Oxford Union believes Israel is an apartheid state responsible for genocide

The Oxford Union voted for its controversial motion โ€œThis House Believes Israel is an apartheid state responsible for genocideโ€ last night, with the societyโ€™s buildings surrounded by tight security and protesters rallying outside. The House saw 278 votes in favour and 59 votes against.

Speaking in Proposition were Palestinian poet Mohammed El-Kurd, Union President Ebrahim Osman-Mowafy, Israeli-American activist Miko Peled, and Palestinian-American poet Susan Abulhawa. Speaking in Opposition were British broadcaster Jonathan Sacerdoti, British barrister Natasha Hausdorff, Arab-Israeli journalist Yousef Haddad, and spy Mosab Hassan Yousef. Yousef is the son of terrorist organisation Hamasโ€™ founder who then defected to become a spy for Israeli intelligence. He has been criticised for his hatred of Islam.

Outside the societyโ€™s buildings, around two dozen pro-Palestine protesters rallied on St Michaelโ€™s Street, their chants audible from the chamber. Oxford Action for Palestine, which called the protest, wrote that its purpose is to show โ€œZionists are not welcome in Oxfordโ€. A protester told Cherwell that their reason is twofold: to show solidarity with Palestinian speakers, and to stand against the Unionโ€™s platforming of speakers.

Speaking first in Proposition, El-Kurd said: โ€œIf this motion passes today, it means that this body is catching up to the moral clarity of the global majority. It is about time and about 70 years too late.โ€ He called Zionism โ€œirredeemable and indefensibleโ€. Lastly, El-Kurd refers to Yousefโ€™s work for the Israeli Defence Forces and said it โ€œdishonours me to share a space with [Yousef]โ€ before walking out of the chamber.

Opening for the Opposition, Sacerdoti argued that the Proposition โ€œintended to inflame not informโ€ and called the motion itself โ€œan outrageโ€. In middle of his speech, a member of the audience began heckling โ€œyou sick motherf***erโ€ and โ€œgenocidal maniacโ€ before being escorted out of the chamber. Sacerdoti continued to argue that each Gazan is receiving more food than the world average.

Osman-Mowafy spoke next for Proposition, framing the debate as one that โ€œputs correct names on self evident truthsโ€. He cited specific Gazan families, asking: โ€œHow many bullets do you need to kill one family? 335.โ€ He also quoted Netanyahu saying โ€œGaza is a city of evilโ€ and that โ€œGazans are animalsโ€, whilst noting that 50% of Gazans are children. Some of the Opposition were chuckling, to which an audience member in the balcony asked: โ€œWhatโ€™s so funny?โ€

Next up in Opposition Haddad told the crowd: โ€˜โ€˜If you are booing, Iโ€™m sorry to say it, but you are terrorist supportersโ€. Haddad cited Jews, Christians, and Arabs playing football together in Israel, how as an Arab-Israeli himself he gave commands to and was saved by Jewish soldiers, and that an Arab man heads the largest bank in Israel โ€“ all evidence against an apartheid, he said. He ended by shouting: โ€œYouโ€™re losing! Youโ€™re losing the Israeli-Arab war! Youโ€™re losing everything!โ€ Due to a lack of decorum, he was asked to leave by the Chair during membersโ€™ speeches, at which point he put on a T-shirt that read โ€œyour terrorist is deadโ€ with a crossed-out face.

Speaking in Proposition, Peled described the terrorist attack carried out by Hamas on 7th October, 2023, as an act of โ€œheroismโ€, which drew condemnation from the crowd.

Yousef opened by referring to his work stopping Hamas suicide bombers despite being the son of the terrorist organisationโ€™s founder. He then turned to incendiary comments including โ€œPalestinians are the most pathetic people on planet Earthโ€, which incited many Points of Orders over whether he should be removed from the chamber. In response Yousef said: โ€œthis House has been hijacked by Muslims.โ€ He called Palestinians โ€œa false identityโ€ and said that โ€œwe [Arabs] will exist long after the Palestinian thugs who came to hijack our societyโ€.

Final Proposition speaker Abulhawa began with a story: โ€œโ€˜When I was in Gaza I saw a little boy whose arms and part of his face had been blown off by a booby-trapped can of food.โ€ She characterised her opponents as โ€œinvoking Holocaust and screaming Antisemitismโ€ and said: โ€œI came to speak directly to Zionists: we let you into our homes when your own countries turned you away. You killed and robbed and burned and looted our lives, you carved out our hearts.โ€

Near midnight, the last Opposition speaker Hausdorff took the stage. She said that Jewish students have been intimidated from attending the debate tonight and called it โ€œa dark moment in the Oxford Unionโ€™s historyโ€. In response to the alleged lack of historical and legal context tonight, she said โ€œbut I am here, so fear not, ladies and gentlemenโ€ and goes on to argue indoctrination as the centre of this conflict. Hausdorff continued: โ€œGenocide is a slur being alleged against the real victims of genocide in this case.โ€

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