Collective Statement in

Solidarity with Gaza

As a group of Scholars, Funeral Directors, Death Work Practitioners, Activists, and Students who strive to dismantle oppression through decolonizing and radicalizing deathwork, we condemn the past and current violence against Palestinians as the manifestation of brutal colonial occupation, ruthless extremism, and institutionalized repression.

We share in the pain of the impossibility of grieving in a context of unabating warfare and a humanitarian crisis. Everyday, we collectively bear witness to atrocities enacted upon Palestinian people in Gaza and in the West Bank. Voices on the ground share with us testimonies of state-backed traumatization ensuring that we have no illusions of the extent of suffering and collective punishment. Displaced families cannot bury loved ones, or mourn the loss of their homes, their communities, and their land.

And yet, they remind us that hope is a daily practice. It is essential in the struggle for a livable future for us all. We are inspired by healthcare and humanitarian workers in Gaza who provide life-saving care despite the resounding silence and abandonment of Western political institutions. These healers are in our thoughts and our hearts as they work day in and day out, without adequate rest or support within a collapsed healthcare system under attack 

We denounce the dehumanization of the Palestinian people rooted in Islamophobia that motivates militarized occupation and spreads moral apathy. We denounce Anti-semitism and recognize grassroots anti-occupation Israeli and anti-Zionist Jewish organizations’ efforts to envision a path for healing from generational trauma that does not depend on forced displacement or the marginalization of the diversity of religious and ethnic communities with whom they live alongside, even as they say prayers for loved ones lost on October 7th.

We refuse to be silent while witnessing these atrocities: all people have a right to freedom, safety and dignity! We stand with Palestine and demand an end to the cycles of mass death, dispossession, blockade and settler occupation. We condemn the United States government’s and other Western global powers’ complicity in the massacre and expulsion of Palestinians byway of unquestioned military support and continued arms sale to Israel ignoring their duty to prevent crimes against humanity. 

Our commitment to our values of social justice, decolonization, and radical thinking compels us to discern the ways in which this specific struggle connects us all. Grief is transformative, it generates affective resonances that power direct action, political movements, and social change. Above all, we believe that peace and justice are intertwined. 

In solidarity, 
The Collective for Radical Death Studies 

From the beginning we were aware that writing on this is deeply flawed: language cannot communicate what the mind cannot process. Maybe we do not need to write. Maybe we weaponize our chants as eulogy, turn our marching into prayer, transform the streets into a funeral procession.
— Grieving Beyond Language by Nick Kattoura and Nada Abuasi for Institute for Palestine Studies

Teach-In February 2024

TESTIMONIES OF GENOCIDE: LEGAL RECOGNITION AND DECOLONIAL POLITICS

Join us for an interdisciplinary panel on the politics of oral and visual testimonies of violence in Palestine, recognition of state-sponsored crimes and the challenges of a decolonial framework within the legal context.

Education through the lens of humanity and ethnics: 

Remembering/Imagining Palestine from Afar: The (Lost) Homeland in Contemporary Palestinian Diaspora Literature

by Dr. Nina Fischer

Further reading and research

Lifting our voices for Palestinian freedom will never be anything but an embracement of love and justice for all.
— Angela Davis