Fighting the opportunists who profit from genocide

Fighting the opportunists who profit from genocide

The global solidarity movement must not be permitted to mutate into a careerist industry for self-serving individuals (File/AFP)
The global solidarity movement must not be permitted to mutate into a careerist industry for self-serving individuals (File/AFP)
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It all started with a call to my family in a displacement camp in northern Gaza. Since internet lines rarely stay connected, I managed to send a message to the widow of my cousin, who was killed along with all of his sons during the Gaza genocide. I asked her a simple question: What do the people of Gaza want?

My purpose was to gather raw testimonies from her neighbors to weave into a letter to a European official whose country is active in pursuing justice for Palestinians. I chose this approach to bypass cliched political discourse and avoid the pitfall of speaking on behalf of those enduring genocide and famine. Palestinians in Gaza are entirely capable of speaking for themselves.

The responses, however, reframed my entire approach. While I am deeply tied to my community in Gaza, I had anticipated a direct focus on macro-political language — on statehood, rights and global justice. Instead, I was met with the visceral reality of immediate physical survival.

“We want a life … we want a dignified life,” she said. “A dignified life with food, water and even the ability to breathe. One feels so suffocated. We need so many things … so, so many things. We need psychological support, financial support and moral support.”

Another neighbor said: “They (Israel) fight us with everything, absolutely everything; even when we are sleeping in our beds … the mosquitoes drain us. Insects and rats are all around us, fleas, and the heat is killing us. There are no fans and there is no electricity.”

This corporate approach to ‘peacebuilding’ is not unique; it is a symptom of a broader trend exploiting Palestine

Dr. Ramzy Baroud

Yes, many spoke about “karameh” (dignity), “hurriye” (freedom) and “Haq Al-Awda” (the right of return), but these broad political and social rights were almost always tied directly to the everyday struggle for education, water and basic medical care — and against rats.

The rats. This is the recurring nightmare in the minds of Gaza’s parents, who find themselves unable to protect their children even from rodents. Nearly 2 million Palestinians remain displaced in horrific conditions, trapped in barely 40 percent of an already tiny, besieged enclave.

I spent the day trying to process the pain, grief and humble expectations of these proud people.

Yet, later that evening, a seemingly separate matter came to my attention. I learned of two characters — Aziz Abu Sarah, a Palestinian from the 1948 areas, and Maoz Inon, an Israeli — who have been touring for months, promoting what they call their “The Future is Peace” tour. These two individuals have achieved global celebrity status, sitting down with the likes of US comedian Jon Stewart on “The Daily Show” and meeting Pope Francis.

To the untrained eye, they are peddling a message of peace and forgiveness, routinely staging a display where they forgive each other at the end of their talks. All of this serves as the promotional springboard for a week-long “peace tour” inside Israel they are running in October. Tickets are being sold for $4,200 per person, air tickets excluded.

The sad truth is that this corporate approach to “peacebuilding” is not unique; it is a symptom of a broader trend exploiting Palestine. Even more tragically, many individual Palestinians have capitalized on the well-intentioned, but often misunderstood, concept of “centering Palestinian voices” to accumulate personal wealth, status and prestige, while their own brethren cannot find drinkable water and teeter on the brink of starvation.

The Arab maxim, famous in Palestine for generations, has long contended that “the revolution is a tree watered by the blood of the martyrs, and its fruits are plucked by the opportunists and the cowards.”

Should mass extermination not be a moral threshold that stops opportunists from feeding their pathological greed?

The balance between genuine solidarity and outright exploitation at times risks tipping in favor of the exploiters

Dr. Ramzy Baroud

Desperate for solidarity, Palestinians in Gaza continue to hope that global efforts will eventually aid their raw struggle for freedom, dignity, clean water and relief from the rats. And millions worldwide are indeed well-meaning; they care about Gaza in ways that no social media post can ever capture.

The crisis is that the balance between genuine solidarity and outright exploitation at times risks tipping in favor of the exploiters. We are witnessing the rise of a lucrative cult of personality, built on high speaker fees and business-class airline tickets, circumnavigating the globe under the guise of advocacy. There are those who have experienced a literal rags to riches transformation since Oct. 7, becoming overnight celebrities and acting like heroic figures surrounded by adoring fans, simply for doing their basic jobs or taking a moral public position.

There are organizations with massive budgets, hosting events costing up to $200,000 over a single weekend, simply to regurgitate the same old stances without strategy, slogans without action plans and claims of stupendous “victories” while Gaza’s people die of thirst and hunger.

On the other hand, Palestinian officials and those who tout the official line continue to turn their back on the reality of Gaza while reaping the immense benefits of global solidarity: the prestige of diplomatic recognition, the red carpets rolled out for bureaucrats and the standing ovations at international conferences.

The circle of exploitation grows wider, while the actual messages filtering out from the displacement camps grow more tragic by the day. “I want my family back — the family Israel took from me.” “I want to bury my children who are still under the rubble.” “I want my father released from prison. We have no one else but him.” “The rats, the rats, brother. They are eating the flesh of our children.”

As I reflected on the horror of those parents who are helpless to protect their children, the word “rats” took on a heavier meaning.

The struggle for Palestinian freedom must remain anchored in the soil of Gaza. The global solidarity movement must not be permitted to mutate into a careerist industry for self-serving individuals masquerading as saviors. This creeping opportunism must be fought with the same urgency as the literal rats of Gaza.

  • Dr. Ramzy Baroud is a journalist, author and the editor of The Palestine Chronicle. His latest book, ‘Before the Flood,’ was published by Seven Stories Press. His website is ramzybaroud.net. X: @RamzyBaroud
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