Pro-Palestine narrative faces challenges at every level of US society, speakers tell convention

From left to right: Amer Zahr, Jenin Younes, Edward Mitchell, Amir Makled and Amy Greer (Arab News)
Short Url
Updated 27 September 2025
Follow

Pro-Palestine narrative faces challenges at every level of US society, speakers tell convention

  • American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee presents awards for ‘courageous activism’
  • CodePink co-founder: ‘It’s our tax dollars and our bombs that are killing people’

DEARBORN: The pro-Palestine narrative faces challenges at every level of US society, speakers warned during panel discussions hosted by the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee and attended by Arab News on Friday.

ADC officials presented awards for “courageous activism.” 

Jewish and Arab education professionals said schools are targets of pro-Israel activists who conflate Judaism with Zionism, and criticism of Israel with antisemitism, as well as vilify those who defend Palestinian or Arab rights.

“Many teachers are afraid to teach some aspects of the Middle East and the Arab world because of Palestine and criticism of Israel, and that has a negative impact on the US population,” said California teacher Dr. Samia Shoman.

Sim Kern, a Jewish teacher from Texas, agreed, saying politically manipulated class instruction feeds these biases that stay with Americans as they grow into adulthood. “There’s an immense lack of knowledge that Judaism and Zionism aren’t the same,” he added.

Medea Benjamin, co-founder of activist group CodePink, said the challenge against anti-Arab and anti-Palestinian biases is most pressing in US politics, among both Democrats and Republicans.

“Knowing what the Israelis are doing, it gives me a sense of responsibility — especially as a US citizen — to know that it’s our tax dollars and our bombs that are killing people,” she added. “As a member of the Jewish community, that makes me feel an extra sense of responsibility.”

Benjamin said her parents sent her to live in a kibbutz in Israel, where she first met Palestinians “and came to love them and their culture.”

In her protests, she has confronted members of the Senate and Congress with the same question: “Why do you support the genocide and killing of women and children in Gaza?”

Benjamin, who has been arrested and detained numerous times, posts their lack of responses on her social media accounts, including to nearly 300,000 followers on TikTok and 200,000 followers on X.

ADC officials presented awards to Benjamin and to Palestinian activist Hazami Barmada, who has confronted members of both the Trump and Biden administrations.

“My job is to simply hold up pictures and ask people as they walk in and out of the White House, ‘Is this something you’re proud of?” said Barmada, a social entrepreneur and strategy consultant for the UN and founder of The Barmada Group, a Washington-based consulting firm.

“The haunting question carried me into the streets not because taking a risk to stop the genocide wasn’t scary, but because not taking the risk felt like betraying not only Palestinian children but my own child.”

Barmada said she has been “spit on, repeatedly sued, dragged through federal court, harassed, doxxed, repeatedly assaulted, slapped, punched, arrested, and I even had a gun pulled on me.”

In one protest, she confronted former US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and his family, spilling fake blood in front of their home as they drove past in their black limousine.

Barmada asked how they could be so upset about fake blood when real blood is being spilled from civilians in Gaza because of US military and financial support to Israel.

She has confronted many other officials, as well as members of the national media who fail to report on the genocide.

Another panel featured speakers who addressed how “lawfare” is being waged against pro-Palestine activists in an effort to silence or stifle protests.

The law panel included Amy Greer, an attorney with Dratel & Lewis; Amir Makled, an attorney with Hall Makled Law; Edward Mitchell, deputy director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations; and Jenin Younes, ADC’s national legal director.

ADC also presented awards to Celine Semaan on behalf of environmental and social justice nonprofit organization Slow Factory, Hamza Ali on behalf of film production and distribution company Watermelon Pictures, media personality Hussein Hachema, former Michigan State Rep. Abraham Aiyash, and the Yemeni-American founder of the Haraz Coffee chain, Hamzah Nasser.

The evening was capped by music performed by a Middle Eastern ensemble, and by a live taping of the show “We’re Not Kidding with Mehdi & Friends,” hosted by journalist Mehdi Hasan with his guest, Egyptian comedian Bassem Youssef.

They discussed the hypocrisy of how the US defends free speech and morality “except when the issue is Palestine.”


Changes to US security strategy ‘largely consistent’ with Russia’s vision: Kremlin

Updated 58 min 7 sec ago
Follow

Changes to US security strategy ‘largely consistent’ with Russia’s vision: Kremlin

  • Kremlin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that the current US administration was “fundamentally different from the previous ones”

MOSCOW: Russia has welcomed changes in the US National Security Strategy, saying the adjustments that marked a radical departure from Washington’s previous policy were “largely consistent” with Moscow’s vision.
Washington’s new National Security Strategy, published early Friday, took aim at allies in Europe, calling it over-regulated, lacking in “self-confidence” and facing “civilizational erasure” due to immigration.
The document stated that the United States would also prevent other powers from dominating but added: “This does not mean wasting blood and treasure to curtail the influence of all the world’s great and middle powers.”
Commenting on the new US strategy, the Kremlin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that the current US administration was “fundamentally different from the previous ones.”
“The adjustments we’re seeing, I would say, are largely consistent with our vision,” Peskov said in an interview with state TV station Rossiya aired Sunday.
“President Trump is currently strong in terms of domestic political positions. And this gives him the opportunity to adjust the concept to suit his vision,” Peskov added.
The publication of the updated security strategy came as officials from Kyiv held talks in Florida with Trump’s envoys on the US-drafted plan to end the near four-year war in Ukraine.
Three days of talks produced no apparent breakthrough.
President Volodymyr Zelensky committed to further negotiations toward “real peace,” as Russia in the early hours of Saturday launched another series of drone and missile strikes at Ukraine.
Zelensky is due to meet with European leaders — French President Emmanuel Macron, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz — in London on Monday to take stock of the negotiations.