Palestine – voices of humanity grow stronger

by Patrick Lawrence*

Catherine Connolly’s rise to the Irish presidency marks a progression in global politics we ought not miss. A critical mass is gathering against the Zionist state.

Catherine Connolly has such a sweet Irish face – broad and open, bright eyes with a touch of sadness about them, always either smiling or about to give the world one. She has Irish politics, too, this daughter of Galway: Ireland’s 10th president, elected last Friday, draws directly from the collective memory of Britain’s long, cruel colonisation of her people when she condemns apartheid Israel’s long, cruel colonisation of Palestinians. So do her voters: She had the support of 63 per cent of them.
  History does this sometimes, providing power does not bury it: Its bleak, violent chapters can induce among the living a heightened consciousness of and commitment to justice. This is among the many things that distinguish the Irish.
  Connolly calls the Zionist regime’s genocide just what it is and recognises Hamas as “part of the fabric of the Palestinian people” – a liberation movement by any other name. Could she have expressed such an understanding so forthrightly had the Irish Republican Army not been part of the fabric of the Irish people all those years?
  I read Connolly’s rise from the Dáil (where she was deputy speaker) to the Irish presidency as marking a progression in global politics we ought not miss. How to put this? The world has been turning against the Israeli terror regime since it began its spree of murder and starvation two Octobers ago. Now it is doing so decisively, so finding its collective voice at last.
  What you have heard ever more loudly on many streets these past two years you now hear at the highest levels of government. There is momentum, I mean to say, and it is in the right direction. Only in America is this not so – a point to which I will return.
  Connolly’s election has reportedly prompted many Israelis to pledge never to set foot on the Emerald Isle. Brilliant: Israeli Zionists are joining in the urgent work of isolating Israeli Zionists.
  There is a fleck of history here, too. As you may recall, the Irish were very quick to denounce the Israelis’ campaign of terror two autumns ago. By the end of 2023 there were left-wing calls in the Dáil to expel Dana Erlich, Tel Aviv’s predictably repellent ambassador. A few months later, in May 2024, Ireland formally recognised Palestinian sovereignty. At the end of that year the Netanyahu regime finally gave up. Its Foreign Ministry cited “the extreme anti-Israel policies of the Irish government” as it recalled Erlich and closed its embassy in Dublin.

Swell of Objection

Ireland’s anti-colonial, anti-imperialist tradition and its reflexive sympathy for the oppressed are impossible to miss and, notably, never seem to bend in the wind. This makes me think Connolly’s voice is likely to prove especially strong – is “acute” my word? – on the Palestine question. But she jumps onto a moving train, let us not forget. The momentum just noted has been gathering for some time and now appears to be reaching critical mass.
  My routine wanderings around X is a daily reminder of this reality. Here is a catalogue – random, of greater and lesser magnitude, incomplete, in no particular order – gathered just over the past few days:
  Norway and Bibi’s arrest warrant. Twenty-two hours before I began this piece Norway reportedly issued “a strong call for the immediate arrest of Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu.” I do not know who constitutes “Norway” in this case, but I think we can count this so: The Foreign Ministry has put out a statement confirming Oslo’s commitment to the rulings of the International Criminal Court, which issued an arrest warrant for Netanyahu last November. Reminder: The Ministry announced in August, as Bibi was preparing to overfly Europe en route to the U.N. General Assembly, that it would arrest him if he set foot in Norway.
  Starmer is named. In Gaza Genocide: A Collective Crime,1 a report issued by the U.N. on 20 October and signed by Francesca Albanese, the British prime minister is specifically cited for his complicity in Israel’s terror campaign against the Palestinians of Gaza. “On 9 October 2023, immediately after Israel announced a tightened siege on Gaza,” the report reads, “key Western leaders expressed support for the ‘self-defence’ of Israel … British opposition leader Keir Starmer defended Israel’s right to cut off water and power to civilians.”
  Spain’s arms embargo in action. Spain just opened a criminal investigation2 into Sidenor, the Spanish steelmaker, for selling product to Israel Military Industries, a subsidiary of the infamous Elbit Systems. This is the first major enforcement of the comprehensive arms embargo the Spanish Parliament just passed into law.
  The noose tightens. Late last week Banco Sabadell, a major Spanish institution, began freezing the accounts of Israelis, requiring them to sign declarations confirming they do no business with Israeli settlements. A bank official said all transactions involving Israelis must henceforth be approved by the bank’s compliance department.
  B. D. S. in action. Pizza Hut UK has announced it has closed 68 shops and 11 delivery sites: A boycott of the company in response to its business in Israel has forced it into a restructuring.
  The dual-loyalty scam. “People who serve in the Israeli military should be deported,” Tucker Carlson declared in an interview Wednesday. “You can’t fight for another country and remain American.” Finally, it is said.
  A critical mass. Priests Against Genocide, which represents 1,200 Roman Catholic clerics, recently organised a march on the Italian Parliament, where one priest said Mass while draped in a Palestinian flag. His sermon matched his vestments.
  If these items seem a touch all-over-the-place, this is by design. My intent is simply to suggest what shapes up as a sort of all-of-society swell of objection we find in one or another form in many places. Any reader can add many of his or her own simply by skating around social media.

The South African Case

Catherine Connolly joins others in the highest offices — notably but not only Pedro Sánchez, Spain’s Socialist prime minister, and the wonderful Gustavo Petro, the former liberation fighter now serving so honourably as Colombia’s president. Connolly’s ascent to their ranks signals that we are at the brink of a take-off point, to borrow a term from the economists. This is my judgment. When we speak of a worldwide anti-Israel movement, we speak of one that begins to accumulate the power of nations behind it.
  As we assess the current circumstance, we ought to bear the South African case in mind. When the Afrikaner regime finally fell, in 1994, it was primarily because its internal contradictions had become too many and too formidable. The apartheid system was no longer sustainable. The anti-apartheid movement accumulated its power gradually over many years – the movement against the Zionist state has gathered force much faster, if not fast enough – but the anti-apartheid cause eventually proved its effectiveness. The international pressure it exerted was among the stresses the Afrikaners could no longer bear.
  Let us take the lessons this history offers.
  The empty chairs in the train belong to the Americans. While Connolly joins Petro, Sánchez, et al. in high office, look at the Trump regime. The president, Marco Rubio, Pete Hegseth, Steve Witkoff, Jared Kushner, and the others on Trump’s foreign policy “team” are by comparison monsters diametrically out of touch with the world, the zeitgeist, of another time, of another cause – a cause other than the human cause.
  Do I have to admit that most Americans are similarly detached? I suppose I do. All praise to those who take to the streets as millions of others elsewhere do. But our numbers are small, reflecting many years of incessant propaganda, social atomisation, the privatisation of the collective consciousness, induced apathy. I see no other way to understand this and no persuasive reason to think the case will change.
  To live so out of sync with the world, so indifferent to what the world announces that it cares about, will not serve America and Americans well over time. Our power elites stumble around the world, from one mess to another, accumulating the rest of humanity’s contempt. And the rest of us other than the conscientious few? Will international banks one day vet our accounts? It is far-fetched, but it is bitter even to pose the question.
  When Irish eyes are smiling3, all the world is bright and stands against Zionism. Isn’t that how the song goes. •



1 https://www.un.org/unispal/document/special-rapporteur-report-gaza-genocide-a-collective-crime-20oct25/
https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/spain-probes-steelmaker-breaching-israel-sales-ban-2025-10-24/
3 «When Irish Eyes are Smiling» refers to the famous Irish Folksong from 1912.

First published: The Floutist of 28 October 2025;
https://thefloutist.substack.com

Patrick Lawrence is a long-standing foreign correspondent, mainly for the “International Herald Tribune”. He is also a columnist, essayist, author and lecturer. His penultimate book is “Time No Longer: Americans After the American Century”, Yale 2013. His new book “Journalists and Their Shadows” was published by Clarity Press (ISBN 978-3-85371-543-7) in 2023 (German translation since March 2025). His website is patricklawrence.us. Support his work via patreon.com/thefloutist

People live(d) in Gaza too

In 2009, a ceasefire between Israel and Gaza had been broken. Israeli air strikes led to many Palestinian deaths, Israeli ground troops crossed the border between Israel and Gaza. The UN’s so-called Goldstone Report concluded: “Israel’s goal is to punish, humiliate and terrorise the Palestinian population.” The conflict between Israel and Palestine escalated and caused concern among the German public. I contacted UNRWA, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees, to find a young Palestinian who could be helped in this disaster. UNRWA found such a person. It was Sanaa, a 15-year-old girl at the time, who attended UNRWA’s Girls’ School Zeitoun in Gaza City. She was a student who had to take care of her four siblings. Her father was in prison for drugs. Sanaa had been through a lot in her life.
  Sanaa had developed aggressive behaviour towards her classmates. Her great talent was painting. Her teachers wanted to support her in this. They allowed her to paint the walls of the classroom, and little by little this helped her to find inner peace. She became a young artist with a sad face.
  In the summer of 2009, I had been invited to give a lecture at a Swiss school in the canton of Thurgau, where I told the story of Sanaa. The spontaneous reaction of the pupils was that they wanted to help. In the weeks that followed, they washed cars to raise money for Sanaa. The pupils earned 1000 Swiss francs – an amount they wanted to donate to the young girl to fulfil her dream of buying painting supplies and a tablet. Without the helpful teachers and wonderful staff at UNRWA, this would not have been possible.
  In view of the current catastrophic conditions in Gaza, I remembered Sanaa and tried to find her. Perhaps I could help her again, encourage her? The UNRWA responded as I feared. Given the current dangerous situation in Gaza, the insecurity and the ongoing genocide, it would be impossible to find Sanaa. Nevertheless, I want to continue trying to find out something about Sanaa and her Palestinian teacher Soha Shaat. Whether they are still alive or have fallen victim to murderers – who knows?

Hans von Sponeck,
former Assistant Secretary-General of the United Nations

Missing person report, No. 10176 *

Wanted: Sanaa Shabayeck, now about 30 years old, lived in Gaza City in 2009, where she attended the UNRWA Zeitoun Girls’ School. Sanaa’s current place of residence is unknown. Information about Sanaa should be sent to UNRWA in Geneva, the International Criminal Court in The Hague and Interpol in Lyon. Please do not send a copy to the Security Council in New York. The building is in danger of collapsing!

(*According to the UN, there were 11,000 missing persons in Gaza at the end of June 2025.)

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