan actually Israel thought that there might be a war with Jordan uh in 1956 when

28:14

they started the war with um uh the UK and and France against

28:20

Egypt um they thought that there would be a Jordanian front as well and this was part of a plan to push Palestinian

28:28

citizens out um as you know this title of this presentation is ongoing

28:33

nakba uh this was in the eyes of the soldiers who were executing it it was to

28:39

be a second nakba they were going to push they were going to Massacre these

28:44

uh villagers and villagers elsewhere and then everybody would be told to leave and they would uh go toward Jordan and

28:52

um as I was watching this documentary and I’ve long been really interested in the in the um a massacre I thought to

29:00

myself you know it’s so important but I think that somebody who doesn’t know a lot about Israel Palestine could hear

29:07

this story and say to themselves yes this is an exception this is this massacre that happened and and it’s only

29:14

really through the testimony of the soldiers who were investigated afterward where they said you know I was behaving

29:21

normally and this is what my normal routine was and actually the Palestinian citizens we regarded as enemies we

29:28

weren’t there to protect them and um uh you know they were asked in their interrogations would you you know kill a

29:36

a child who was Palestinian Citizen and they said yes of course and and I found

29:41

those kinds of testimonies just about their normal behavior much more damning

29:46

and persuasive um than than actually the details of the massacre which could be written off as some terrible commander

29:54

who went uh uh Rogue or what have you um and so with that was also a kind of

30:01

similar thinking behind my choosing to tell the story of something common place like a bus accident um I didn’t want to

30:09

focus on you know a war in Gaza or um you know some major event in the second

30:16

intifa or something like the kerum massacre I wanted to choose something

30:22

that um happens all over the world but show what it actually looks like for

30:28

tragic bus accident to take place in this specific place with uh a Bus full

30:33

of kindergarteners who are Palestinian on a road in area C that’s under full

30:39

Israeli uh control security control and administrative control where Israel police give out traffic tickets and to

30:46

show what it is for these parents to try and reach uh their children some of them told that they’re at hospitals in

30:53

Jerusalem that the parents themselves cannot reach because of the color of their IDs

30:58

and through their navigation of this system I felt that it was a way to

31:04

explain a very um elaborate uh bureaucracy of control that can be quite

31:10

dry and boring when you read about uh all of the rules and all of the details but when you actually are in the shoes

31:17

of a person who has to get through the system and they have to get through it on the worst day of their life trying to

31:23

find their child um I I found that that was actually

31:28

um a way to really convey the whole uh architecture of segregation and uh

31:38

domination beautiful and I’m hearing this from all of you like inviting us to

31:44

see what’s happening because we’ve been now trained for eight months even I was

31:49

starting my uh presentation to say it’s 244 days since October 7 not to not to

31:58

count October 7 as not even starting but like as a

32:03

reference point yes it’s important but how important is to start seeing the

32:09

larger context and the the historical context but also how we are

32:15

indoctrinated us each and every one of us because we’ve been consuming this media for all these time to see it

32:23

through that lens as like oh yeah that’s the beginning and that’s why all this is happening

32:29

um and and there’s one more question I want to bring and then each one of you can reflect so s since we started

32:35

speaking on October and I know you have all experienced some form of silencing

32:42

and being attacked and being questioned and being cancelled we’re constantly getting uh

32:49

indoctrinated Zionist questions and two of those that we hear all the time is like well but you see the whole Arab

32:56

world is against Palestinian they don’t like them like this is over and over we hear that and the other one is

33:04

um yeah uh Israel has to protect itself in the middle of all these Arabs right

33:10

are mids like they have to protect but nobody well

33:17

nobody you bring the lens like how did we arrive to this simplistic narratives

33:23

that nobody can even question because that’s considered anti Semitic so this

33:29

is very long question but maybe each one of you can pick a part that feels relevant to to your

33:37

work Shireen do you um where to begin I mean narrating

33:46

Palestinian history is itself a form of resistance in this country we have seen

33:53

that through the intense policing of

33:59

even insisting on Palestinian existence through things like the IH the IRA um

34:06

the long tradition of attempting to conflate Judaism with Zionism a

34:15

dangerous um um cynical conflation we all know that Judaism is the world’s

34:22

first mon abrahamic monotheistic religion and that Zionism is a modern

34:27

political movement what it means to be Palestinian in this country in the midst of this genocide mean it means to be

34:37

gaslit constantly while we are counting our dead it means to be shut down um it

34:44

means that it that we are charged with violence for saying the word genocide as

34:50

opposed to the genocide itself being the source of violence it means uh an

34:56

intense fre fragility of the forces much stronger than us um that are so deeply

35:03

threatened by the insistence on Palestinian life and and Palestinian PE

35:09

peoplehood um I want to back up because I did see a

35:14

question about um semitism and anti-Semitism and the

35:20

Holocaust or the showa which also means catastrophe in Hebrew and I think that

35:26

it is very important for us to hold the histories of the shaah and the neba

35:32

together not to compare them in any way but to think about the centrality of

35:38

catastrophe in Palestinian and Jewish experience and to then differentiate

35:44

between Jewish and Zionist we all know that not all Jewish people are zionists and we all know that not all zionists

35:51

are Jewish this is the logic of the Israeli state so the I think there are

35:56

three points on want to make here number one I think we have to always learn the

36:03

lessons of how different people are racialized and evacuated from the

36:08

category of the human and I think this is a primary technology in genocides

36:15

more broadly number two I think we really and and part of that is to study

36:20

the is to study anti-Semitism we actually need to know what it is and to know how it emerged and to know how it

36:27

took shape in order to differentiate it from the policies of

36:33

Zionism um the second point I want to make is about um is about this kind of

36:39

cynical weaponization uh um that’s attempting to shut down our very um narration in this

36:48

country and as you started sort of you know I want to also acknowledge that I’m on Chumash land and I want to relate

36:54

that to the lesson that we’ve learned in the last eight months which is a lesson

37:00

that standing up and not just in the last eight months exactly as you were saying before sort of for for many

37:08

decades which is that standing up for Palestinian freedom is standing up for freedom and for those of us who teach at

37:15

universities who have been under the fire of silencing Erasure

37:22

invisibilization doxing threats Lial the threat of of losing your position the

37:29

fear of even speaking your history right we understand that fighting for those um

37:37

for basic things like academic freedom and free speech is fighting for what

37:42

kind of University that we return to and we understand that in this moment there

37:47

is a a convergence of Zionist right-wing

37:53

uh um xenophobic right we saw UCLA

37:58

when the mobs came out to try and um dismantle the encampment in solidarity

38:04

with Palestine and with Gaza it was a group of The Proud boys um the uh

38:13

zionists and other um forces that were coming together in this convergence of

38:20

racism xenophobia and actually existing anti-Semitism this is what drives me

38:27

crazy when you see these show trials right in congress with uh uh people like

38:33

Stephanie who is herself an anti-semite Holocaust deniers yes

38:40

questioning you know these University professors who haven’t bothered themselves to talk to the people who

38:47

work for them who might be able to tell them what in actually means right uh

38:54

it’s it’s it’s a deeply cynical moment and I think think at this moment we have

38:59

to understand those of us who are fighting especially those of us who are at public institutions who are fighting

39:05

for um the very idea of public education we understand that the kind of

39:10

Suffocation that we are under now is something that is that has a much longer

39:16

history and that fighting for continuing to utter the word Palestine and to

39:21

continue to narrate that history is again a fight for all of our freedoms

39:28

beautiful thank you beautiful AMA would do you would you can

39:35

you add to this well what I would agree with everything sharen said um but I would

39:41

also add as well that what we’re witnessing now is not just a backlash

39:46

obviously against everyone who speaks out for Palestine whether they’re they whatever Faith they are including of

39:52

course many Jewish anti zionists uh but what’s interesting to me is that there’s a generation shift taking place and this

39:59

is I think where I would like to to emphasize that for the first time Palestinians have been narrating their

40:05

history for for decades and decades and decades the question has never been a question of narration it’s been a

40:12

question of being able to listen to and accept a Palestinian perspective uh or

40:17

Palestinian perspectives and what’s happened now for the first time in my I’ve been teaching now for 27 years for

40:23

the first time you know there is an extraordinary generation ship taking place the Zionist narrative is no longer

40:30

hegemonic what the zionists have is of course huge amounts of investment that they’ve made over decades in their

40:36

various lobbying organizations in as Shan said the ideology the constant conflation of Judaism and Zionism and

40:43

Israel but what’s amazing to see is how many people especially young people in

40:48

North America but honestly around the world no longer accept this and the fact that Nathan’s book want to pull it

40:54

surprise I’m hoping is an indication of some kind of shift the only question that we have to think about since we

41:00

were’re addressing settler colonialism is that the the the fear I have um but

41:05

thus far it hasn’t been born out entirely the fear I have is that typically in the west they celebrate indigenous populations after they’ve

41:12

been devastated and destroyed to the point where they no longer pose any kind of sovereign threat and then there’s all

41:19

these like these these crocodile tears that get shed for Natives and Indigenous populations and and so on and so forth

41:26

and the question is now you know are we at that turning point I hope not because as Shan said and as Nathan knows and as

41:33

you know since with your film the Palestinians obviously still exist and continue to exist and and as do other

41:40

native peoples but they exist in in in a huge sort of despite the neba despite what happened in 48

41:46

despite despite all the massacr despite the genocide now in Gaza the Palestinians inside historic Palestine

41:53

still constitute 50% of the population let alone the refugees outside so all

41:58

this censorship to me is to is an indication of desperation on the part of

42:04

zionists who have completely lost the intellectual ethical moral argument

42:10

which is why they don’t engage with us I mean I don’t know sh’s experience is different from mine but almost never do

42:15

they engage with me intellectually or ethically or morally they only sort of defame us as anti-semites and they try

42:22

to shut us down sorry yeah they just scream at you and

42:28

and and at students and at anyone honestly anyone it does you don’t have to be Palestinian anyone who’s Allied is

42:35

also defamed because they don’t have an argument to make whereas in the 70s and the 60s of the last century the 20th

42:41

century they used to make very powerful at least in their minds powerful persuasive liberal arguments about how

42:48

beautiful Israel is how tolerant it is ETC now nobody nobody with eyes to see or heart that beats actually believes

42:56

this because everyone can see what’s happening in Gaza it’s so intolerable it’s so outrageous it’s so disgusting

43:02

frankly and the hypocrisy of the official West has been laid to Bear everyone can see it it’s right before

43:08

our eyes if I might just add I’m sorry quickly um really quickly sorry Nathan

43:15

um that I wanna I I also wan to definitely agree with Usama about the

43:21

generational shift and so I want to lift up some movement work here because I think often we you know we um we forget

43:30

that what we are living in now is the product of actual movement work that’s been happening for 20 years so the BDS

43:37

movement now is 15 years old right um the the the um no even more almost 20

43:45

years old um the the um so that’s how long students for justice in Palestine

43:51

have been taking shape and even before that students coming together in solidarity with Palestine across North

43:58

America you know through things like the general Union of Palestinian students that was happening around the first in

44:05

and even in the moment that um Usama writes about in in in in his books which

44:12

is this period when people in the Mahar or um you know Arabs in Exile were also

44:19

kind of shaping an analysis around Palestine right as early as 1917

44:25

throughout different period Arles so I I want to just really make sure that we highlight that movement I want to

44:32

highlight the movement of anti-zionist Jewish um labor that we now see as jvp

44:38

and not in our name but that also has a very long history uh um dating back to

44:43

the actual Inception of Zionism and I also want to you know think together

44:48

about the Resurgence and essence of indigenous movements in this country and

44:54

I you know I was recently in Hawaii and I just gained so much from thinking with

44:59

those indigenous struggles and you know to just remember also the struggle at

45:05

Standing Rock to remember the water protectors to remember the long tradition of Black Liberation in this

45:11

country you know that when in the assassination after the assassination of George Floyd we saw Millions coming out

45:18

onto the streets globally and many people at that time too were thinking of it in the presst but it’s actually such

45:25

a long tradition and so I think there’s a way that catastrophe In This Moment is

45:30

so generalized that Palestine has come into being as a space for imagining

45:37

freedom and demanding it for so many different kinds of movements wow and to approach it more

45:43

holistically rather than separate movements that have one specific Direction yeah we had a conversation

45:49

with Angela Davis a week ago and that’s exactly what she was calling that

45:55

standing for Palestine in stand for Freedom he standing for human rights all over the world not just in pal is a

46:02

societal change that is needed total different approach is colonialism which

46:07

is still totally effective and working full force in every day in our lives now

46:13

yeah and Nathan I mean you live in Jerusalem like how was your

46:20

book receive or not received like was it ever covered or give us something about

46:26

the real reality there the life of the in Jerusalem right now and also I was

46:32

wondering about abet Salama how the release of the book might have impacted

46:39

his life or like we interviewed a lot of women for the film and we could not

46:45

include them in the movie because it would not have been safe for them to be

46:50

in a movie like this so was a hard Choice actually not to tell their

46:55

stories protect them I wonder if you encounter yeah um thank you you know

47:02

before I answer those two questions I want to just touch on a couple of things that were were said um earlier and and I

47:10

I very much uh agree with what was said by S and Shireen um one one of the

47:17

things that I I had been saying for years to friends is that um the fact

47:22

that the IH definition of anti-semitism is now the main weapon being used to

47:29

defend uh Israel um could be looked at in a positive light that this is the

47:34

weapon of Last Resort and the fact that they have no other argument and that

47:40

this is the only one being used is a sign that they really are uh realizing that they’re losing uh the argument or

47:46

have lost it and and you know to pick up on another thing that that Shireen said

47:52

about movement work and the BDS movement um so I uh uh taught a class titled

47:58

apartheid in Israel Palestine last year on a us uh college campus at Bard and I

48:03

believe it was the first time ever that a course with that title was taught but you know for over a decade prior to that

48:12

uh students for justice in Palestine at campuses around the country would have an apartheid week and it would be

48:17

enormously controversial and people would try and shut it down and when my class was taught it was also um uh faced

48:25

opposition there there was a major donor to the school who pulled out $2.5 million doar the New York Consulate of

48:32

the Israeli consulate in New York uh tried to have the class shut down um uh

48:37

but it went forward and I think it went forward in part because of all of that

48:42

years of work uh by uh younger people who were um changing the narrative and

48:50

talking about apartheid for years and years uh uh prior to it um I also feel

48:56

we didn’t really address the um the the your question about the Zionist uh

49:02

talking points uh earlier you had said you know we encounter people saying uh

49:08

Israel needs to protect itself because it’s surrounded by all of these Arabs um

49:14

and um it reminded me actually of a conversation I had just a couple of days ago there was uh somebody who was

49:21

visiting uh the West Bank um was not too familiar with it and I was helping to

49:26

show this person around and uh he had very much been indoctrinated and and you

49:32

know like most Americans and and Zionist talking points and he kept saying you know but you know what about the

49:37

security argument what about the argument that Israel is doing all of this for for its security and and the um

49:46

example that I gave him to try and address this was to say you know um heon

49:53

has a uh Jewish settler presence in the Heart of the City and this is a tiny

50:00

Jewish settler presence uh you know I don’t remember the numbers today but you

50:06

know rough less than a thousand surrounded by you know more than 2

50:13

200,000 uh Palestinians in Hebron and they need a heavy heavy Army presence uh

50:19

to to protect the settlers and and they take these drastic uh measures like

50:25

creating uh what the Army calls sterile roads roads that only the settlers can

50:31

go on um meaning that they are quote unquote clean of uh the local population

50:37

of Palestinians now um there are no um settlers in downtown rala and there are

50:44

no sterile roads in downtown rala and um and so you know you can insert settlers

50:53

into a the middle of a Palestinian population and have them take over

50:59

Palestinian homes and land with the aid of the army and then say well naturally they need uh protection they’re

51:06

surrounded by hostile Arabs um and and so you could zoom out and say it’s the

51:11

same actual answer uh with your question well Israel is surrounded by by hostile

51:18

Arabs um you know they need to to secure themselves but um it’s it’s the exact

51:26

same same process um with with respect to the reaction to

51:31

the book here I um really there hasn’t been much of one because it has not been

51:38

translated into Hebrew and so um people all the time ask me you know is it safe

51:43

for you do do people attack you there are Israeli journalists who are uh attacked there’s an ultra Orthodox

51:49

journalist named Israel fry who had just expressed grief for some of the Gaza

51:54

Dead uh in the first couple months of the war and he had a mob uh come outside

52:00

his home and I’ve never experienced anything like that I basically don’t think I will uh so long as my book isn’t

52:08

translated into Hebrew um and and so so far I I would like it actually to be

52:14

translated into Hebrew but Hebrew uh Publishers have not wanted to touch it um so so that’s the the short answer to

52:23

to um the the reaction here and and um you had asked about Abid and his

52:30

life and you know he and I were supposed to be on tour uh in the us together for

52:37

this book the book was published on October 3rd we were planning to be in the US for about six weeks uh in the UK

52:44

and um after October 7th he he lives in a walled Enclave um he’s surrounded on

52:52

three sides by the um uh 26t tall gray

52:57

wall famously known as the apartheid wall and on a fourth side by another wall which is the wall running through a

53:04

segregated Road Route 4370 with Israeli traffic on one side Palestinian traffic

53:10

on the other known also as the aparti road and this community of about 130,000

53:17

people today has two exits one through a checkpoint into the rest of Jerusalem uh

53:22

that only half of the people within the Enclave can use and then another at the

53:28

base uh of the of the enclave and it takes only about two soldiers at each exit to shut the whole thing down and

53:34

leave 130,000 people trapped and that’s the how the entire West Bank is designed you can just shut down a couple of key

53:42

roads and you’ve trapped a whole Community uh and it takes you know Two Soldiers to put down a yellow gate or

53:49

move a couple of Big Stone uh blocks across the road so that’s what happened

53:55

immediately after after October 7th to abid’s community and uh his family was

54:02

trapped uh inside all of the uh jobs in Israel and the settlements which nearly

54:08

every extended Palestinian family in the West Bank relies on these are much higher paying jobs they’re so much

54:14

higher paying that even people who have relatively good jobs in the Palestinian Authority will go on their days off and

54:22

work as laborers inside Israel uh for supplemental income because the pay is

54:27

so much higher um and so all of those jobs all but a couple of few thousand of

54:33

them have uh disappeared since October 7th Israeli employers are not allowing

54:38

Palestinians to come back to work there is a huge uh spike in uh killing of

54:44

Palestinians about 500 now have been killed since October 7th in the West Bank um uh one of them is a relative of

54:53

uh of close relative of abid’s wife haa um a and uh and also people are kind of

55:01

afraid to to use the roads because of uh settler violence and violence from the

55:06

Army those two things are uh uh go hand inand they’re not really distinct from

55:12

one another but now they’re even uh more tightly interwoven since October 7th

55:17

because the settlers have uh put on uniforms as uh Regional defense units

55:23

and so the same people who would go and attack their settlers who would go and attack their neighbor Neighbors not

55:29

their Palestinian neighbors not in um in uniform now do it in uniform um in in in

55:36

the West Bank and and the restrictions on movement are worse than they’ve ever

55:42

been I’ve as I ask basically everyone I I meet I say can you remember a time

55:47

where the restrictions on movement were worse than they are today because I didn’t live here during the second

55:53

intifa and in my mind that was the worst period and every single person I know

55:58

who was an adult during the second intifa and who’s lived through this entire occupation uh has said this is the worst

56:05

restrictions on movement they’ve ever faced um and so you know people are

56:13

really staying at home they’re they’re they’re trapped they’re economically strangled they’re uh constricted uh uh

56:21

they’re uh uh facing uh high levels of violence and the levels of of

56:27

dispossession are also at a at a real high there the un uh issued a report in

56:34

September um that was trying to raise the alarm about how much um the force

56:40

displacement of Palestinians in area sea had increased in the preceding 18 months

56:46

I think it was they said that more than 1100 Palestinian mostly um uh

56:53

pastoralists had been um uh for forcibly displaced and in just the month or so

57:00

month and a half after October 7th an even greater number more than 1100 more

57:05

were forcibly displaced that process the theme of this panel is ongoing nakba

57:10

that is happening uh today at very very uh High rates um so yeah that that’s

57:18

kind of a picture of of of abid’s life just to give another anecdote you know his his brother who whom he’s very close

57:25

to lives in rala and works in rala and I went to an ifar uh dinner at abid’s home

57:33

um not that long ago and um his brother had not it had been more than six months

57:40

since his brother had not visited anatha which should be 20 minutes away by car

57:46

since October 7th he’d go and see his family all the time under normal circumstances he just wasn’t leaving um

57:52

the immediate area around his home uh because of the the conditions in the West Bank right

57:59

now like becoming monstrous like I wish to believe is before it collapses fully

58:05

this is we’re seeing the last gasp is like

58:11

before maybe it’s wishful thinking may maybe there’s more to the monster before

58:16

it collapses fully but I I I yeah I I think we should be it’s very hard to

58:23

it’s when we’re sitting with historians who have an allergy to any kind of prediction but um but I I I you know I

58:32

don’t think that um of course it depends what you know kind of scale of time

58:38

we’re talking about when we say last gasps but um certainly I I do I’m not

58:44

among those um uh who believe that this is the end right now and I’ve heard some

58:51

uh people say that um but um I think that you know we need to as much as this

58:58

generational change is very important and I Echo everything that was said about that I really do believe we’re

59:04

going to have to wait until these kids who are on on the campuses right now are in power which is 20 years from now to

59:10

see really the kind of change that we want to see um and um you know just to

59:17

give a sense of proportion you know the moment now we have mass mobilization for Palestine and

59:25

so if there’s ever a moment to put forward real policy changes it’s today

59:30

when palestine’s on the front page of the newspapers the day that this if this war ends uh the day that it ends the

59:39

ability to make real changes here will decrease that mobilization will decrease

59:45

so if there’s a moment to do something it’s now and where are we despite the shifted public opinion despite you know

59:51

Elizabeth Warren a fairly mainstream politician saying uh genocide real

59:57

changes that I don’t discount at all but like where are we in terms of policy let’s look at you know the lowest

1:00:03

hanging fruit you know in Europe for example a ban on settlement products

1:00:09

something you would think most European Cent interests could get behind it’s not on the table uh something that simple is

1:00:17

not on the table today and so um I do believe we’re in a very important period

1:00:23

of change I really Echo everything that’s said about this generational shift and how important it is but I

1:00:29

don’t I I I don’t use the language of of last gasps myself although you know I

1:00:34

also can’t don’t have a crystal ball I mean I also feel very hesitant

1:00:42

about these kinds of predictions right um I do think that Israel will not come

1:00:49

back from this the same state that it went into it and I do think that the

1:00:56

United States won’t come back from this I mean when you see Congress attempting

1:01:01

to pass a bill to cond or passing a bill to condemn the IC there are many big

1:01:08

shifts that are happening in this moment and and I I totally agree with Nathan that this is a long

1:01:15

duray you know this is gonna have this is going to take decades more but it’s

1:01:20

also going to be a time of great attenuation of the very Western

1:01:26

Civilization that Usama was talking about um in the beginning there is much that has been unveiled in this moment

1:01:33

and I think the consequences of that unveiling for those of us who’ve always known it to be there but the

1:01:40

consequences of this explicit unveiling are going to live on with us and

1:01:45

sometimes it might and it might live on with us in ways that are even more brutal we you know that’s why I think we

1:01:51

have to be careful about the the predictions yeah thank you absolutely you have word than

1:02:00

that keeping the Long View and the historical perspectives well I mean I I I agree

1:02:07

with what’s been said uh 100% um it’s hard to say it’s impossible this to be

1:02:12

optimistic in a moment like this it’s just impossible it’s heartless in fact on the other hand you know when Nathan

1:02:19

talks about when when we talk about a generational change and Nathan says yes we have to wait for people to come to

1:02:24

power sure of of course we’re talking about decades um on the other hand so

1:02:30

much of Zionism and so much of Israel depends on narrative and depends on this

1:02:35

idea of getting a past and having an impunity that for decades and decades and decades they have enjoyed to the

1:02:43

point where was 1956 the was 1948 the the so we can go back de generation so

1:02:50

it’s it’s not that it’s not that anything is going to change overnight as such but nevertheless the fact of the

1:02:57

matter is that for the first time in In Living memory Palestinian solidarity is

1:03:02

no longer first of all just Palestinian and it’s no longer just Arab or Muslim it’s transcended that and that shift is

1:03:09

not something that you’re going to be able to sweep back under the it’s very difficult to change it’s it’s a

1:03:14

narrative battle as much as it’s an a political economic military battle so

1:03:20

for sure Palestinians are are are suffering and are going to suffer even more let’s see what happens in the West

1:03:25

Bank was talking about the the the the slow moving genocide in the West Bank it’s going to accelerate without any

1:03:31

doubt in my mind that that’s that’s next but that doesn’t mean that that that the

1:03:38

the the shift is not taking place and some things that sh is saying some things are irreversible this is an

1:03:44

irreversible shift it’s a generational shift that’s irreversible honestly I really do believe that maybe it’s

1:03:50

wishful thinking I don’t think so as a historian I think we’re talking about tracking this extraordinary

1:03:56

that has taken place and as sh was saying we need to lift up uh activism but it’s also remember the BDS movement

1:04:03

itself Builds on Decades of student activism before I mean Palestinians have been and Arabs have been active as

1:04:09

students in this country talking about Palestine right after the nakba but in the 50s nobody would listen to them and

1:04:16

their English perhaps wasn’t as good now we’re talking about generations of people who are as American as apple pie

1:04:22

and at the same time are also Palestinian are Muslim are anti Zionist are Jewish are you know

1:04:28

anti-zionists are Allied you know are so you see what I’m saying there’s a shift taking place and that is going to be

1:04:34

accelerate even more which is why the Crackdown is so severe right now um and

1:04:39

let’s see what happens it’s an ongoing struggle but in the end um it’s it’s the

1:04:45

the shift itself can’t be undone that’s my sense yeah but with our movie and

1:04:51

generally people ask us constantly but what can we do now an individual

1:04:56

collectively what are the important step that we as a community that we can do towards this process as a

1:05:04

individual Europe euroamerican human being what can we do to support the

1:05:12

struggle for human I guess that comes also with the notion of like oh yeah just can we just do it get over that

1:05:20

that the Savior yeah how that can actually hurt more if

1:05:25

we focus on Solutions so exactly so help us what can we say what can we do and uh

1:05:33

no sh sh no go ahead go ahead what were you gonna say

1:05:39

and no you go I’m sorry the the whole thing two

1:05:45

states one state you know when you get in down that uh narrow path is also part

1:05:50

I think of the indoctrination and it’s a dead end Street when you agree when when

1:05:55

they yeah take you there okay I want to go back to the question about it um um Arabs not

1:06:03

supporting Palestinians um which was something you said earlier and we lost

1:06:08

that Arab states don’t support the Palestinians because Palestinians and

1:06:14

Palestinian Liberation also offers a a a a vision of Liberation that Arab states

1:06:21

have used since World War II to keep their people down right so so I think

1:06:27

making that distinction between Arab states and Arab peoples the second point about safety as long as Israel is based

1:06:36

on an unjust formula that Israeli rights supersede and Israeli super Supremacy

1:06:44

supersede the rights of the indigenous peoples on the lands which they settle

1:06:49

on and occupy there will be no peace it’s that simple and one of the things I

1:06:54

think to draw on is that this is the case for many settler colonies that PE

1:07:00

that there is always a sense of fear because if you are surrounded by peoples

1:07:07

who you have yourself been a a a as a state taking part in uh a dispossessing

1:07:15

you don’t feel safe so what we’re seeing now is the logic of a kind of preemptive

1:07:22

genocide you’re and this is what’s so crazy when they say to us when we when we when you say from The River To The

1:07:28

Sea Palestine will be free this is a genocidal call first of all no we’re not

1:07:34

genocidal like you are we can imagine freedom in ways in which we have we live

1:07:40

alongside of each other as Usama has taught us in this longer tradition and also the whole logic is we’re going to

1:07:46

genocide you before you genocide us right and this is not viable it is not

1:07:53

sustainable what can people in Europe and North

1:07:58

America and everywhere around the world do I think number one read read because

1:08:04

your life depends on reading it depends on it it depends on knowing it depends on understanding these details that

1:08:11

Nathan was drawing out about the ongoing slow and and in in the West Bank and in

1:08:19

Gaza this kind of slow death this slow erosion and dispossession this shrinking

1:08:24

of pal uh uh and paying attention to its Tempo

1:08:30

temporality both in when it’s slow and when it’s WAP it so read also follow the

1:08:37

lead of Palestinians who are giving us the Visions for how we ought to organize

1:08:42

in the future organize speak up Don’t Be Afraid right these are the things that

1:08:48

we all can do together and I think through that through that you know reading organizing following the the

1:08:55

lead of Palestinians working collectively we can begin to imagine how

1:09:01

do we expand the geography of Palestine just as that geography itself is

1:09:07

shrinking beautiful beautiful um if I could just add to what Shen is saying

1:09:13

Nathan if you you want to jump in or just if I could just add to what shine is saying very briefly um and to say

1:09:19

that uh I I agree of course that that it’s it’s important on two points there’s the first point about the Arab

1:09:25

States versus Arabs more generally there’s no question that that Palestine has always been and remains a core sort

1:09:33

of issue um of justice of basic Justice and Injustice it’s one of the things when I try to explain to people what

1:09:39

does it mean to be Arab you know one of the things about being Arab it’s just knowing without having to explain that

1:09:44

Palestine is a question of justice and Injustice you don’t need to go into the details people just know understand

1:09:50

intuitively because of this history the shared history of the 20th century and and prior

1:09:56

that’s point but I think on the Arab states it’s important also to emphasize that there are Arab states who have been

1:10:01

even historically have been supported of Palestine it’s simply that you know if you go back to the UN debates of 1947

1:10:08

and it’s the Arab states that were the ones who were most eloquent in defending the rights of the Palestinians they were

1:10:14

ignored it’s Arab states that that that sent minor detachments no question but

1:10:20

nevertheless sent unlike today uh the sent detachments to fight on behalf of the Palestinians in 1948 they lost but

1:10:27

at least they sent something as opposed to today where nothing is being done um

1:10:32

and so you know over the years the Arab states have fought Wars and they’ve been defeated time and again and in the end

1:10:38

the Arab states surrendered in part because the US policy has been so overwhelmingly pro Israel after 1967 in

1:10:45

particular that that the Arab states especially the egyps you know uh the the

1:10:51

Gulf States have thrown in the towel in effect and and conceded defeat at the

1:10:56

official level not at a popular level and so that’s where we are today but

1:11:01

there are states like Yemen today or at least places like Yemen Iraq and Syria and Lebanon where people are still

1:11:07

fighting so I think it’s important really to maintain that that understanding that this is not simply

1:11:13

done that this is an ongoing issue that can be revitalized at any moment when there’s a shift in the state system in

1:11:20

the Arab world as far as what I would tell people what you can do like shanin was saying you know read as and know the

1:11:26

history because one of the things that’s so stunning to me as a historian and as a scholar and as a person as a human

1:11:31

being is is just how the Palestinian narrative is so utterly basic it’s so simple doesn’t require aisc it doesn’t

1:11:39

require slogans it doesn’t require the absurdity of a land without a people for a people without a land or every other Z

1:11:44

of slogan that’s come up with to offc a very basic reality that people are Palestinians are human um and and so

1:11:51

there’s no fear Palestinians don’t have a fear sh are historians but but in general Palestinians don’t have a fear

1:11:58

of History it’s the opposite they know the history they know that everything they experienced is going to be

1:12:04

validated eventually and corroborated as time moves on it’s the Israeli narrative the Zionist narrative that has collapsed

1:12:10

entirely almost from where it was in 48 to where it is today the Zionist narrative the myths of Israel have all

1:12:17

one after another have collaps so read of course most of all be confident be

1:12:24

confident in speaking up for justice in the face of a of a of a barrage of of

1:12:31

hostility and ignorance and racism but just stick to the basic points and that’s what I would say

1:12:36

always beautiful we’ll take a couple of quick

1:12:42

questions unless Nathan let’s hear um yeah let’s keep the questions short

1:12:48

short we have more voices thank you aene okay I thank you for all the you’re

1:12:55

doing I’m while you’re using the word apartheid I’m thinking I was very young at the time but I’m thinking of South

1:13:02

Africa and the the boycotts that we did which was a which was a movement of the

1:13:08

people where we started boycotting products from South Africa which did not

1:13:13

ultimately was the Big Tool but it it ended up it helped in empowering the

1:13:19

population there and it’s it is a majority that ended up being oppressed by a major minority and and also

1:13:26

financially supported so I was wondering how can we start uh knowing which products are from

1:13:33

Israel how we can boycott the economic as as me as a person and asking my

1:13:39

friends to do the same that’s my because that seemed to have

1:13:45

worked in defeating a parte there so that’s my

1:13:50

question I just want to say really quickly I sent um I sent link to um um

1:13:58

the BDS movement website to the um to the organizers and I also just want to uplift that it’s that similarity that

1:14:05

you see is foundational to the BDS movement so it was it’s not just

1:14:11

coincidental it is that the 250 Palestinian Civil Society organizations

1:14:16

who first called for warat divestment sanctions in 2005 were explicitly drawing on the the your movement were

1:14:24

explicit drawing on the experience of South Africa and here I want to uplift

1:14:29

South Africa for the incredible righteous and courageous work that it

1:14:35

has done on the international scale and um I also want to know so here this is

1:14:42

maybe another conversation because I we have some differences about Arab states I also want to note that the only state

1:14:49

that has actually completely dismantled its relations to Israel in this moment

1:14:54

has been in Colombia so I think that there are you know that from the that

1:15:00

the tradition and the resonance that you’re seeing is part of the effervescence of the moment that we’re

1:15:08

in I’ll look it up thanks very much Nathan I saw you wanted to do you

1:15:15

want to add anything or no no that that’s that’s okay I I see that shine sent um sent resources to answer the

1:15:22

question I was going to just volunteer something similar um and so yeah that

1:15:28

that that information is readily available and and there’s also a um the

1:15:33

United Nations has a uh database the UN Human Rights Council has a database of

1:15:40

uh firms that are uh complicit in Israel’s occupation uh

1:15:45

specifically um and uh and that’s also uh another readily available uh database

1:15:53

[Music] as you are gearing towards the the the

1:15:59

closing like is it you want should we have few minutes each one of you to give us a closing statement I would say or

1:16:07

something that what what do you say so let’s I’ll just say really quickly that another thing I think um people in

1:16:14

Europe and North America have to do is reject all the forces that are trying to make us stupid which includes the

1:16:21

mainstream media which has been a really important actor in uh in obfuscating

1:16:29

what’s happening in this genocide yeah

1:16:35

definitely absolutely so let’s see if there’s any question um to read this how

1:16:41

is it possible that an ethnic religious group we kind of covered that already sees itself as the victim that’s

1:16:49

part of the indoctrination anyone yeah I think we covered that um

1:16:55

Nathan there is a question for you see from in Israel what do You observe in

1:17:01

the Jewish Israeli population do you see any critical mess of critical ethical

1:17:06

societal examination and the desire to move away from the role of militarise compressive occupiers and thought

1:17:13

something of mutual coexistence Liberation with Palestinian or this is a darker cynical and traumatized movement

1:17:20

that seems to be kep to dominant population stuck I would appreciate your perspective but it seem yeah I think we

1:17:26

touch that we got a request for the movie to be translated in Hebrew and there’s a rabbi two days ago show it and

1:17:34

we are doing it we didn’t even believe that would ever be possible but

1:17:41

um is there anything and or if you want to touch on normalization something that

1:17:47

people on this side don’t understand quite well we heard all the time like

1:17:53

why did you make one-sided movie why you didn’t show both perspectives this is

1:17:58

one of the most common question what about the other side um I don’t know I can well I’d like

1:18:06

to say something about the other side or about the two sides or objectivity and and always a reminder I I say this in

1:18:12

all my classes um neutrality of course is not objectivity there’s a huge difference between telling the truth and

1:18:20

being a witness which is another thing everyone can do is be Witnesses and act on your I and and and do do the things

1:18:27

that elevate people and that support Justice around the world not just in Palestine but obviously including

1:18:33

Palestine um the the idea of Truth being somewhere in between two perspectives is

1:18:39

absurd I mean there are truths and there are there are you know there there’s there’s something that if we don’t if we

1:18:45

can’t agree on basic ideas of justice and Injustice of history of narration of

1:18:50

what’s happened then we can’t make any kind of ethical decision about anything frankly and so again don’t be afraid of History

1:18:58

always remind those desists who come along and who basically as shim was saying don’t know the history at all they actually do not know the history

1:19:04

they try to make you stupid they try to make other people stupid in the sense of the most basic question of all if

1:19:11

Zionism why did Zionism emerge in Europe and not in the Middle East they don’t even have an answer to that question

1:19:17

because most of them have never thought about that in any serious way they don’t understand that there was no Jewish

1:19:23

question in the Middle East in the way there was in Europe and there’s a reason for that um and there’s you know there’s

1:19:30

a whole history again there’s there’s so much history that one can just um get

1:19:35

into and to understand the basic sort of humanity and history and so it’s so

1:19:41

important to just always maintain this this idea of insisting on a Palestinian

1:19:46

and people’s right to represent themselves and to be represented as human as opposed to Simply as the foil

1:19:53

for other people’s anxieties

1:19:59

fearce Nathan anything on the question of how do you see the the society in

1:20:07

Israel no I I I don’t uh I don’t see a movement for equality uh in Israel that

1:20:16

that’s um you know the the majority much

1:20:22

more than just the majority you know the super majority of uh Israeli Jews are um

1:20:29

content with a system of uh Perpetual domination um and um I I don’t see that

1:20:39

that changing in the foreseeable uh future and

1:20:44

[Music] um you know that that that has been the case for for many decades this isn’t I

1:20:51

not don’t mean to say that that’s the result of the right being in power now this is true of the center and the

1:20:56

center left as well there are differences in approach there’s differences in you know how rapidly they

1:21:02

want to move how much they’re willing to spit in the world’s face how much they’re willing to take off their masks

1:21:08

how much they’re willing to talk about uh expulsion um but um but in terms of the

1:21:17

uh willingness to have a system of domination that also of course as

1:21:23

Shireen put it so well makes them insecure as long as they have

1:21:28

that system in place and of course in apartheid South Africa as well that one of the main arguments about why you

1:21:33

couldn’t end it was that the afri coners said we we’re all going to die um so um

1:21:41

yes I I I do not I do not see any kind of movement for for equality uh within

1:21:48

Israel yeah yeah I so quickly about the

1:21:55

news where is that what are your sources where do you would you direct people to

1:22:00

read um and get the news learn anything that yeah any recommendations for

1:22:08

resources M um

1:22:14

anything feel free to I would read yeah I would read all those all these these these sites um read and consume I mean

1:22:21

the mainstream media we can see obviously it is what but it is there’s so many now alternative sites um

1:22:28

websites news services that that that the this the

1:22:34

there’s not I wouldn’t have one recommendation but but the ones you mentioned Jia there’s a million honestly

1:22:39

there’s so many differ there’s there’s no excuse anymore to be uneducated on this issue um and even on the mainstream

1:22:45

media I mean there are so many people who have left the mainstream media and have their their YouTube channels and

1:22:51

and so on and so forth that the a lack of education is not excusable anymore

1:22:56

honestly at this point we all need to do our homework

1:23:01

there is no excuse yeah well this has been a very enlightening conversation thank you all

1:23:08

so much for um for all that you brought and a lot to work with and a lot to

1:23:14

continue exploring and learning from the little bits and pieces you gave us to

1:23:20

continue learning so thank you so much and for connecting more dots together

1:23:26

because this is really what we are missing that holistic yeah visual approach yeah so thank you thank you for

1:23:34

having us um really a pleasure to be with with all of Youk thank you for your film as well yes

1:23:41

really beautiful and thank you everyone who tuned in today and this talk the recording will be available on YouTube

1:23:48

so feel free to share with your friends and we will see other tomorrow again the

1:23:54

same time at 10 a.m. Pacific Time thank thank you

1:24:05

[Music]

1:24:14

[Music]

1:24:27

[Music]

1:24:45

[Music]

1:24:56

I

1:25:25

[Music]

1:25:40

[Music]

Utzi erantzuna

Zure e-posta helbidea ez da argitaratuko. Beharrezko eremuak * markatuta daude