1000 Global Writers Call For Boycott of Israeli Cultural Institutions

Over 1,000 writers, publishers, and literary professionals, including prominent authors Sally Rooney, Arundhati Roy, and Rachel Kushner, have signed a letter committing to boycott Israeli cultural institutions.

The signatories pledged to disengage from Israeli publishers, festivals, agencies, and publications they say are “complicit in violating Palestinian rights” or remain “silent observers” of what they describe as systemic oppression.

Organized by the Palestine Festival of Literature (PalFest), the campaign urged global literary figures to boycott any institution that, in the organizers’ view, has failed to recognize the “inalienable rights of the Palestinian people as enshrined in international law.”

The letter criticized Israeli cultural institutions for allegedly “normalizing these injustices,” asserting that many of them play an “integral role” in obscuring the effects of occupation and displacement.

The signatories declared that they will avoid collaborating with institutions supporting “discriminatory policies and practices” or contributing to “whitewashing and justifying Israel’s occupation, apartheid, or genocide.”

“We, as writers, publishers, literary festival workers, and other book workers, publish this letter as we face the most profound moral, political, and cultural crisis of the 21st century,” the letter said.

“Israel has killed at the very least 43,362 Palestinians in Gaza since last October and that this follows 75 years of displacement, ethnic cleansing and apartheid,” it added.

“We cannot in good conscience engage with Israeli institutions without interrogating their relationship to apartheid and displacement,” it reads, noting that “countless authors” took similar stands against apartheid in South Africa.

The campaign has received backing from groups like Fossil Free Books, which advocates against investments linked to Israel and fossil fuel interests. The letter concludes by inviting peers to join the pledge, emphasizing a call for solidarity as the crisis persists.

The Israeli army has continued a devastating offensive on the Gaza Strip since a cross-border incursion by Hamas last October, despite a UN Security Council resolution calling for an immediate cease-fire.

More than 43,000 people have been killed, most of them women and children, with over 101,100 others injured, according to local health authorities.

The Israeli onslaught has displaced nearly the entire population of the territory amid an ongoing blockade that has led to critical shortages of food, clean water, and medicine.

Israel also faces a genocide case at the International Court of Justice for its actions in Gaza.

CrossFireArabia

CrossFireArabia

Dr. Marwan Asmar holds a PhD from Leeds University and is a freelance writer specializing on the Middle East. He has worked as a journalist since the early 1990s in Jordan and the Gulf countries, and been widely published, including at Albawaba, Gulf News, Al Ghad, World Press Review and others.

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Social Media Lash Out at BBC For Gaza Film

The BBC is facing growing criticism for “failing in its duty of care” to the 13-year-old Palestinian narrator of a Gaza documentary as he has reportedly experienced intense online abuse following the BBC’s decision to withdraw the film.

The Gaza: How to Survive a War Zone documentary sheds light on the experiences of children in Gaza amid Israel’s genocide war through the eyes of narrator Abdullah al-Yazuri. However, it was removed from the BBC iPlayer, after a pro-Israel campaign centered on al-Yazuri’s relationship with a minister in Gaza’s Hamas-run government.

Abdullah’s father Ayman al-Yazuri has been labeled by media as a “Hamas chief” while he is a technocrat with a scientific rather than political background, who has previously worked for the UAE’s education ministry and studied at British universities.

Fears for Safety

Speaking exclusively to Middle East Eye (MEE) last week, the child explained that he and his family have been the targets of online abuse, adding that the affair has caused him serious “mental pressure” and made him fear for his safety.

“I did not agree to the risk of me being targeted in any way before the documentary was broadcast on the BBC. So [if] anything happens to me, the BBC is responsible for it,” he said.

The boy also said the BBC had not reached out to him to apologize.

“Hamas Royalty”

His father has also denied claims that he and his son are “Hamas royalty” in an interview this week with MEE.

His comments came after pro-Israel activist David Collier alleged that Abdullah was the son of a deputy minister in Gaza’s government and was related to a co-founder of Hamas, Ibrahim al-Yazuri, who died in 2021.

The father is a civil servant in Gaza’s government – which is administered by Hamas.

Many Palestinians in Gaza have family or other connections to Hamas, which runs the government. This means that anyone working in an official capacity must also work with Hamas.

Collier, whose revelations sparked a national scandal, described Abdullah as the “child of Hamas royalty”, a claim later repeated by mainstream British newspapers.

The father said that his full name was Ayman Hasan Abdullah al-Yazuri, whereas the Hamas founder’s full name was Ibrahim Fares Ahmed al-Yazuri. He added that his father was named Hasan and died in 1975.

“Our family is not as some claim,” he told MEE, insisting he was not “Hamas royalty”.

“There are many individuals within our family who are affiliated with Fatah and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), including some in leadership positions within these movements.”

Sparking Debate

The child’s interview with MEE about his experiences has sparked a debate on social media on media ethics and the BBC’s responsibility to protect the children it works with.

“I posted about this concern shortly after the BBC pulled this documentary,” said Chris Doyle, chair of the Council for Arab-British Understanding, responding to Abdullah’s video.

Several social media users have accused the BBC of exposing the child’s life to danger, and say the broadcaster has a responsibility to ensure his safety.

They have also highlighted Section 9 of the BBC’s editorial guidelines concerning children and young people as contributors, which states that the BBC “must take due care over the physical and emotional welfare and the dignity of under-18s who take part or are otherwise involved in our editorial content, irrespective of any consent given by them or by a parent, guardian or other person acting in loco parentis. Their welfare must take priority over any editorial requirement”.

There are also guidelines in the section that dictate that if a person under 18 is suspected to be at risk in the course of their work, “the situation must be referred promptly to the divisional Working with Children Adviser or, for independent production companies, to the commissioning editor”.

Section 9 also states that “procedures, risk assessments, and contingencies for the impact of participating on an individual’s emotional and mental well-being and welfare may be appropriate in some circumstances”.

Others also argued that the removal appeared to be another example of media bias against Palestinians according to the Quds News Network.

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Al Jazeera English Wins Top Award in London…

This is what Sami Al Arian, a Palestinian professor and activist wrote on his X account:

Very proud of my daughter Laila. She is the Executive Producer of Al Jazeera English Flagship ‘Fault Lines.’ Last night, she and her team won the 2025 best documentary award from the ‘Royal Television Society’ in London. The documentary was on the Gaza genocide and titled ‘The Night Won’t End.’

Congratulations to Laila and her team! May the suffering of Gaza and its valiant people end soon. Here is the link to this very powerful documentary.

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