I’ve resisted a bit writing about this topic, out of fear of being too clichè—but also because it can be argued that what I’m going to talk about is a given, proven time and again throughout history. And yet, with the realities we—as Palestinians and as human beings within our struggle for liberation—are facing, it becomes all the more important to remind ourselves that our existence can manifest itself through our continuous artworks, in their various forms.
In a world that constantly tries to reduce us to numbers, headlines, and footnotes, poetry insists on our full humanity. It is our artistic and cultural thumbprint: a living archive that can challenge, unsettle, and even debunk the colonial powers’ narrative—especially when those powers have so often been the only ones allowed to dictate what will be written in the future’s history books… when they can.
Whenever I think about resisting or defying injustice when you are completely powerless, probably the grimmest example I know is people at Auschwitz inverting the “B” in the infamous “Arbeit macht frei” (“Work sets you free”) sign at the entrance of the camp—a subtle last and final act of defiance.
A small act of defiance can be the differentiating factor between being subservient—between giving up and accepting a miserable ending—and not breaking. And sometimes, not breaking is the only way you can actually defeat your oppressor.
The entrance to Auschwitz concentration camp ca. 1945
I find it especially significant, culturally, when it comes to poetry. Poetry has always been that transcendent art form—one that can alleviate our existential dread in this life and this world. It has portrayed the human condition with a spin of beauty, and when things got darker, then maybe even with some irony. It has proven to us that even as we face death, even as we are threatened with extermination, we can still dream. We can still resist—simply by immortalizing our words.
In this short article, I’ll introduce a few translated poems, or excerpts from longer poems, that amplify this idea: resistance under oppression.
Enemy of the Sun by Samih al-Qasim
I may – if you wish – lose my livelihood I may sell my shirt and bed. I may work as a stone cutter, A street sweeper, a porter. I may clean your stores Or rummage your garbage for food. I may lie down hungry, O enemy of the sun, But I shall not compromise And to the last pulse in my veins I shall resist.
You may take the last strip of my land, Feed my youth to prison cells. You may plunder my heritage. You may burn my books, my poems Or feed my flesh to the dogs. You may spread a web of terror On the roofs of my village, O enemy of the sun, But I shall not compromise And to the last pulse in my veins I shall resist.
You may put out the light in my eyes. You may deprive me of my mother’s kisses. You may curse my father, my people. You may distort my history, You may deprive my children of a smile And of life’s necessities. You may fool my friends with a borrowed face. You may build walls of hatred around me. You may glue my eyes to humiliations, O enemy of the sun, But I shall not compromise And to the last pulse in my veins I shall resist.
O enemy of the sun The decorations are raised at the port. The ejaculations fill the air, A glow in the hearts, And in the horizon A sail is seen Challenging the wind And the depths. It is Ulysses Returning home From the sea of loss
It is the return of the sun, Of my exiled ones And for her sake, and his I swear I shall not compromise And to the last pulse in my veins I shall resist, Resist—and resist.
Promises from the Storm by Mahmoud Darwish
Let it be… I might as well refuse death, to burn away the tears of weeping songs, to strip the olive tree of every false and borrowed branch.
And if I sing of joy behind the eyelids of frightened eyes, it is because the storm has promised me wine, and fresh toasts, and rainbows.
Because the storm has swept away the dull voices of the birds, and torn the borrowed branches from the steadfast little trees.
Let it be… I must take pride in you, O wound of the city — you, a streak of lightning painted across our sorrowed nights.
The street may scowl in my face, but you shield me from its shadows and its stares of spite.
And so I will sing of joy behind the eyelids of frightened eyes — for since the storm has risen in my land, it has promised me wine, and rainbows.
Children of the Stones by Nizar Qabbani (an excerpt)
They dazzled the world— with nothing in their hands but stones. They shone like lanterns, came like good tidings. They resisted… exploded… fell as martyrs…
And we remained— polar bears, skins thick against the heat.
They fought for us, until they were slain. And we sat in our cafés— like spit inside a shell.
One of us searches for a trade, one begs for a new billion, a fourth wife, with breasts sculpted by civilization.
One hunts for a mansion in London, one trades in weapons, one drinks away his vengeance in bars, one dreams of throne, army, and emirate.
Ah— O generation of betrayals, generation of waste, generation of prostitution—
You shall be swept away— no matter how slow history may seem— by the children of the stones.
For the sake of remembrance, I would like to end this article with a poem by a martyred poet from Gaza. It is not, strictly speaking, a poem about resistance—but it reminds us why we need hope in our lives, even when everything feels bleak.
Not Just Passing by Hiba Abu Nada (translated by Huda Fakhreddine)
Yesterday, a star said to the little light in my heart, We are not mere passersby. Do not die. Beneath this glow some wanderers go on walking.
You were first created out of love, so carry nothing but love to those who are trembling.
One day, all gardens sprouted from our names, from what remained of the hearts of lovers.
Since the inception, this ancient language has taught us how to heal others with our yearning
how to be a heavenly sent to relax their tightening lungs: a welcome sigh, a gasp of oxygen.
Gently, we pass over wounds, like gauze, a hint of relief, an aspirin.
O little light in me, don’t die, even if all the galaxies of the world grew narrow… say: Enter my heart in peace. All of you, come in!
Interested in our work? Would you like to help us organize, write, or take part in solidarity efforts? We would be glad to have you join us at Tadamun. Resistance requires action.
Die für eine der Solidarität verpflichteten Bewegung teilweise unerträgliche Kritik an unseren Kolleginnen von der Histadrut auch in gewerkschaftlichen Bünden verurteilen wir scharf. Nirgendwo anders werden Gewerkschaften mit dem Handeln ihrer Regierung gleichgesetzt und dafür verantwortlich gemacht. Die Histadrut steht immer wieder an der Spitze von Protesten gegen die israelische Regierung und setzt sich für ein friedliches Miteinander und den Austausch zwischen allen Beschäftigten ein.
In English:
We sharply condemn the at times unbearable criticism of our colleagues from the Histadrut, even within trade union federations, which claim to be committed to solidarity. Nowhere else are trade unions equated with the actions of their government and held responsible for them. The Histadrut has repeatedly been at the forefront of protests against the Israeli government and advocates for peaceful coexistence and exchange among all workers.
Taking a step back: why is the Histadrut subject to criticism at all? This article addresses that question by examining the Histadrut’s role, practices, political positioning, and its role in Israeli the war machine. On this basis, it argues that criticism is not only well-founded but necessary. Moreover, if the DGB is genuinely committed to “peace in the Middle East,” it must fundamentally reassess—and ultimately sever—its partnership with the Histadrut.
Founded in December 1920, the Histadrut—the General Federation of Hebrew Workers in Palestine—was established to secure the economic foundations of the Zionist project. Its core mission was not simply to organize workers, but to create and protect a Jewish labor force by excluding Palestinian Arab labor from key sectors of the economy. Through the doctrine of avodah ivrit (“Hebrew labor”), the Histadrut turned labor organization into a mechanism of colonization, linking employment to national belonging and transforming the workplace into a frontier of settlement.
From the outset, the Histadrut was both a union and an employer, owning enterprises, land, and industries that advanced Zionist colonization. Its companies—most prominently Solel Boneh—constructed roads, military outposts, and settlements, embedding the federation in the material infrastructure of the emerging Jewish state. As a central pillar of the Yishuv’s economic system, the Histadrut coordinated with the Jewish Agency and other state-building organs to exclude Palestinian workers, dismantle mixed unions, and monopolize employment through Jewish-only cooperatives and hiring halls.
After 1948, the Histadrut’s dual role as labor federation and development agency deepened. It became one of Israel’s largest employers, controlling major industrial, construction, and financial firms under its holding company Hevrat HaOvdim. These enterprises built the new state’s infrastructure while entrenching a racially segmented labor market that privileged Jewish citizens and relegated Palestinians—whether citizens of Israel or residents of the occupied territories—to precarious, low-wage positions outside collective representation.
By 1967, this institutional model had merged seamlessly with Israel’s occupation regime, subordinating Palestinian labor to Israeli regulatory power. Histadrut-affiliated firms such as Solel Boneh and Bank Yahav extended their activities into settlements in the West Bank and annexed East Jerusalem, while Palestinian workers in these same areas remained unrepresented. The federation’s continued integration with the settlement economy made it a direct participant in the consolidation of occupation.
The Military Role of the Histadrut
The Histadrut anchors organized labor inside Israel’s military-industrial complex, chiefly through its Metal, Electrical and High-Tech Workers Union, which represents employees at Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI), Rafael Advanced Defense Systems, and Elbit Systems. These firms produce core war-fighting systems—IAI’s missiles, UAVs, and C2 platforms; Rafael’s air and missile-defense and precision munitions; and Elbit’s electro-optics and battlefield electronics—central to Israel’s genocide in Gaza.
In this capacity, the Histadrut does not merely coexist with Israel’s war economy; it enables and sustains it, ensuring that labor power remains fully mobilized in the service of Israel’s continuing assault on Gaza.
The DGB has never been blind to the Histadrut’s historic role in the colonization of palestine, or its role in the . In its brochure “50 Jahre Partnerschaftsabkommen zwischen DGB und Histadrut”, it notes that “the Histadrut was practically a ‘state within the state.’” The federation’s support for Israel’s labor movement was not merely symbolic but consistently material—especially at pivotal moments. During the 1967 Six-Day War, for example, the DGB purchased an additional 3 million DM in development-aid bonds (Israel Bonds), publicly expressing confidence in Israel’s survival and democracy.
As the DGB Youth explicitly stated in Motion E011 “Boykotte boykottieren”, they branded BDS “anti-Israeli,” reaffirmed a two-state line, and distanced themselves from cultural, political, scientific, and economic boycotts of Israel. In practice, that stance delegitimized a key non-violent accountability tool and helped sideline BDS in labor forums. Coupled with defending the Histadrut while Palestinian workers remain excluded, and with German industry’s ongoing ties to Israeli firms (including war- and settlement-linked sectors), this posture shields the institutions underpinning Israeli apartheid—criticizing only its most visible violence while leaving its foundations intact.
Conclusion
What began as a gesture of postwar reconciliation has long since turned into complicity with a colonial project. The DGB’s partnership with the Histadrut — an institution that functions not as a vehicle of workers’ liberation but as a pillar of Zionist state power — embodies a deep contradiction at the heart of German labor internationalism. The Histadrut has never been a neutral trade union. From its founding, it has operated as an instrument of Jewish settlement, exclusion, and militarization. It is part of the political and economic structure that sustains Israel’s apartheid regime and its war economy.
By bargaining for the well-being of soldiers and reservists, by stabilizing Israeli civil society amid war, repression, and global outrage, and through its silence on the ongoing Gaza genocide, the Histadrut actively reinforces the occupation and the colonial order it depends upon. It negotiates not for the emancipation of all workers, but for the maintenance of privilege within an ethno-national state. To continue cooperation with such an institution — while Palestinian workers remain dispossessed, unrepresented, and exploited — is to abandon the principle of class solidarity in favor of nationalist loyalty.
It simply goes against the very concept of international worker solidarity to stand with a colonial labor federation that denies labor rights to those under occupation. It is not enough to condemn “extremism” or criticize “individual settlers” while ignoring the systemic role of Zionism and the Histadrut in perpetuating Palestinian exclusion and dispossession. The struggle for justice demands a break with this complicity.
If the DGB is serious about its proclaimed commitment to peace, it must act accordingly. That means ending its partnership with the Histadrut, supporting the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement, and exerting pressure on German industry to sever all ties with Israel’s military-industrial complex and companies profiting from occupation and settlement. This is not simply a suggestion — it is an imperative of international worker solidarity.
To remain silent or neutral in the face of colonial and genocidal violence is to side with the oppressor. True solidarity lies with the Palestinian working class — those whose land, labor, and lives have been stolen, and who continue to resist against overwhelming power. Breaking with the Histadrut would not betray the principles of labor internationalism — it would restore them, aligning the German labor movement with the global struggle for justice, liberation, equality, and decolonization, from the Jordan to the Mediterranean.
This article argues that genuine solidarity with Palestine must be rooted in an antiracist framework. It traces the history of Zionism from its colonial origins to the present genocide in Gaza and the entrenched apartheid in the West Bank, revealing how racial narratives underpin and sustain Western — and especially German — political support for these crimes. By exposing the global nature of these racial logics, it makes the case that confronting Zionism abroad is inseparable from dismantling racism wherever it operates.
Early Zionist Thought and Colonial Self-Identification
UNSPECIFIED – CIRCA 1897: Theodor Herzl at the balcony of the hotel in Basel where he stayed during the Zionist congress overlooking the Rhine river, Switzerland, Photograph, 1897 (Photo by Imagno/Getty Images)
Theodor Herzl, regarded as the father of political Zionism, articulated the movement’s colonial orientation from its inception. Writing in the context of European imperial expansion and the so-called “Scramble for Africa,” Herzl drew directly on the language and logic of settler colonialism. In his 1896 pamphlet Der Judenstaat1, he referred to “important experiments in colonization” already underway in Palestine and argued that Jews “should form a portion of a rampart of Europe against Asia, an outpost of civilization as opposed to barbarism”2. Such framing positioned the Zionist project not only as a nationalist endeavor but as a contribution to the broader “civilizing mission” of European colonial powers.
We should form a portion of a rampart of Europe against Asia, an outpost of civilization as opposed to barbarism.
Theodor Herzl, The Jewish State (Der Judenstaat)
Herzl also sought to align Zionism with prominent imperial figures of his time. In 1902, he wrote to Cecil Rhodes—the British imperialist, mining magnate, and Prime Minister of the Cape Colony whose colonization of southern Africa became emblematic of settler colonialism—explicitly describing the Zionist project as “something colonial”3. By appealing to Rhodes, Herzl signaled that Zionism was not opposed to colonialism, but rather saw itself as part of its global expansionist framework. This willingness to situate the Jewish national movement within the strategic and ideological currents of European imperialism would later shape the alliances Zionist leaders pursued with colonial powers, most notably Britain during the Mandate period.
This self-identification with colonialism was not limited to Theodor Herzl; it was shared across the early leadership of the Zionist movement. Vladimir Jabotinsky, the founder of Revisionist Zionism, openly characterized the movement as “a colonization adventure”4. A staunch advocate of a maximalist territorial vision, Jabotinsky argued that Jewish settlement in Palestine required the open and unapologetic application of colonial methods, including the use of force to overcome Indigenous resistance—a view famously articulated in his 1923 essay “The Iron Wall”5. For Jabotinsky, the aim was not merely agricultural colonization but the establishment of an ethnonational state secured through demographic transformation and military strength.
Max Nordau, Herzl’s close collaborator and vice president of the World Zionist Organization, likewise rejected gradualist or small-scale approaches. Speaking in 1905, he dismissed “all colonization on a small scale” in favor of a large, organized settler enterprise capable of transforming Palestine’s demographic and political realities6. Nordau’s position reflected a broader consensus among Zionist leaders that the project required systematic planning, substantial financial backing, and political sponsorship from imperial powers.
Building the Colonial Infrastructure through the Kibbutzim
Merhavia (kibbutz) in the Jezreel Valley. Palestine (later Israel) 1920. (Photo by: Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
Such statements reveal that the terms “colonial” and “colonization” were not, in this context, derogatory labels applied by critics, but self-ascriptions embraced within the Zionist movement. This rhetorical openness illustrates both the deep integration of Zionist thought within the imperial culture of the late 19th and early 20th centuries and the extent to which its leaders viewed their aims as part of the broader project of European settler colonialism7.
Major Zionist institutions embedded this colonial identity in their very names and organizational mandates. The Jewish Colonisation Association, founded in 1891 by Baron Maurice de Hirsch, financed agricultural settlement for Jews in Palestine and other territories as part of a broader colonization program8. The Jewish Colonial Trust, established in 1899 as the financial arm of the World Zionist Organization, served as the central bank for settlement activities9. The Jewish Agency, which emerged from the Palestine Office of the Zionist Organization, maintained a dedicated colonization department responsible for land purchase, agricultural planning, and demographic engineering10. Land acquired through these bodies—whether purchased or allocated—was held under restrictive covenants administered by the Jewish National Fund (JNF), which prohibited transfer or lease to non-Jews, thereby ensuring permanent Jewish control over territory11.
By the early 20th century, Zionist policy extended beyond land acquisition to the regulation of labor. In 1905, elements within the movement formalized the principle of avoda ivrit (Hebrew labor), which required that Jewish-owned enterprises employ exclusively Jewish workers12. This doctrine was explicitly designed to displace Palestinian Arab labor from the agricultural sector, restructure the rural economy to favor Jewish settlers, and cultivate self-sufficient agricultural communities capable of sustaining the Zionist national project13. The policy was enforced both economically—through preferential allocation of land and resources—and politically, via the institutional authority of Zionist labor organizations such as the Histadrut after its founding in 192014.
On the ground, these interlinked policies materialized most visibly in the creation of kibbutzim—collectivist, all-Jewish agricultural settlements. Established from the early 20th century onwards, kibbutzim were deliberately located in strategic-only settlements beyond Israel’s pre-1967 borders, embodying the combination of agricultural production, demographic exclusivity, and military preparedness that characterized the Zionist approach to colonization15. In many cases, the establishment of a kibbutz directly displaced Palestinian communities, appropriated cultivated fields, and integrated the land into the settler economy, further consolidating Jewish demographic dominance in targeted regions16.
These practices were not incidental byproducts of settlement but integral components of a deliberate strategy to create what Gershon Shafir has termed an “ethnic labor economy,” in which access to both land and employment was racially delimited in order to foster a self-contained settler society17. The insistence on avoda ivrit and the kibbutz model not only excluded Palestinian Arab labor, but also severed the economic interdependence that had historically existed between Arab and Jewish communities in Palestine18. This separation reinforced a dual economic structure: a relatively capital-intensive, mechanized, and subsidized Jewish sector oriented toward export markets, and an increasingly marginalized Arab sector subject to land dispossession, wage depression, and restricted access to resources19. By embedding these exclusions into the institutional framework of the Yishuv, Zionist leaders laid the groundwork for a system of spatial and economic segregation that would persist—and later be codified in law—well beyond the establishment of the State of Israel20.
The Nakba and the Settler-Colonial Structure
The 1948 Palestinian exodus, known in Arabic as the Nakba (Arabic: an-Nakbah, lit.’catastrophe‘), occurred when more than 700,000 Palestinian Arabs fled or were expelled from their homes, during the 1947Ð1948 Civil War in Mandatory Palestine and the 1948 ArabÐIsraeli War. The exact number of refugees is a matter of dispute, but around 80 percent of the Arab inhabitants of what became Israel (50 percent of the Arab total of Mandatory Palestine) left or were expelled from their homes. Later in the war, Palestinians were forcibly expelled as part of ‚Plan Dalet‘ in a policy of ‚ethnic cleansing‘. (Photo by: Pictures From History/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
As historian Rashid Khalidi has noted, Zionism was both a colonial and a national project. In a Vox interview, he explained: “Zionism, of course, has a national aspect, but as early Zionists all understood and accepted and were not ashamed of, it was a colonial project. It was a settler-colonial movement to bring persecuted Jews from Europe to Palestine, where they would establish a Jewish majority state”21. In a separate Current Affairs interview, Khalidi emphasized the distinctiveness of the Zionist project: unlike English settlers in North America or Australia, or French settlers in Algeria, Zionist settlers were not the direct emanation of a “mother country.” Rather, it was an independent nationalist enterprise whose success depended on sustained support from European imperial powers, particularly Britain during the Mandate period. Khalidi stressed that “without the backing of great European colonial powers [it] would never have been able to succeed”22.
The settler-colonial nature of Zionism became fully evident in 1948 during the Nakba (“catastrophe”), when an estimated 750,000 Palestinians were expelled or fled from their homes in present-day Israel. An Israeli Defense Forces intelligence report from that year acknowledged that “without a doubt, hostilities were the main factor in the population movement”23. These refugees and their descendants were denied the right to return, even as the 1950 Law of Return granted automatic citizenship to Jews worldwide24.
Patrick Wolfe’s influential model of settler colonialism helps explain this trajectory. In contrast to classical colonialism, which focuses on exploiting Indigenous labor and resources, settler colonialism is “a structure, not an event,” aimed at eliminating the native population and replacing it with a settler society25. This elimination can occur through direct expulsion, assimilation, segregation, and legal disenfranchisement. Israel’s ongoing settlement expansion—currently including nearly 700,000 settlers in the occupied West Bank—alongside its control over Palestinian movement, land, and resources, has led numerous scholars and human rights organizations to classify it as a continuing form of settler colonialism26.
Genocide in Gaza
GAZA STRIP – AUGUST 5: Palestinians struggle with hunger amid Israeli attacks as the people rush to an aid distribution point near the Zikim Crossing in northwestern Gaza Strip on August 5, 2025. (Photo by Mahmoud Issa/Anadolu via Getty Images)
The Israeli military campaign in the Gaza Strip since October 2023 has been characterized by numerous human rights organizations, UN experts, and legal scholars as meeting the criteria for genocide under the 1948 Genocide Convention27. By early 2024, the death toll in Gaza had exceeded 30,000, with thousands more unaccounted for under rubble, the vast majority being civilians, including a disproportionately high number of children28. The destruction extended to hospitals, schools, water and sanitation infrastructure, and the deliberate blocking of humanitarian aid — measures explicitly prohibited under international humanitarian law29.
The International Court of Justice (ICJ), in provisional measures ordered on 26 January 2024 in South Africa v. Israel, found that there was a plausible risk of genocide in Gaza and instructed Israel to prevent genocidal acts and allow humanitarian access30. Despite this, reports from the UN and NGOs such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch indicate that Israel intensified its military operations, including indiscriminate bombardments and the weaponization of siege conditions to induce famine31.
Indeed, mounting evidence shows that Israel has been using starvation as a deliberate tool of genocide. Amnesty International has documented that “Israel’s continued blocking of aid and attacks on food supplies point to the use of starvation to destroy the Palestinian population in Gaza.”32 B’Tselem has described Israel’s policy as “manufacturing famine” and committing “the war crime of starvation in the Gaza Strip.”33 Médecins Sans Frontières reports that their staff and patients are “wasting away as mass starvation spreads across Gaza,”34 describing the siege as a “death trap” and part of a campaign of total destruction.35
Reactions from Western political elites have largely failed to acknowledge or act upon these findings. In the United States, military aid and diplomatic cover at the UN Security Council continued unabated36. In the European Union, while some member states expressed concern over humanitarian conditions, leading powers such as Germany, France, and the UK maintained arms exports to Israel and publicly defended its military actions as self-defense37. The German government, in particular, not only rejected accusations of genocide but also filed to intervene on Israel’s behalf at the ICJ38. This alignment with Israeli policy occurred despite Germany’s international legal obligations under the Genocide Convention to prevent and not be complicit in such crimes39.
These responses reveal a consistent pattern: Western states, while often championing human rights in other contexts, have shielded Israel from accountability. This selective application of international law reflects entrenched geopolitical alliances and, as numerous scholars have argued, a racialized hierarchy in which Palestinian life is systematically devalued40.
Germany between Genocide and Staatsräson
BERLIN, GERMANY – APRIL 09: The Israeli flag flies between the European Union and German flags outside the Reichstag on April 09, 2024 in Berlin, Germany. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)
Germany’s political establishment has been one of Israel’s most steadfast defenders during the ongoing war on Gaza, even as the International Court of Justice (ICJ) found a plausible risk of genocide in January 202441. Across the political spectrum, from the center-left Social Democratic Party (SPD) to the conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and the Greens (Bündnis 90/Die Grünen), senior leaders have framed unconditional support for Israel as a matter of “Staatsräson” — a core principle of German state policy42. This consensus even extends to Die Linke, a party once more critical of Israeli policy, whose parliamentary group in 2019 introduced the motion BDS-Bewegung ablehnen – Friedliche Lösung im Nahen Osten befördern in the Bundestag, explicitly rejecting the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement and framing it as incompatible with a peaceful resolution of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict.43
(To clarify: In May 2019, the German Bundestag debated two motions regarding the BDS movement. The motion by Die Linke titled „BDS-Bewegung ablehnen – Friedliche Lösung im Nahen Osten befördern“44 was rejected. In contrast, a joint motion by Bündnis 90/Die Grünen, CDU/CSU, SPD und FDP titled „Der BDS-Bewegung entschlossen entgegentreten – Antisemitismus bekämpfen“45 was adopted, marking the official parliamentary stance against BDS)
In public statements, SPD Chancellor Olaf Scholz, CDU leader Friedrich Merz, and Green Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock have consistently defended Israel’s military actions in Gaza, framing them as self-defense, despite mounting evidence of war crimes and the use of starvation as a weapon of war46. This political posture is reinforced by broad parliamentary support: in November 2023, the Bundestag passed a resolution condemning Hamas, affirming Israel’s right to military action, and making no mention of the ICJ proceedings or calls for a ceasefire47.
Even as footage from Gaza revealed mass civilian deaths, the destruction of entire neighborhoods, and UN warnings of famine, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz reaffirmed Germany’s alignment with Israel’s war policy. In an official statement on 8 August 2025, Merz maintained that “Israel has the right to defend itself against Hamas’ terror” while announcing only a temporary halt to exports of military equipment that could be used in the Gaza Strip48. By insisting on Israel’s “right to defend itself” even amidst allegations of genocide before the International Court of Justice—and having previously described Israel’s campaign as “the dirty work that Israel is doing for us all”49—the German government reinforced the Staatsräson doctrine, ensuring political protection for Israeli policies despite mounting evidence of atrocity crimes.
Das ist die Drecksarbeit, die Israel macht für uns alle. [This is the dirty work, that Israel does for us.]
Friedrich Merz, 17.06.2025
Public opinion in Germany has shifted notably under the impact of the war in Gaza. While decades of state policy have framed unconditional support for Israel as a moral imperative rooted in Holocaust remembrance, surveys now indicate a growing divergence from this official line. An ARD-DeutschlandTREND poll released on 7 August 2025 found that 66% of Germans wanted their government to put more pressure on Israel to change its conduct in Gaza, up from 57% in April 2024 according to a Forsa survey.50 Nearly half (47%) believe Berlin is doing too little for Palestinians, and only 31% still feel Germany bears a “special responsibility” toward Israel because of its history, while 62% reject this core tenet of Staatsräson.51 These numbers reflect a hardening mood among the public, particularly among younger demographics and migrant communities, even as the political establishment remains committed to defending Israel’s military actions and limiting criticism to humanitarian appeals.
Central to Germany’s political and media discourse has been the weaponization of the term “antisemitism” to silence criticism of Israeli policy. The 2019 Bundestag resolution labeling the BDS movement as antisemitic52 has since been used to justify the cancellation of events, denial of public funding, and defamation of Palestinian activists and their allies53. This expansive and politically charged definition conflates antisemitism — hostility toward Jews as Jews — with legitimate critique of a state’s policies. As scholars and human rights organizations have noted, such conflation undermines the fight against actual antisemitism by instrumentalizing it for foreign policy purposes54.
In this context, Germany’s response to the Gaza genocide reflects a broader pattern in which solidarity with Palestinians is marginalized through legal, political, and rhetorical means. This dynamic not only shields Israeli policy from accountability but also reinforces a racialized hierarchy in which Palestinian lives are systematically devalued55.
From Culture of Regret to a Racial Order of “Justice for Some”
Participants hold up placards reading ‚Fascists out‘ (L) and ‚ Fuck Nazis‘ during a demonstration against racism and far-right politics in Munich, southern Germany on January 21, 2024. (Photo by MICHAELA STACHE / AFP) (Photo by MICHAELA STACHE/AFP via Getty Images)
Germany’s celebrated Erinnerungskultur—its culture of regret and remembrance—has produced important reckonings with the Nazi past, yet it has also hardened into a civil religion that often equates moral rectitude with state loyalty to Israel56. In this frame, “antisemitism” is increasingly defined not as hostility toward Jews as Jews but as criticism of Israeli state policy, a shift codified politically (e.g., the 2019 Bundestag BDS resolution) and operationalized through cancellations, funding bans, and policing of Palestinian advocacy.575859The result is a narrowing of anti-racism into a state doctrine that, paradoxically, reproduces racial hierarchy: Palestinians, Arabs, and Muslims are rendered suspect publics whose speech is presumptively criminalized, while Jewish and non-Jewish critics of Israeli policy are surveilled or excluded. This is how a culture of regret, filtered through raison d’état, generates racial structures in the present.60
This narrowing also helps explain the social acceptability of mass civilian destruction in Gaza: when the vocabulary to condemn state violence is pre-emptively pathologized as “antisemitic,” the legal and moral tools that would otherwise trigger prevention duties (under the Genocide Convention and reflected in the ICJ’s provisional measures) are blunted.61 In practice, Germany’s stance performs what Noura Erakat calls “justice for some”: international law and memory are mobilized selectively to shield allies and discipline dissenters, rather than to constrain power consistently.62
Comparative memory sharpens the point. Germany’s 2021 declaration recognizing the genocide against the Herero and Nama was widely criticized by descendant communities as inadequate and negotiated without full representation, exposing the limits of contrition when it meets geopolitical and fiscal interests.6364 At home, the enduring antigypsyism faced by Sinti and Roma—documented by European rights bodies—shows how racial orders persist beneath commemorative surfaces, even toward groups central to the Nazi genocide.6566 Set against these patterns, the exceptionalism extended to Israel—despite findings and warnings by leading human rights organizations and UN bodies—reveals a continuity: remembrance becomes a national alibi, not an ethical constraint.
Conclusion
German riot police officers push back Pro-Palestinian demonstrators as they protest against the bombing in Gaza outside the Foreign Ministry in Berlin on October 18, 2023. (Photo by John MACDOUGALL / AFP) (Photo by JOHN MACDOUGALL/AFP via Getty Images)
If solidarity with Palestine is to be principled and effective, it must be antiracist by design. As Angela Davis reminds us, “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere” — a call that resonates across movements confronting racial domination and state violence.67 Palestinian activist and scholar Noura Erakat argues that “Palestine is a litmus test for the international order — whether law serves as an instrument of justice or a tool of domination”68, insisting that liberation requires dismantling racial hierarchies both in Palestine and in the countries that sustain Israeli apartheid. The 2016 platform of the Movement for Black Lives declares: “The US justifies and advances the global war on terror through its alliance with Israel, which is a key partner in the global militarization of police, border security, and the export of weapons”69 — explicitly tying anti-Black state violence in the US to the Israeli occupation.
Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere
Angela Davis, Freedom Is a Constant Struggle
International Indigenous and decolonial movements have long affirmed these connections. In 2014, Idle No More and Defenders of the Land stated: “We recognize the deep connections between the struggles of Indigenous peoples here and the Palestinian people’s fight against colonial dispossession and racial apartheid”70. In a 2014 communiqué on Gaza, the Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN) condemned Israel’s assault as “a war of extermination against the Palestinian people” and affirmed that, “as the Indigenous that we are, we know the people of Palestine will resist and rise up again… the Zapatistas embrace you now as we did before, as we always will, with our collective heart.”71 By framing Palestinian liberation as part of the global struggle of Indigenous and oppressed peoples against colonialism, the EZLN located Gaza’s resistance within a shared fight against dispossession and racism worldwide.
European anti-racist networks have underscored that the same political culture which criminalizes criticism of Israel in Germany also fuels the marginalization of Roma, Sinti, and Muslim communities, showing that remembrance, when weaponized, reproduces racial ordering at home.72
Principled solidarity means naming and opposing this racial ordering — one that turns remembrance into a tool of exclusion, recasts critique as bigotry, and normalizes catastrophe. Fighting Zionism “there” requires dismantling the racial logics “here” that make justice for some thinkable.
References
Theodor Herzl, Der Judenstaat (Leipzig & Vienna: M. Breitenstein’s Verlags-Buchhandlung, 1896). ↩︎
Theodor Herzl to Cecil Rhodes, January 11, 1902, in The Complete Diaries of Theodor Herzl, ed. Raphael Patai, vol. 4 (New York: Herzl Press and Thomas Yoseloff, 1960), pp. 1501–1502. ↩︎
Vladimir Jabotinsky, quoted in Walter Laqueur, A History of Zionism (New York: Schocken Books, 2003), p. 220. ↩︎
Vladimir Jabotinsky, “The Iron Wall (We and the Arabs),” Rassvyet (November 4, 1923), reprinted in Lenni Brenner, The Iron Wall: Zionist Revisionism from Jabotinsky to Shamir (London: Zed Books, 1984), pp. 33–40. ↩︎
Max Nordau, speech to the Seventh Zionist Congress, Basel, 1905, in Proceedings of the Zionist Congresses, vol. 2 (Basel: Zionist Organization, 1911), pp. 72–74. ↩︎
Derek Penslar, Zionism and Technocracy: The Engineering of Jewish Settlement in Palestine, 1870–1918 (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1991), pp. 16–19. ↩︎
Alex Bein, The Jewish Colonization Association (Jerusalem: Yad Izhak Ben-Zvi, 1961). ↩︎
The Jewish Colonial Trust, “Prospectus,” 1899, Central Zionist Archives (CZA), L3/27. ↩︎
Anita Shapira, Land and Power: The Zionist Resort to Force, 1881–1948 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1992), pp. 45–47. ↩︎
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Gershon Shafir, Land, Labor and the Origins of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict, 1882–1914 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989), pp. 92–110. ↩︎
Zachary Lockman, Comrades and Enemies: Arab and Jewish Workers in Palestine, 1906–1948 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996), pp. 53–60. ↩︎
Walid Khalidi, All That Remains: The Palestinian Villages Occupied and Depopulated by Israel in 1948 (Washington, D.C.: Institute for Palestine Studies, 1992). ↩︎
Gershon Shafir, Land, Labor and the Origins of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict, 1882–1914 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996), 15–17. ↩︎
Zachary Lockman, Comrades and Enemies: Arab and Jewish Workers in Palestine, 1906–1948 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996), 45–50. ↩︎
Rashid Khalidi, The Iron Cage: The Story of the Palestinian Struggle for Statehood (Boston: Beacon Press, 2006), 30–33. ↩︎
Tom Segev, One Palestine, Complete: Jews and Arabs under the British Mandate (New York: Henry Holt, 2000), 102–104. ↩︎
Quoted in Benny Morris, The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisited (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004), p. 239; original document available in English via Akevot Institute for Israeli-Palestinian Conflict Research, IDF Intelligence Branch, The Emigration of the Arabs of Palestine, June 1948, https://www.akevot.org.il/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/1948ISReport-Eng.pdf. ↩︎
Law of Return, 5710–1950, State of Israel, passed July 5, 1950. ↩︎
Patrick Wolfe, “Settler Colonialism and the Elimination of the Native,” Journal of Genocide Research 8, no. 4 (2006): 387–409. ↩︎
See, for example, Amnesty International, Israel’s Apartheid Against Palestinians: Cruel System of Domination and Crime Against Humanity (London: Amnesty International, 2022); Human Rights Watch, A Threshold Crossed: Israeli Authorities and the Crimes of Apartheid and Persecution (New York: HRW, 2021). ↩︎
United Nations Office of the Special Advisers on the Prevention of Genocide and the Responsibility to Protect, “Statement on the Situation in Gaza,” 15 November 2023. ↩︎
UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), “Hostilities in the Gaza Strip and Israel,” Situation Report, 5 March 2024. ↩︎
Amnesty International, Gaza: Israeli Attacks on Medical Facilities and Blockade Amount to War Crimes, 23 October 2023. ↩︎
International Court of Justice, Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide in the Gaza Strip (South Africa v. Israel), Order of 26 January 2024. ↩︎
Human Rights Watch, Israel: Starvation Used as Weapon of War in Gaza, 18 December 2023. ↩︎
Congressional Research Service, U.S. Foreign Aid to Israel, updated 7 February 2024. ↩︎
European Council on Foreign Relations, “Europe’s Reactions to the Gaza War,” Policy Brief, February 2024. ↩︎
Federal Republic of Germany, “Declaration of Intervention in the Case South Africa v. Israel,” ICJ, 12 February 2024. ↩︎
William A. Schabas, Genocide in International Law: The Crime of Crimes, 2nd ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009), pp. 345–347. ↩︎
Noura Erakat, Justice for Some: Law and the Question of Palestine (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2019), pp. 217–223. ↩︎
International Court of Justice, Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide in the Gaza Strip (South Africa v. Israel), Order of 26 January 2024. ↩︎
Federal Government of Germany, Press Statement by Chancellor Olaf Scholz, 12 October 2023; Foreign Office, “Statement by Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock on the Situation in the Middle East,” 20 October 2023; CDU Press Release, “Merz: Israel hat das Recht auf Selbstverteidigung,” 13 October 2023. ↩︎
Deutscher Bundestag, Drucksache 20/9195, 16 November 2023. ↩︎
“Statement by Federal Chancellor Friedrich Merz on the development in Gaza,” Press and Information Office of the Federal Government, 8 August 2025, bundeskanzler.de. ↩︎
Friedrich Merz, interview with ZDF, 17 June 2025, zdf.de↩︎
Deutscher Bundestag, Drucksache 19/10191, 17 May 2019. ↩︎
European Legal Support Center, Suppressing Palestinian Advocacy Through the Misuse of Antisemitism Definitions in Germany, 2021. ↩︎
Kenneth Stern, “I Drafted the Definition of Antisemitism. Rightwing Jews Are Weaponizing It,” The Guardian, 13 December 2019. ↩︎
Noura Erakat, Justice for Some: Law and the Question of Palestine (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2019), pp. 217–223. ↩︎
Aleida Assmann, The Long Shadow of the Past: Memory Culture and Historical Responsibility (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2006); Susan Neiman, Learning from the Germans: Race and the Memory of Evil (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2019). ↩︎
Deutscher Bundestag, Drucksache 19/10191, 17 May 2019. ↩︎
European Legal Support Center, Suppressing Palestinian Advocacy Through the Misuse of Antisemitism Definitions in Germany (2021). ↩︎
Kenneth Stern, “I Drafted the Definition of Antisemitism. Rightwing Jews Are Weaponizing It,” The Guardian, 13 December 2019. ↩︎
European Legal Support Center, Suppressing Palestinian Advocacy Through the Misuse of Antisemitism Definitions in Germany (2021). ↩︎
International Court of Justice, Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide in the Gaza Strip (South Africa v. Israel), Order of 26 January 2024. ↩︎
Noura Erakat, Justice for Some: Law and the Question of Palestine (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2019), pp. 217–223. ↩︎
German Federal Foreign Office, “Joint Declaration by Germany and Namibia,” 28 May 2021. ↩︎
Jürgen Zimmerer, “German Colonial Genocide: The Case of the Herero and Nama,” in The Oxford Handbook of Genocide Studies, ed. Donald Bloxham and A. Dirk Moses (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010), 403–422; Reinhart Kößler, Namibia and Germany: Negotiating the Past (Windhoek: University of Namibia Press, 2015). ↩︎
European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights, Roma and Travellers in Six Countries (2019); Council of Europe, ECRI, Report on Germany (2020) on antigypsyism. ↩︎
Zentralrat Deutscher Sinti und Roma, Antigypsyism Report (various years). ↩︎
Angela Y. Davis, Freedom Is a Constant Struggle: Ferguson, Palestine, and the Foundations of a Movement (Chicago: Haymarket Books, 2016), p. 15. ↩︎
Noura Erakat, Justice for Some: Law and the Question of Palestine (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2019), p. 228. ↩︎
Movement for Black Lives, “A Vision for Black Lives: Policy Demands for Black Power, Freedom & Justice,” 2016, https://m4bl.org/policy-platforms/. ↩︎