On Nov. 6, I was supposed to have an appointment at the Israeli consulate in New York to begin my application to renounce my Israeli citizenship. That morning, I finalized a letter of explanation to the Israeli population and Immigration Authority to explain my reasoning. By that time, the apartheid State of Israel, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), and settlers in theĀ West BankĀ had already committed countless atrocities in the prior several weeks alone,Ā bombingĀ hospitals,Ā schools, andĀ churches, killing and maiming thousands of Palestinians, and displacing thousands more. TheĀ genocideĀ we have seen unfolding since Oct. 7 is just one horrifying chapter of the decades of sheer brutality and inhumanity of the Zionist project to colonize Palestine. This is a clearĀ continuationĀ ofĀ the Nakba, the theft of Palestinian land, and the ongoing ethnic cleansing and genocide of the Palestinian people since and before 1948.
In 2017, afterĀ Israeli forces arrestedĀ then-16-year-old Ahed Tamimi (the detention andĀ physical, sexual, and mental abuseĀ of Palestinian children by Israel is not uncommon; they sinceĀ detained Tamimi againĀ on Nov. 6, though she was freed Nov. 30 as part of a prisoner exchange), I started attending rallies byĀ Within Our Lifetime, where I heard Nerdeen Kiswani talk about citizenship renunciation as a way forward for Israelisāand the idea was seeded in my head. I had been living in New York since 2012, but I was raised in an Israeli-Zionist household, and I cannot put into words the shame I have for my own familyās participation in Zionist violence. While I did not serve in the IDF for medical reasons, I cannot ignore my position as a settler. Like millions of Israelis, I was also kept ignorant by the state and its educational system on purpose. However, once you unlearn Zionist propaganda, there is no going back; the world makes so much more sense, and it feels similar to what I have heard of those who escaped a cult. After tackling some legal hurdles, I finally scheduled my renunciation appointment at the Israeli Consulate in September and confirmed it a week before. The morning of the appointment, I received a notice of cancellation due to a āsafety incidentā at the building. Since I had always planned on going public about my renunciation and had been working on my letter of explanation, I decided to post it on social media, where itĀ spread widely. Unfortunately for Israel, its most recent genocidal campaign meant the letter received greater visibility. On Nov. 20, I went to the rescheduled appointment only to be denied the chance to submit my application since I do not have the papers to prove I did not serve in the IDF (I do not have access to those). So, this op-ed is a way to further clarify why I chose to take a very public approach to renouncing my citizenship and why I am encouraging others to do so, too.
Since publishing my letter, many have asked me how I was able to unlearn the Zionist propaganda. While I have always thought of myself as left-leaning, I was ignorant of much. My reeducation began after the New York Police Departmentās Daniel PantaleoĀ killed Eric Garner, and I started attending Black Lives Matter protests. The Black friends I was in community withāand to whom I could never truly repay for their time and effort to educate meātaught me the foundational history of policing and racism in the U.S. I witnessed or went to more protests like thoseĀ organized at museumsĀ across the city that exposed the interconnected relationships of oppression. I followed more and more Black, Indigenous scholars, artists, and organizers of color on social media. I began to understand the relationship between the U.S. and Israel, the struggle for liberation in Palestine, and oppressed peopleĀ around the world.Ā
I learned from Angela Davis about the solidarity between those in Ferguson, Missouri, and the Palestinians who offered organizersĀ concrete toolsĀ to deal with a militarized police force trained by Israel, and I learned from Nick Estes onĀ oil, land, and settler colonialismĀ in the fight against the Dakota Access Pipeline. An especially eye-opening moment was when I readĀ Roxanne Dunbar-Ortizās book āAn Indigenous Peoplesā History of the United Statesā and saw the same myths I was taught in Israel reflected in the settler-colonialist ideology of the U.S. I also learned fromĀ Harsha WaliaĀ on the violence of borders; fromĀ Mariame KabaĀ on policing and prison abolition; and I am constantly learning fromĀ Imani BarbarinĀ about ableism and disability as a thread that connects all forms of oppression. And I have been fortunate to learn from Palestinians like Noura Erakat aboutĀ Israeli apartheid. Other Israelis likeĀ Ilan PappeĀ helped untangle some of the myths that Zionism tells the world. It is through this ever-growing learning and my understanding of my role as a settler in the U.S. that I was able to reflect and understand my role as a settler growing up in colonized Palestine and the interconnected nature of the struggles of Palestinians, the ongoing genocide in Gaza, theĀ millionsĀ displacedĀ andĀ killedĀ in theĀ Democratic Republic of CongoĀ andĀ Sudan, and the militarization of police forces here in the U.S. as we see in the flagrant example of AtlantaāsĀ CopĀ Cityājust to name a few of the current struggles.
Modern Zionism, which emerged in the 1800s, is an unethical, immoral, and evilĀ settler-colonial project, held together byĀ lies,Ā racism,Ā propaganda, and the support of world superpowers with theirĀ own interestsĀ in theĀ resource-richĀ region. It cannot provide a āsafe havenā for Jews, and Zionism is antithetical to Jewish values. We see this in the way the government, currently led by genocidal fascist Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, is willing toĀ killĀ Israelis,Ā hostagesĀ (some of whomĀ gaveĀ accountsĀ of Oct. 7 and theirĀ timeĀ inĀ captivityĀ that do not suit the Israeli narrative of ruthless, senseless, barbaric behavior from Hamas), and staff fromĀ international medical organizationsĀ and theĀ United NationsĀ while bombarding Gaza. We see it in theĀ repressionĀ ofĀ protestsĀ in Israelāthe nature of which Palestinians haveĀ critiqued. We see it in the way that Israel treats Israeli Holocaust survivors, a third of whomĀ live below the poverty lineĀ and must choose between food and other basic necessities at times. One could also easily make the argument that antisemitism is beneficial to a settler colony that isĀ built and sustainedĀ by the fear of its settlers. Hence, it is to Israelās benefit toĀ flame the firesĀ of antisemitism, making JewsĀ worldwideĀ less safe. The founder of modern political Zionism, Theodor Herzl,Ā himself claimedĀ antisemites āwill become our most dependable friends, the anti-Semitic countries our allies.ā
Living in Israel, I saw how well the manufacturing of history and the dehumanization of Palestinians worked to create a society and culture thatĀ celebrates and demandsĀ the death of Palestinians. Palestinians are being portrayed asĀ wantingĀ to enact genocide by chanting, āFrom the river to the sea, Palestine will be free,ā a chant thatĀ representsĀ liberationĀ from occupation andĀ equality for all. However, it is Israelis and Zionists who not only useĀ fascist,Ā genocidalĀ rhetoric,, but alsoĀ materially make it so:Ā enacting pogroms; enforcingĀ enclosures and blockades; turning off power, food, and water supplies toĀ millions; demolishingĀ homes; andĀ ethnicĀ cleansingĀ as the entire world has seen time and time again and especially in this bloody, ruthless campaign to eviscerate Gaza. The surgeon Ghassan Abu Sitta, who has been working tirelessly in Gaza with countless wounded, correctly framed thisĀ as such: āWe are facing a killing machine masquerading as a state.āĀ The clarity of this moment shows that as much as Palestinians are dedicated to life, water, and land, Israel and Zionists are as dedicated to death and destruction.
That is why Israel is so terrified nowāthe lies and propaganda simply cannot counter the overwhelming truth that we have access to thanks to journalists and people in Gaza, likeĀ Motaz Azaiza,Ā Plestia Alaqad,Ā Refaat Alareer,Ā Bisan Owda,Ā Eman Basher, and others who are risking not only theirĀ own livesĀ to share whatĀ they can, but alsoĀ their familiesā, as IsraelĀ targets them as punishmentĀ (at the time of publishing this op-ed, IsraelĀ has killedĀ 50 Palestinian and three Lebanese reporters). Meanwhile, mainstream media reporters likeĀ Bel TrewĀ andĀ Sara SidnerĀ and outlets likeĀ The New York Times, The Guardian, andĀ CNNĀ have beenĀ manufacturing consent for IsraelĀ to commit this genocide by acting as stenographers, repeating U.S. government and IsraeliĀ propagandaĀ without questioning it and perpetuating violentlyĀ racist and IslamophobicĀ stereotypes.
The response to my letter has been overwhelmingly supportive. I blocked any Zionist who reached out, like an Israeli who sent me a direct message on Instagram saying, āwhat is it like not to have friends or family?ā But I received heartfelt messages from Palestinians inviting me to their homes and families, some even telling me that they did not know a single person who had not read my letter. Lebanese people, a people who have also suffered tremendously fromĀ Zionist violence, offered me a community and a family. Many anti-Zionist Jews have responded, some now looking to take a similar action. For a little while, the tender responses to my letter moved me to tears. I felt, and still feel, that I did not deserve it and wish to take the space here to deeply thank each person who has reached out, commented, or shared my letter. It is not lost on me that as a white, Ashkenazi Jewish Israeli man, the response has been mostly positive, while my friends and othersĀ are killed, sufferĀ doxxing,Ā horrificĀ racist and Islamophobic abuse andĀ violence,Ā intimidation, andĀ economicĀ repercussionsĀ for choosing to speak against genocide orĀ simply existing.
Our call for a free Palestine demands that we understand that it will not take just a singular action but collective work. That it will take time and commitment. It demands clarity in ourĀ anti-colonial struggleĀ and the centering ofĀ PalestinianĀ voices. It demands that we keep each other safeāfromĀ McCarthyism,Ā policing, and state-sanctionedĀ deathĀ andĀ disabilityĀ through our current SARS pandemicāby wearing a high-quality mask, covering up, and protecting ourselves from surveillance. Together, our resolve must be steadfast and resilient, as ofĀ olive trees.
Every moral and ethical part of my bones, flesh, and soul leaves me with only one viable option: to unequivocally renounce my Israeli citizenship.Ā Mohammed el-Kurd saidĀ āWe chant for our freedom while they chant for our death, that should tell you all you need to know about the settler state.ā This is why I choose to say: From the river to the sea, PalestineĀ will be free.
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