My thoghts about Palestine and Israel supporters
I write to you today with a heavy heart, and with hope. Our world is witnessing immense suffering — particularly in the land of Palestine and Israel, but also beyond it, in every community touched by war, by fear, by division. I feel compelled to speak — not as someone who holds the answers, but as someone who cares deeply about our common humanity.
I stand for the dignity and the rights of all human beings — both Palestinians and Israelis. I support the Jewish people, I support the Palestinian people; I support peaceful, just societies for all communities. I do not stand with extremist forces — whether the extremist factions within Hamas, or within the Israeli authorities, or others who employ violence, hate, or collective punishment. Such extremism harms us all.
Too often, in this conflict, entire communities are blamed for the actions of a few: entire Jewish communities for Zionist policies; entire Muslim communities for extremist acts; entire nations for the actions of their governments. I refuse to accept that narrative. We must distinguish between citizens and governments, between faith and ideology, between common people and those who wield power or violence.
The term “genocide” is used by many, and I understand why: the scale of death in Gaza—tens of thousands of Palestinians killed, large numbers wounded, cities devastated—is alarming. But legally, genocide requires specific intent to destroy a protected group in whole or in part. The horrors we are witnessing may also be mass atrocities, war crimes, or crimes against humanity — terms that capture horrific violence and suffering even if the legal threshold for genocide is not yet universally established. I believe it is vital to use language carefully, because words shape our understanding and our response.
Homicide, murder, manslaughter — these are domestic legal terms: “homicide” is simply killing of one human by another, “murder” has intent, “manslaughter” lesser intent or provocation. At the international level we see similar gradations: war crimes, crimes against humanity, genocide. The suffering in Gaza and Israel crosses many of these lines: hundreds of thousands killed or injured; civilians, children, families. But let us not lose sight of the people behind the numbers. Each death, each injury, each destroyed home, each refugee is a human being — someone’s child, someone’s parent, someone’s friend. Our moral duty is to remember them. To lift up their dignity. To demand accountability. To say, “Not in my name,” when governments or movements claim to act for me but hurt innocents.
So I call on us — Muslims, Jews, Christians, secular people; LGBTQ folks, conservatives, liberals; all humanity — to stand together in compassion. Let us call out violence and oppression wherever it occurs. Let us support humanitarian relief and protection of civilians. Let us promote justice, not vengeance. Let us refuse to be manipulated by propaganda, by fear, by tribalism. Let us refuse to let extremists on any side define our beliefs or our future.In doing so, we acknowledge that our fates are interlinked. The destruction of one community diminishes us all. The hatred of another deprives us all of peace. The silencing of any voice robs us all of humanity.
Let us build bridges, not walls. Let us extend our hands across divides. Let us recognise that the Jewish people deserve safety and justice, and so do the Palestinian people. Let us demand the end of violence that targets civilians, the end of dehumanisation. Let us demand accountability for extremists but also for those who wield state power irresponsibly. Let us not substitute one form of oppression for another.
This is not easy. The history is long. The wounds are deep. The pain is real. But the alternative—silence, division, hatred—is far worse. I believe that if enough of us speak clearly, compassionately, with integrity, we can change the tone. We can create a space where human beings matter more than labels, where solidarity matters more than slogans.
I hope you will join me in this journey—not just in words, but in action: speaking for the vulnerable, providing relief where possible, challenging extremist narratives, supporting truth and justice. Because ultimately the greatest tribute we can pay to the lost lives is to ensure we do not let more die alone, forgotten, silenced.
With hope and solidarity,
Bean Devil 👿










