”No, it’s not antisemitic to protest against Israeli genocide in Gaza”

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In Handala’s Playground: Season 1, Episode 11: The Children Who Never Had a Chance: Handala at Al-Basma IVF Centre

Phalapoem editor, 25/11/25

December 2023 — Gaza.

Night hung low over the city, trembling with distant explosions. Hospitals glowed in the dark like last surviving stars — fragile, flickering — and then, one by one, they began to go out.

Handala stood on the rooftop of a neighboring building, his bare feet coated in dust, watching the Al-Basma IVF Centre, Gaza’s main fertility clinic, still lit from within. Inside, thousands of dreams rested quietly in cryogenic tanks — 4,000 embryos, tiny seeds of families who had already suffered too much.

Handala whispered to himself:

“They’re only cells now… but they are futures.”

Below him, a doctor stepped out to smoke a quick cigarette before returning to the night shift. A generator sputtered. Nurses moved between rooms with soft footsteps, guarding what they knew were among the most precious lives in Gaza — embryos entrusted to them by 2,000–3,000 patients a month.

And then the sky tore open.

The Israeli Shelling

The first shell hit like God slamming a fist into the earth.

A deafening crack, then fire.

Handala didn’t flinch — he never did — but he watched with eyes that had seen too many endings.

The doctor outside ran toward the entrance screaming for help, but the second shell struck the main laboratory directly. Windows exploded outward. Shards of glass rained over him like a deadly glitter.

Inside, a nurse was hurled across the floor. Cryogenic tanks ruptured. Liquid nitrogen hissed out in white plumes. The embryos — thousands of them — were thrown into the chaos, their containers shattered, their temperature rising faster than human hands could reach them.

Handala whispered, voice trembling with ancient rage:

“They are killing babies who haven’t even been born yet.”

Another Israeli shell. The ceiling collapsed.

A wall of fire swallowed the clinic’s machines, the incubators, the hope.

There were no gunmen.

No fighters.

No military presence.

Only doctors.

Only nurses.

Only would-be parents.

The UN would later say exactly what Handala saw that night:

There was no credible evidence the building was used for any military purpose.

The destruction was a measure intended to prevent births among Palestinians — a genocidal act.

Handala watched the clinic burn until the screams faded into ash.

The Aftermath

Smoke drifted like ghosts when Handala finally walked into the ruins.

The ground crunched beneath his bare feet — shattered glass, melted plastic, charred metal. The smell of burning chemicals stung his throat. Cryogenic tanks lay toppled on the ground, their metal peeling from heat. Labels floated in puddles of dirty water:

“Embryo #1147 — Boy.”

“Embryo #2332 — Girl.”

“Embryo — Twins.”

Names never written.

Lives never lived.

Handala crouched beside a collapsed incubator, placing his small hand on the warm metal.

Handala

(softly)

“Four thousand children.

You didn’t even give them a minute.”

A young mother arrived at the scene, stumbling over rubble, her hands shaking. She had come to check on her embryos — her last chance after cancer treatment. When she saw the building, she collapsed, screaming until her voice broke.

Handala stood beside her.

She couldn’t see him.

But he stayed.

The UN’s Words

Days later, the world heard what Handala already knew.

The UN Commission’s report stated that Israel had:

Intentionally shelled the Al-Basma IVF Centre.

Destroyed 4,000 embryos, eliminating future Palestinian births.

• Committed a genocidal act, aimed at preventing a population from continuing.

Former UN Humanitarian Affairs Coordinator Martin Griffiths told Al Jazeera:

“It’s good that the UN is now talking about genocide… the evidence is incontrovertible.”

Yet even he stopped short of saying the ICC or ICJ would hold anyone accountable.

The same UN report also documented what Handala had seen across Gaza:

• Palestinian women and girls were targeted directly.

• Killings constituted crimes against humanity and war crimes.

• Forced stripping, sexual harassment, threats of rape, and sexual assault were part of Israeli forces’

“standard operating procedures.”

Handala listened to the report from the ruins, dust settling in his hair.

Handala Speaks to the Embers

He stood at the center of the destroyed clinic, surrounded by the ashes of thousands of potential lives.

Handala

(quiet, shaking with a child’s fury)

“They say I am the witness of all Palestinian children.

But tonight…

I witness the children who never had the chance to become children.”

He touched the remnants of a cryogenic tank, still warm.

Handala

“They were not nameless to God.

They were not nameless to their parents.

And they will not be nameless to Palestine.”

The fire crackled, eating through the last pages of medical records.

Handala

(bare feet rooted in the rubble)

“I will carry their memory.

I will carve their absence into the conscience of the world.

And I will not turn around…

not until someone answers for this.”

A gust of wind blew across the ruins. The night fell silent again.

Only Handala remained — the last witness of 4,000 silenced beginnings.

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Culture Of Peace In The Light Of Globalization

Hani Smirat

Social experiments and theories have proven the existence of a dialectic that humanity has lived and is experiencing, which is the dialectic of war and peace. Schools and opinions have differed in defining the concept of peace throughout the ages, and they have also differed in clarifying and monitoring the reasons for its establishment, as well as its weakness and collapse. In the past, before the world turned into a small global village due to globalization, peace ,in   the eyes of states  did not go beyond the absence of manifestations of war, and the state would see peace,  if the boys  did not go to war, or if there were  no war planes flying in the sky intending to bomb and destroy. The concept of peace in the past was no more than the absence of scenes of war and killing.

Today, in light of globalization and international experiences that have begun to move from culture to culture and from one people to another, peace has many dimensions that go beyond the absence of violence. Justice, respect for human rights, equality, and strengthening the values ​​of identity, belonging, and citizenship…and others, all fall within the dimensions of the concept of different cultures of peace.

Over the past decades, the features and dimensions of a culture of peace and civil peace have been absent in many countries of the world within their societies, due to the spread of corruption, the absence of the values ​​of freedom and justice, and the weakness of the culture of dealing positively with conflicts, especially in developing countries, and focusing on our Arab world, unfortunately, The culture of peace and the culture of dealing with conflict through positive means is still weak, and does not receive the attention of academics, decision-makers, and policy makers. The results of the absence of this culture can be seen clearly within Arab society, as scenes of violence that can be seen.

The concept of peace has expanded in the modern era from negative peace to include positive peace, which necessarily means the absence of exploitation, corruption, rejection of others, and the creation of social justice. Thanks to globalization, three schools of peace have been developed. There have been various schools formed in different countries, and in the past each country used to adopt one method. The American and European school is closer to the school of peace building: which is the construction of suitable conditions so that the society can live in peace. This includes several methods such as education in the field of human rights, economic development, increasing aid and social solidarity, and restoring harmony between people and different ethnic groups.

While many Middle Eastern countries adopt the school of peacemaking, which is based on helping the parties in conflict to reach a negotiated agreement.  These countries believe in the necessity of the presence of phenomena that threaten the culture of peace, especially the presence of violence, in order for them to intervene.As for the African countries, they adopt the school of peacekeeping, through the presence of international military forces called peacekeeping forces that work to maintain peace, monitor violations within the state, and work to prevent the parties in conflict from fighting among themselves.

Today, in the light of globalization, there is overlap and adoption of these schools, as some countries can be seen adopting more than one school in order to achieve the promotion of a culture of peace within society.

To understand the impact of the development of globalization on the concept of the culture of peace within human societies, it is possible to trace seven basic stages that the various formulations of the concept of peace have passed through, especially in the Western peace research. These stages are:

Peace as a practice and behavior in the absence of war, and this applies to violent conflict, whether between countries or within the countries themselves in the form of civil wars. The second stage focused on peace as a balance of power within the framework of the international system, and sometimes this balance is called the balance of terror when it is based on a balance of military forces.

As for the third stage, emphasis was placed on preventing the outbreak of war by preventing structural violence within society. As for the third stage, emphasis was placed on preventing the outbreak of war by preventing structural violence within society. Fourth, the focus was on the idea of ​​peace with the environment, as capitalist practices have brutally assaulted the human environment. During the sixth stage, the stage of focusing on a development of person’s inner peace, due to its connection to peace at the macro level.

We add to these divisions the seventh stage: this is the stage in which the focus was on human rights, violations and violence directed against children, the disabled and other vulnerable groups.

Perhaps one of the most prominent connotations of the culture of peace in the era of globalization is the connotations of comprehensive development. Therefore, weakening these rights is considered one of the violations of basic human rights and an entry point and fertile ground for fueling conflict. Since the concept of globalization is linked to the economy, fueling conflicts and conflicts within societies would weaken economic development, and there are many studies that indicate a close connection between conflicts and the financial costs that affect the state as a result of the continuation of conflicts.

At the end of this paper, it is necessary to call for embodying the culture of peace, especially within Arab society, and to benefit from the schools of peace culture that have begun to spread widely through international institutions, as these institutions were able to contribute, even if only in a small way, to promoting the culture of peace, and contribute to developing concepts of dealing with conflict, as international mediation companies, arbitration companies, and international institutions concerned with dialogue and dealing with disputes have become crowded in our Arab world in the last five years. Although globalization has led to the creation of new deadly means of combat, it has also created  means in dealing with conflict, such as in Tunisia’s case. In choosing peaceful means to deal with its crises, Tunisia has created an innovative image of democracy in the Arab world, while both Libya and Syria refused to adopt the values ​​that globalization brought about the culture of peace, and so there was death, devastation, and terrorism.

What we are today as an Arab world requires the concerted efforts of all national and regional efforts to achieve peace and security. The first steps in promoting and disseminating the culture of peace begin with education in the culture of peace, the values ​​of tolerance and dialogue, and a sense of equal citizenship, leading to seeing the world from the perspective of human culture, and not narrow personal culture.

Perhaps the Palestinian society today is required to adopt new strategies to confront internal conflicts, including political division, societal disputes, phenomena of violence, and other forms that clearly penetrate the Palestinian body. This adoption must address the system of collective thinking about the concepts of the culture of peace. Given that, the culture of peace and conflict resolution does not necessarily mean its connection to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, and that is by acknowledging that there are dangerous local societal manifestations that are fragmenting the Palestinian fabric and making it more believe in violence to address its internal conflicts.

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South Africa’s Lesson

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When Descendants of Nazi Victims Become Oppressors

As we mark International Holocaust Remembrance Day on Saturday, January 27, 2024, a disheartening paradox unfolds in history. In a synchronicity with the gravity of the past, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) delivers its ruling on Israel’s criminal actions in Gaza from October 2023 until now. The irony is profound as the descendants of those victims who endured Nazi horrors find themselves connected to criminal actions against humanity!

The death toll in Gaza is staggering. Over 26,000 lives, mostly women and children, have been lost. Thousands of homes, along with hospitals, schools, mosques, churches, and universities and almost everything, lie in ruins—a haunting testament to the widespread destruction in the region. The echoes of a criminal war against humanity resound not just in physical wreckage but in shattered lives and communities left in its wake.

The juxtaposition is hard to comprehend—the very people who remember the catastrophic history of the Holocaust are now cast as perpetrators against another nation. It prompts reflection on the cyclical nature of human conflict, as if history repeats itself with cruel symmetry. How have the descendants of the Nazi victims become perpetrators?!


The proofs of the Gaza genocide is undeniable, documented in numerous videos,  photos, and by many international organizations and seen by hundreds of millions of people worldwide, and not fabricated in dark rooms. It’s time to halt this disconcerting game and strive for justice for Palestinians.

Watch

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Individuals With Disabilities in The Occupied Palestinian Territories

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People with disabilities 03/12/2023

The Palestinian Central Bureau Of Statistics Issues A Press Release On The Occasion Of World Day For Individuals With Disabilities in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. About 115 thousand individuals with disabilities in Palestine prior to the aggression on the Gaza Strip (October 7, 2023)

Before this happened in the Gaza Strip on October 7, 2023, the number of infected people in Palestine was estimated at 115,000, approximately 2.1% of the population. What we expect is 2.1% of the population. In reality, it is about 59,000 individuals from the western regions, and it is estimated at 1.8% of the total population of the West Bank, which is about 58. One thousand people from the Gaza Strip represent 2.6% of the total population of the Gaza Strip. While the percentage among the best (18 years and over) is 3%, at 2.6% in the West Bank and 3.9% in the Gaza Strip. The disparity varies greatly according to the governorate, as the North Gaza Governorate recorded the highest prevalence of disability, amounting to about 5%, and it adheres to It includes Deir al-Balah Governorate (4.1%). On the other hand, it targets a prevalence rate in Ramallah, al-Bireh and Aghwar Governorates at 2% for each of them. Two of them grew up in the Gaza Strip

Forex is an important target in the field of public health and health care. From 2007 until 2017, the sector exceeded the number of people with special needs in Gaza from 24,608 to 48,140 individuals. According to the report, Why in the Distinguished Gaza Strip 2022, the number of individuals with limited income reached 55,538 individuals, constituting 47% of them. As the diplomatic intervention and war in the Gaza Strip caused disability for about 2,000 individuals, the problem of what 9% of the people who benefit from celebrities think is a problem, but about 3% of children under the age of eighteen are celebrities. By mentioning that the reasons that contributed to the Israeli measures and the Rob were a cause of disability at least for about 6% of individuals 18 years and over in the Gaza Strip, 8% in Gaza compared to 4% in the West Bank.

This came according to the reports issued by the UN Relief Agency as a result of the creative aggression on the Gaza Strip in 2014, a third of a third was required with gestures required for the injured at the time, and therefore it is clear that a number of prominent prominent people rose to Alexander 2023, including 12,000 individuals until the issuance of this statement, because of the veto their number became Known for health care, it imposed a closure on essential medical facilities from accessing the Strip, targeting hospitals, care centers, and medical teams.

They suffering face to face, as they are exposed to risks as a result of technical conditions accompanied by aggression, unhealthy and inappropriate conditions in exploration sites, in addition to the lack of health care and their inability to access health services. 3 out of every 25 children suffer from one or more types of functional difficulties

By tracking functional tasks in the 2019-2020 Multiple Indicator Cluster Scanning of children aged 2-17 years, we succeeded in obtaining approximately 12% of children in Palestine suffering from one or more types of functions. According to the estimates before the aggression on the Gaza Strip, it was expected that the number of children who attended the Gaza Strip in the year 2023 would reach about 98 thousand children in the age group of 2-17 years*, including about 6 thousand children in the age group of 2-4 years, and 92 thousand children are still there. In the age group 5-17 years. Learning difficulties accounted for 21,200 children aged 2-17 years in the Gaza Strip in 2023, and their number is estimated at 21,200 in 2023.

This aggressive wound on the Gaza Strip since October 7 until the date of issuing this special statement to children, who represent 17% of the total number of wounded, has been suffering from a varied and diverse impact in many songs, and they succeed in influencing them for a long time, and they may succeed in repeated surgeries and severe medical damage. We have also started with new artists and the elderly, which contributes to them not achieving their full potential and affecting their future. It may also contribute to children not having access to education, which affects their opportunities in the future, and for them to suffer from psychological trauma and psychological disorders as a result of injuries resulting from aggression, which affects due to their diseases. Psychologically, the wounded may face great challenges and difficulties in adapting to their guests, which can lead to a feeling of hope and confidence in the future.

More than three people in the Gaza Strip as a result of infection mental health is one of the areas most affected during wars and conflicts, and the war on the Gaza Strip was unfortunately no exception. The psychological toll on Gazans can be unconscionable and devastating. According to the psychological conditions survey carried out by the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics in cooperation with the World Bank in 2022 on mental health and the war on the Gaza Strip, the Gaza Strip has become more than three individuals in Gaza suffering from depression, and high levels and symptoms of post-traumatic stress among younger age groups (between 18 and 29 years) and tends to peak with age. On the other hand, a higher percentage of job potential among children in the age group of 5-17 years in the Gaza Strip was a concern, reaching about 13%. It is estimated that about 52,450 children aged 5-17 years from the vigilant population will suffer from the survey in 2023, while 13,000 children are still suffering from signs of discrimination according to estimates in 2023 based on the results of the Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey 2019-2020 before the aggression on Gaza. On October 7th.

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Phalapoem editor, 23/11/25

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A People Under Siege: The Moral Collapse of a 21st-Century Occupation

Phalapoem editor, 22/11/25


In the 21st century—an age that celebrates progress, law, and human dignity—it should be impossible for an occupying power to imprison an entire population of six million people behind walls, checkpoints, and fascist policies designed to break the human spirit. And yet this is the reality in Palestine.

A reality that the world witnesses every day.

A reality that continues because those with the power to stop it choose complicity and silence.

This is not a conflict of equals.

This is not “security.”

This is systemized punishment, a machinery of apartheid, crushing a whole population for the acts of a few.

The Zionist occupying power has built its doctrine on a single word: security.

But security has become a shield for brutality.

The record is unmistakable:

• Entire cities cut off from food, water, and medicine.

• Families buried under rubble, children killed in deliberately targeted airstrikes that were “not mistakes.”

• Ambulances blocked, medics shot at, the wounded left to bleed out.

• Hospitals raided, gutted, demolished.

• Homes bulldozed in the middle of the night.

• A population starved, displaced, and suffocated under military rule.

And the most chilling reality:

Dossiers and testimonies from inside the regime confirm that soldiers received orders to kill indiscriminately, destroy everything, and treat civilians as expendable.

This is not misjudgment.

This is a fascist policy of domination, a deliberate system of cruelty.

Why does an apartheid regime still operate openly in 2025?

Because powerful Western governments protect it.

Because weapons and funding continue to flow.

Because diplomatic cover is guaranteed, no matter how many civilians are killed.

Because “international law” becomes a slogan rather than a standard.

When the ICJ orders protection of civilians and the occupying regime simply ignores the ruling—with no consequences—the message is clear:

The powerful may break the law.

The powerless may be broken by it.

What happens to an occupied nation when it loses hope?

Hope is the final defense of the human soul. It is the belief that tomorrow might be kinder than today.

When hope collapses:

• Trauma becomes inheritance.

• Despair becomes daily bread.

• Young people grow up believing the world has abandoned them.

• A people suffocated for generations may eventually conclude that justice is a myth.

This is not only a political crisis.

It is a humanitarian, psychological, and moral disaster.

The civilians within the occupying state face a choice that defines their history:

• They can refuse to be silent.

• They can challenge the apartheid structures carried out in their name.

• They can reject Zionist propaganda that paints domination as necessity.

• They can demand an end to a system that guarantees perpetual bloodshed.

They cannot claim innocence if they choose silence.

Silence is participation.

Silence is surrendering one’s moral agency.

What does it mean when a state violates ICJ rulings, ignores UN resolutions, and continues demolitions, killings, and settlement expansion?

It means the international system is failing.

It means human rights are conditional.

It means justice depends on geopolitics, not principles.

It means the occupied are treated like a laboratory:

their lives tested, measured, and managed, while their land is taken piece by piece.

If the world allows this, it destroys its own credibility.

Hope is not enough.

Hope alone cannot break walls, open borders, or resurrect the dead.

Hope must be accompanied by:

Sanctions and real consequences for the occupying regime.

A complete end to the occupation, not cosmetic reforms.

Equal rights for every person, no exceptions, no excuses.

Justice for every war crime, no matter who committed it.

A global refusal to accept apartheid as “security.”

Hope is the seed.

Action is the harvest.

Future generations will ask why the world allowed a modern apartheid to flourish.

Why powerful nations supported a regime that starved, bombed, displaced, and humiliated millions.

Why hospitals became battlegrounds.

Why children’s bodies became bargaining chips.

Why international law was written only for the weak.

They will ask:

How could humanity fail so completely, so publicly, so unforgivably?

The answer cannot be that we lacked information.

The answer cannot be that we were afraid to speak.

The answer cannot be that we chose comfort over conscience.

Because history will not be kind.

And the victims will not be forgotten.

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Apartheids’s Separation Wall Gallery

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Letter 3 to the Olive Tree: The Hands That Harvest

Phalapoem editor, 22/11/25


Dear Olive Tree,

When the autumn sun begins to soften over the hills of Palestine, your branches grow heavy with blessings. The valleys of Jenin, the terraces of Nablus, the slopes of Hebron, all come alive with the rustle of nets, the sound of laughter, the rhythm of hands returning home. The harvest has begun.

Families gather beneath your silver leaves, their hearts beating to the same ancient pulse. Grandmothers hum old Palestinian songs, their voices blending with the call of the wind across the fields. Children chase one another between your roots, their laughter echoing through the stone terraces built by their ancestors. Fathers and mothers work side by side, their palms roughened by love and the soil of generations.

Each olive they pluck carries the memory of a thousand yesterdays. It is not just fruit, it is testimony, identity, and resistance pressed into flesh. When they crush the olives, the oil runs like liquid gold, fragrant and pure, a sacred essence that binds them to the land. In every drop gleams the story of Palestine, its endurance, its grief, and its undying beauty.

Even in the hardest times, they come. No checkpoint can stop them, no separation wall can silence the call of the earth. To harvest is to belong; to touch your branches is to declare: we are still here.

Dear tree, you are the heart of this land, steadfast as the people who guard you. You have watched them return year after year, even when the world turned away. You have seen them plant new saplings beside the old, whispering to them the same promise that has kept us alive for centuries:

As long as the olive tree stands, Palestine lives.

With love, pride, and remembrance,

Your Child of Palestine

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Pro-Israel money pours in to unseat progressives in congressional races

Jamaal Bowman and Cori Bush face formidable challenges but Rashida Tlaib, Ilhan Omar and Summer Lee in stronger positions

Alice HermanJoan E Greve and Will CraftWed 17 Apr 2024 12.00 BST

Quarterly campaign finance reports reveal the Democratic representatives Jamaal Bowman of New York and Cori Bush of Missouri – progressive “Squad” members – will face formidable challenges in their 2024 congressional primaries, partly due to the influence of pro-Israel lobbying groups.

Ilhan Omar, of Minnesota, and Summer Lee, of Pennsylvania, meanwhile, have far outspent their primary challengers, and the Michigan Democrat Rashida Tlaib, a Palestinian-American member whose outspoken criticism of Israel has brought the ire of her political opponents, does not yet face a challenger.

The powerful pro-Israel lobbying group American Israel Public Affairs Committee (Aipac) is expected to lavish $100m on efforts to defeat progressive candidates it views as insufficiently supportive of Israel in 2024 – and the latest campaign finance reports in closely watched races pitting high-profile progressives against moderate challengers offer a preview of where the group may prioritize spending.

Bowman, the New York congressman and progressive, faces a particularly fierce campaign by George Latimer, a Westchester county politician who has so far raised $3.6m – nearly $1m more than Bowman. More than $950,000 in contributions to the Latimer campaign came through earmarked donations to Aipac.

Meanwhile the Missouri congresswoman Cori Bush and her primary challenger, the St Louis county prosecutor, Wesley Bell, have raised comparable hauls, with Bell reporting about $100,000 more than Bush, who has raised $1.6m. Although Aipac does not appear on Bell’s most recent campaign filings, he raised more than $650,000 in earmarked contributions through the group Democracy Engine Inc Pac – a donation platform that allows unpopular Pacs to obscure their donations and lists Aipac as a client on its LinkedIn page.

Asked about Aipac’s support for Latimer and its affiliation with Democracy Engine, a spokesperson for the group, Marshall Wittmann, told the Guardian: “We strongly support George Latimer who is a strong advocate for the US-Israel relationship in clear contrast to his opponent who is aligned with the anti-Israel extremist fringe.” (He did not directly address the question about Democracy Engine.)

In addition to the spending unleashed by Aipac so far in support of campaigns to challenge incumbent progressives, it is almost certain that Aipac’s political action committee and Super Pac will weigh in. United Democracy Project, the Super Pac launched by Aipac in 2022, spent nearly $33m in the 2022 election cycle and has so far spent more than $17m with $32m to spare as of 16 April, according to data from the non-partisan transparency group OpenSecrets.

Pro-Israel groups – which include Aipac Pac, United Democracy Project and Democratic Majority for Israel – notched some notable wins during the last election cycle, ousting the progressive congressman Andy Levin of Michigan in his incumbent-versus-incumbent primary and blocking candidates such as Donna Edwards of Maryland and Nina Turner of Ohio from advancing to general elections.

This time around, there have already been some surprises in the primary campaigns. Aipac poured more than $4.5m into the March primary in California’s 45th congressional district to prop up their preferred candidate, Joanna Weiss, but she ultimately lost to a progressive, Dave Min.

And although Summer Lee squeaked by in her 2022 primary against the moderate Democratic challenger Steve Irwin, her current primary opponent Bhavini Patel has struggled to come up with cash, raising a paltry $600,000 compared with Lee’s approximately $2.3m. Meanwhile, Lee has also faced opposition spending by the Moderate Pac, a Super Pac funded primarily by the GOP mega-donor and Pennsylvania resident Jeffrey Yass.

Omar and Tlaib, meanwhile, so far face little opposition spending. Omar’s primary opponent Don Samuels, who she beat narrowly in her 2022 primary, has raised a little more than $750,000, while Omar’s campaign has already generated nearly $5m in cash with four months to go before her August primary.

Only Tlaib – whose criticism of Israel provoked the Republican-controlled legislature to censure her last year – has raised more, with $6.5m on hand according to her latest reporting. Tlaib easily fought back a 2022 primary challenge and faces no opposition in her 2024 race so far, and she has already formed joint fundraising committees with both Bowman and Bush to help boost their financial standing.

Usamah Andrabi, a spokesperson for Justice Democrats, said the impressive fundraising haul from lawmakers like Lee and Tlaib underscored how progressives’ criticism of the Israeli government over the war in Gaza is resonating with Democratic voters.

“These are likely going to be some of the most expensive Democratic congressional primaries we have ever seen. And it is only that way because these candidates – be it George Latimer or Wesley Bell or Bhavini Patel – cannot stand on their own,” Andrabi said.

“They have to stand on $5m of money from Republican Maga [‘Make America Great Again’] donors that Aipac is funneling to them. That is the only way that they get a leg up against deeply popular progressives who are speaking of core values.”

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