Refaat Alareer
Refaat Alareer (1979–2023) was a Palestinian professor of English literature at the Islamic University of Gaza, an editor of literary anthologies featuring writings from young Gazans, and a poet whose work addressed life amid the Israeli blockade of Gaza.[1][2] Alareer earned a BA in English from the Islamic University of Gaza in 2001 and an MA in comparative literature from University College London in 2007, later pursuing doctoral studies in English literature.[3] He edited Gaza Writes Back (2014), a collection of short stories by adolescent writers from Gaza responding to the 2008–2009 conflict, and co-edited Gaza Unsilenced (2015), amplifying Palestinian perspectives through English-language publications.[4][5] His own poetry, including the widely circulated "If I Must Die," emphasized storytelling as resistance, though it drew varied interpretations.[6] Alareer's social media presence highlighted daily hardships in Gaza but also included statements critics deemed inflammatory, such as equating the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks to the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising and a post implying Israeli "mistakes"—military errors resulting in deaths—should multiply if he were killed.[7][8] These views, rooted in his advocacy for Palestinian narratives, contrasted with his academic focus on literature like Shakespeare, underscoring tensions between intellectual pursuits and political rhetoric in conflict zones.[9] On December 6, 2023, Alareer was killed in an Israeli airstrike on a building in Gaza City's Shuja'iyya neighborhood, along with family members including his sister and nephews, amid ongoing military operations following the October 7 attacks.[10][11] Reports indicated the strike targeted his specific location in a multi-story structure, prompting claims of deliberate assassination from Palestinian sources, though Israel did not confirm targeting him individually.[12] His death, occurring after the destruction of his university, fueled international tributes as a loss to Palestinian letters while reigniting debates over the treatment of Gaza's intellectuals in wartime.[13]
Early life and education
Childhood and family background in Gaza
Refaat Alareer was born on September 23, 1979, in the Shuja'iyya neighborhood east of Gaza City, during Israel's occupation of the Gaza Strip.[1] Shuja'iyya, a densely populated district with roots tracing to the thirteenth century, has long been associated with Palestinian resistance to occupation and features a community noted for its tenacity, humility, and diligence amid economic hardship.[14][13] Alareer's extended family originated from this area, reflecting its historical significance as a hub of Gazan social and familial networks.[14] From an early age, Alareer experienced the constraints of living under military occupation, where daily movements and opportunities were limited by checkpoints, restrictions, and periodic violence.[15] His family's home in Shuja'iyya was later bombed during Israeli military operations, contributing to personal losses including the deaths of relatives such as an uncle and brother, though these events occurred beyond his immediate childhood years.[16] Such conditions in Gaza, marked by blockade and conflict since the 1967 occupation, influenced the environment in which Alareer was raised, fostering a worldview centered on resilience and narrative self-expression.[15]Formal education and academic training
Alareer earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in English from the Islamic University of Gaza.[17][18] He subsequently obtained a Master of Arts degree in comparative literature from University College London, where his thesis examined representations of Jerusalem in Palestinian and Israeli poetry.[1][19] Alareer completed a PhD in English literature at Universiti Putra Malaysia, with a dissertation titled Unframing John Donne's Transgressive Poetics in Light of Bakhtin's Dialogic Theories, focusing on the metaphysical poet John Donne through the lens of Mikhail Bakhtin's theories of dialogism.[20][1] This doctoral work emphasized literary transgression and polyphony, reflecting Alareer's interest in challenging conventional interpretive frameworks in early modern English poetry.[20]Academic and professional career
Teaching roles at Gaza universities
Refaat Alareer served as an assistant professor in the Department of English at the Islamic University of Gaza (IUG), where he taught English literature, world literature, comparative literature, and creative writing courses including fiction and nonfiction.[21][22] He held this position for over fifteen years, instructing thousands of students in subjects such as poetry, Shakespeare, and narrative techniques amid Gaza's challenging academic environment marked by blockades and infrastructure limitations.[23] Alareer earned his BA in English from IUG before pursuing an MA in comparative literature at University College London in 2007, after which he returned to Gaza to take up his teaching role at the same institution.[24][19] His classes emphasized self-expression and storytelling as tools for Palestinian youth, drawing from his own experiences under occupation, though formal records of specific syllabi or student evaluations remain limited due to the destruction of IUG facilities in subsequent conflicts.[25] No verified accounts indicate teaching positions at other Gaza universities such as Al-Azhar University or the University of Palestine during his career.[26]Mentoring programs and educational outreach
Alareer mentored numerous young Palestinian writers through his teaching positions at the Islamic University of Gaza (IUG), where he instructed courses in world literature, comparative literature, fiction, and non-fiction creative writing beginning in 2007.[27] His approach emphasized empowering students to articulate personal experiences amid occupation and blockade, viewing storytelling as a form of resistance against dehumanization.[28] A primary outlet for this mentorship was the 2014 anthology Gaza Writes Back: Short Stories from Young Writers in Gaza, which Alareer edited and published through Just World Books. Following Israel's Operation Cast Lead (December 2008–January 2009), he solicited submissions from young Gazan writers, selecting 23 stories by 15 contributors—12 of whom were women—to highlight their perspectives on life under blockade.[19] The collection served as an educational platform, fostering skills in narrative craft while amplifying underrepresented voices internationally.[29] In 2014, Alareer co-founded We Are Not Numbers (WANN), a program pairing aspiring writers in Gaza with experienced international mentors to develop and publish personal essays.[30] The initiative aimed to counter media portrayals by enabling direct self-representation, with Alareer providing ongoing guidance to participants, many of whom were his former IUG students.[31] By 2023, WANN had facilitated publications in outlets like The Guardian and The New York Times, training dozens of young contributors in journalistic and literary techniques.[32] Beyond formal programs, Alareer organized creative writing workshops and talks in Gaza, including sessions at IUG that built on his anthology work to refine participants' skills in poetry and prose.[33] These efforts extended his outreach to community settings, prioritizing raw emotional expression grounded in lived realities over abstracted narratives.[19]Literary contributions
Short stories, essays, and PhD thesis
Alareer completed his PhD in English literature at Universiti Putra Malaysia in 2017. His dissertation, titled Unframing John Donne's Transgressive Poetics in Light of Bakhtin's Dialogic Theories, applied Mikhail Bakhtin's concepts of dialogism and carnival to analyze the subversive elements in the metaphysical poetry of John Donne, challenging traditional framings of the poet's work as unified or orthodox.[20] Alareer's short stories appeared primarily in Gaza Writes Back: Short Stories from Young Writers in Gaza, Palestine (Just World Books, 2014), an anthology he edited that collected 23 pieces from 15 young Palestinian contributors, written in response to Israel's 2008–2009 military operation in Gaza. He personally authored three of these stories, emphasizing themes of resilience, loss, and everyday survival amid blockade and conflict.[34][35] His essays, often blending literary criticism with personal and political reflection, were featured in co-edited volumes like Gaza Unsilenced (Just World Books, 2015), which gathered opinion pieces, blog posts, and narratives from Gazan writers critiquing media portrayals and international indifference to the region's conditions. Alareer also published scholarly essays, such as one in the journal Biography examining life-writing in constrained environments, drawing from his experiences in Gaza.[36][37]Edited anthologies and collections
Alareer edited Gaza Writes Back: Short Stories from Young Writers in Gaza, Palestine, published in 2014 by Just World Books.[38] The anthology compiles short stories by fifteen young Palestinian writers from Gaza, most of whom were Alareer's students and participated in his creative writing workshops.[39] These narratives focus on personal experiences amid Israel's blockade and military actions, including the 2008–2009 Gaza War, emphasizing themes of resilience, loss, and everyday life under constraint.[40] A memorial edition was released in 2024 with a foreword by Ali Abunimah, following Alareer's death.[35] In 2015, Alareer co-edited Gaza Unsilenced with Laila El-Haddad, also published by Just World Books as a 318-page volume.[41] The collection gathers essays, blog posts, and opinion pieces from diverse contributors reflecting on the 2014 Gaza conflict (Operation Protective Edge), critiquing international media coverage and amplifying Gazan perspectives on the siege's impacts.[40] It includes writings from journalists, activists, and residents, spanning 2014 events where over 2,100 Palestinians were reported killed by Gaza health authorities.[41]Poetry and public writings
Alareer composed poetry in English that addressed the hardships of life in Gaza, including military incursions, loss, and the imperative to preserve personal stories as an act of defiance. His verses frequently highlighted human resilience amid blockade and conflict, drawing from direct observations of Palestinian existence.[42] The poem "If I Must Die," written circa 2011 and initially published on December 16, 2012, by the Center for Global Nonkilling, encapsulates this theme through lines imploring readers: "If I must die, / you must live / to tell my story / to sell my people / to tell my story / who are my people." Alareer reposted it on social media platforms, including X, in October or November 2023, amid escalating violence, after which it circulated widely following his death.[43][44] In "And We Live On," dated May 27, 2012, Alareer evokes daily survival under restriction: "And another day in Gaza / Another day in Palestine / A day in prison. / And we live on. / Despite Israel's very much identified flying objects." The work underscores continuity despite "birds of death" and enforced isolation.[42] A selection of Alareer's poetry appeared posthumously in the 2024 anthology If I Must Die: Poetry and Prose, compiled by Yousef M. Aljamal and published by OR Books on December 10, containing verse alongside prose pieces on Gaza's realities.[6] Alareer's public writings extended through social media, where under the handle @itranslate123 he disseminated poems and reflections critiquing external portrayals of Palestinians while promoting self-authored narratives. These posts, often emotional and direct, blended literary output with real-time commentary on events in Gaza, amassing engagement from global followers.[45][46]Political views and activism
Advocacy for Palestinian self-narrativization
Refaat Alareer promoted Palestinian self-narrativization by encouraging writers from Gaza to document their lived experiences in their own words, aiming to challenge dominant external depictions of the region as solely defined by conflict.[47] He argued that storytelling serves as a tool for constructing Palestinian national identity and fostering unity, emphasizing that withholding personal narratives equates to self-betrayal.[48] In his view, literature allows Palestinians to humanize themselves to global audiences, bypassing filtered media portrayals.[49] Central to this advocacy was Alareer's editorship of Gaza Writes Back: Short Stories from Young Writers in Gaza, Palestine, published in 2014, which compiled works from over 20 young contributors under his mentorship.[38] The anthology, titled as a response to colonial literary tropes like The Empire Writes Back, sought to portray Gazans' everyday aspirations, humor, and resilience rather than perpetual victimhood or militancy.[50] Alareer selected stories that highlighted personal growth and normalcy amid blockade conditions, stating that "Gaza writes back because storytelling helps construct Palestinian national identity and unity."[48] Through workshops at the Islamic University of Gaza, he trained students in English-language creative writing to reach international readers directly.[51] Alareer frequently quoted the idea that "a homeland becomes a tale," underscoring literature's role in preserving cultural memory and resisting erasure.[51] He critiqued reliance on foreign journalists for Gaza's representation, advocating instead for endogenous voices to convey nuanced realities, as external accounts often amplify sensationalism over substance.[52] This approach extended to his public writings and social media, where he urged Palestinians to share unmediated stories of endurance and critique.[53] While his efforts amplified marginalized perspectives, they operated within a framework prioritizing resistance narratives, potentially sidelining intra-Palestinian complexities.[54]Stance on the Israel-Palestine conflict
Alareer portrayed the Israel-Palestine conflict as a protracted Israeli occupation and aggression against Palestinian civilians, emphasizing the asymmetry of power and the need for Palestinians to narrate their own experiences of suffering. In a May 13, 2021, New York Times op-ed, he detailed the psychological toll of Israeli airstrikes on Gazan families, recounting how his child questioned whether their building could be targeted during power outages, framing such operations as indiscriminate and terror-inducing.[55] He argued that Palestinian rocket fire from Gaza represented desperate responses to blockade and provocation, rather than unprovoked aggression. Following Hamas's October 7, 2023, attacks on Israel, Alareer focused criticism on Israel's retaliatory military campaign, describing it in an October 10, 2023, Democracy Now! interview as a "barbaric" bombardment aimed at rendering Gaza uninhabitable and erasing Palestinian presence, part of a long-standing policy of collective punishment.[56] He expressed no explicit condemnation of the initial Hamas incursion in available statements from that period, instead highlighting the ensuing Israeli operations as genocidal in intent. In voice notes recorded shortly before his death and published by Time on December 14, 2023, Alareer acknowledged the horrors of war, including bombardment and loss, but contextualized them within decades of occupation, urging listeners to carry forward Palestinian stories amid inevitable doom.[57] Alareer endorsed Palestinian resistance, including armed struggle, as a legitimate dimension of liberation efforts against what he termed settler-colonial oppression. A December 10, 2024, Guardian review of his posthumous writings noted his affirmation of armed resistance's role alongside cultural and narrative defiance, though he primarily channeled activism through literature and education to counter Israeli dominance.[58] He displayed skepticism toward Israeli accounts of October 7 atrocities, tweeting on November 29, 2023, that claims of rape and sexual violence were fabricated "lies" regurgitated when other justifications faltered, aligning with broader patterns of denialism observed in pro-Palestinian circles.[59] This stance drew accusations of bias from critics, who contrasted it with verified evidence of Hamas's actions, including hostage-taking and civilian killings documented by multiple investigations.[60]Associations with Hamas and resistance rhetoric
Refaat Alareer served as a professor of English literature at the Islamic University of Gaza (IUG), an institution with longstanding ties to Hamas, including its founding by Islamist precursors to the group in 1978 and subsequent use for military training and intelligence operations by Hamas.[61][62] While no public evidence indicates formal membership in Hamas, Alareer's employment at IUG placed him within Gaza's Hamas-governed academic environment, where the organization exerts significant control over higher education.[63] In the hours following Hamas's October 7, 2023, attacks on Israel, which killed approximately 1,200 people and involved massacres at civilian sites, Alareer appeared in a BBC interview describing the actions of "Palestinian resistance" as "legitimate and moral."[64] He explicitly likened the assault to the 1943 Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, framing it as a justified revolt against oppression despite the uprising's historical context of Jewish fighters resisting Nazi deportation, not initiating attacks on civilians.[10] This rhetoric positioned the Hamas-led operation, which included documented atrocities such as rape and hostage-taking, as ethically defensible resistance.[57] Alareer's broader writings and statements emphasized themes of unyielding resistance, portraying Palestinian fighters—implicitly including Hamas militants—as possessing an insurmountable "weapon of the belief, the faith, that this is your land," superior to Israel's military advantages despite their lighter armaments.[65] Such language recurred in his edited anthology Gaza Writes Back (2014), where contributors, mentored by Alareer, depicted armed struggle and defiance against Israeli forces as integral to Palestinian identity, often glorifying persistence in conflict over peaceful alternatives.[66] Critics, including those analyzing his public output, have characterized this as ideological alignment with Hamas's rejectionist stance, though Alareer framed it as cultural and moral imperative rather than partisan affiliation.[67]Controversies and criticisms
Allegations of incitement and violence glorification
Refaat Alareer faced allegations of glorifying violence through public statements praising Palestinian attackers and justifying assaults on Israeli civilians. On November 21, 2021, following the stabbing death of Israeli security guard Eliyahu David Kay by Palestinian terrorist Fadi Abu Shkhaidem, Alareer shared an image of the attacker on social media, writing "May Allah bless his soul" and responding "Amen" to a similar sentiment.[68] In the aftermath of the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks on Israel, which killed approximately 1,200 people, Alareer appeared in a BBC interview where he described the assaults on civilians as "legitimate and moral," likening them to the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising against Nazis.[64][69] He further characterized Hamas's actions, including reported rapes and massacres, as a moral response despite uncertainties about details at the time.[70] The BBC later apologized for airing the comparison, acknowledging it as inappropriate. Critics, including media watchdogs, argued these remarks constituted incitement by endorsing terrorism and minimizing civilian targeting, contrasting with Alareer's portrayal in some outlets as a peace advocate.[70][10] Alareer also faced accusations of downplaying Israeli suffering in prior conflicts, such as mocking victims in social media posts during escalations.[10]Accusations of antisemitism and historical analogies
Critics, including media watchdogs and antisemitism monitoring organizations, have accused Refaat Alareer of antisemitism based on a pattern of public statements demonizing Jews and equating Israeli actions with Nazi atrocities. [71] [72] In a 2019 lecture, Alareer stated, "Of course most Jews are evil," a remark that organizations such as CAMERA cited as evidence of overt prejudice. [72] He further claimed that "all supporters of Israel would be cheering for the Nazis in the ’30s and ’40s," framing Zionism as morally equivalent to Nazi sympathy. [8] Alareer's rhetoric often invoked blood libels and collective guilt, such as alleging that Israel "starves Holocaust victims and steals their money to slaughter and occupy native Palestinians." [73] He described Zionists as "the most despicable filth" and Israel as "the root cause of evil," tropes that critics argue echo historical antisemitic dehumanization. [8] These statements, documented across his social media posts under the handle @itranslate123, were flagged by groups like HonestReporting and StopAntisemitism as promoting hatred rather than legitimate political critique. [71] [73] Regarding historical analogies, Alareer repeatedly likened Israel to Nazi Germany, with over 115 documented Twitter posts between 2019 and 2021 drawing such parallels. [71] Examples include calling Israel "Nazi Germany on steroids," claiming it was "following nazism to the letter," and labeling its Iron Dome defense system a "nazi-like Israeli killing machine." [71] He asserted that Zionism and Nazism "are [two cheeks of the same dirty arse]" and accused Israel of perpetrating a "second Holocaust." [71] [8] Alareer also inverted Holocaust narratives, stating "Hitler is as peaceful as any Israeli leader" in reference to alleged Israeli atrocities, a claim critics identified as Holocaust minimization and inversion. [73] On October 10, 2023, during a BBC interview shortly after Hamas's October 7 attacks, he equated Palestinian militants' actions to the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising against Nazis, portraying the violence as "legitimate and moral" resistance despite the historical asymmetry of armed aggressors versus defenders. [8] Such analogies, per definitions from bodies like the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance, constitute antisemitic discourse by trivializing the Shoah and falsely imputing Nazi-like intent to Jews or the Jewish state. [74]Responses to smear campaign claims
Supporters of Refaat Alareer have framed allegations of incitement, antisemitism, and violence glorification as elements of a coordinated smear campaign by pro-Israel advocates to discredit Palestinian intellectuals and rationalize his targeting. According to The Electronic Intifada, such efforts distorted Alareer's image by labeling him "controversial" for declining to condemn Hamas's October 7, 2023, attacks, which he described in a BBC interview as a "legitimate and moral" response akin to the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, while ignoring his emphasis on education and storytelling over direct militancy.[75][11] This outlet, known for its advocacy against Israeli policies, linked the smears to preceding death threats and the December 6, 2023, airstrike that killed him, asserting they formed part of a broader suppression tactic inseparable from his assassination.[75] A 2025 biographical analysis in the Journal of Holy Land and Palestine Studies detailed how criticisms intensified after Alareer's sarcastic October 2023 tweet—"With or without baking powder?"—mocking an unsubstantiated Israeli claim of a baby being baked alive during the Hamas attacks; detractors, including figures like Bari Weiss and outlets such as the Daily Mail, portrayed this as evidence of callousness, but the narrative defended it as a rhetorical tool to expose propaganda rather than endorse barbarity.[14] The piece, aligned with decolonial perspectives on Palestinian resistance, argued Alareer eschewed formal defenses in favor of continued mockery and truth-telling, framing the backlash from "Zionist digital warriors" as preemptive justification for his elimination without engaging the substance of his historical analogies to Nazism, which critics cited over 100 times in his writings.[14][71] Journalist Chris Hedges, in a December 2024 letter published on his Substack, rebutted portrayals of Alareer as a militant by highlighting his advocacy for nonviolent tools like BDS and literature, quoting his students' jests about "Poems of Mass Destruction" to underscore a commitment to words over weapons, and attributing attacks on his university—falsely labeled a weapons site by Israeli officials—as efforts to eradicate dissenting knowledge.[76] Hedges, a frequent critic of U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East, contended that opponents resorted to "lies, censorship, [and] smear campaigns" absent substantive counters to Alareer's emphasis on tolerance and resistance through narrative.[76] Alareer himself offered no documented direct rebuttals to antisemitism charges during his lifetime, instead persisting with public commentary that supporters viewed as defiant exposure of biases in Western media coverage.[77] These responses, predominantly from pro-Palestinian platforms and figures, rarely provided point-by-point refutations of quoted statements—such as urging students to study Hamas's charter or invoking Nazi parallels—but instead emphasized contextual resistance under occupation, cautioning against conflating policy critique with prejudice, a stance echoed in broader defenses against IHRA definitions of antisemitism.[78] Critics of these defenses, including monitoring groups like CAMERA and HonestReporting, maintain that Alareer's unrepudiated rhetoric met thresholds for incitement and bias, underscoring a polarized discourse where empirical verification of intent remains contested.[79][71]Death
Circumstances of the 2023 airstrike
On December 6, 2023, an Israeli airstrike targeted a residential building in the Al-Wehda neighborhood of Gaza City, killing Refaat Alareer along with several family members, including his brother Hamada, his sister, and at least three nephews.[80][59] The strike occurred amid Israel's ongoing military campaign in Gaza, which began after Hamas's October 7, 2023, attacks on southern Israel that killed approximately 1,200 people and took over 250 hostages.[26] Alareer, who had refused evacuation orders and remained in northern Gaza, was sheltering in his sister's apartment at the time.[11] The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) did not issue a specific statement regarding the strike or Alareer's death, despite requests for comment from multiple outlets.[10][81] Palestinian sources and human rights groups, such as Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor, claimed the attack was deliberate, citing the precision of the bombing that destroyed only Alareer's section of the multi-story building while sparing adjacent structures.[82] However, no independent verification of targeting intent has been publicly confirmed, and the IDF's broader operations in Gaza City involved strikes on suspected Hamas infrastructure and militants, with over 17,000 Palestinian deaths reported by Gaza health authorities by early December 2023.[83] Eyewitness accounts from Alareer's associates described the family gathered for safety when the missile hit, collapsing the structure and causing immediate fatalities.[7] The incident drew international attention due to Alareer's prominence as a writer and educator, but it aligned with patterns of urban airstrikes in densely populated areas during the conflict, where collateral civilian casualties have been documented on both sides' reports.[84]The "If I Must Die" poem and its context
"If I Must Die" is a short poem composed by Refaat Alareer in 2011 and first published on December 16, 2012, in a collection tagged for its nonviolent orientation.[43] The work, written in English, envisions the author's potential death in the context of Gaza's ongoing hardships, urging survivors to perpetuate his memory through storytelling and a symbolic act of creating a white kite for a child orphaned by violence.If I must die,The poem's imagery draws on everyday elements like kites, common in Gazan children's play amid restrictions and conflict, to evoke resilience and legacy rather than vengeance.[43] Though predating the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks and ensuing war by over a decade, it circulated modestly until resurfacing prominently in late 2023, amplified by Alareer's advocacy for Palestinian self-narrativization.[86] After Alareer's death in an Israeli airstrike on December 6, 2023, "If I Must Die" achieved viral dissemination, read by millions, translated into dozens of languages, and featured in global tributes, often framed as his final testament despite its earlier composition.[44] [87] A posthumous anthology titled If I Must Die: Poetry and Prose, compiling 41 of his works from 2010 to 2023, was published on December 10, 2024, by OR Books, further cementing the poem's role in his literary output.[86]
you must live
to tell my story
to sell my things
to buy a piece of cloth
and some strings,
(make it white with a long tail)
so that a child, somewhere in Gaza
while looking heaven in the eye
awaiting his dad who left in a blaze —
and bid no one farewell
not even to his flesh
not even to himself —
sees the kite, my kite you made, flying up above,
and thinks for a moment an angel is there
bringing back love.
If I must die
let it bring hope,
let it be a tale.[85]