An »Ausländer's« Perspective on Berlins Ban Of Solidarity

This is a strange time in Berlin. All expressions of solidarity with the people in Gaza have been banned

  • Nathaniel Flakin
  • Lesedauer: 4 Min.

On Saturday, up to 150,000 people took to the streets of London to express solidarity with the population of Gaza. The following day in Berlin, 1,000 people gathered at Potsdamer Platz for the same reason. Yet seven minutes before their rally was set to begin, the police announced it had been prohibited. Cops began beating, pepper spraying, and arresting people.

Despite what you might have read, this rally was not about celebrating Hamas. The organizers said they would not tolerate Hamas flags or antisemitic slogans. The ban was preemptive – nothing illegal had happened, yet the police claimed that something illegal could happen. The right to assembly (Article 8 of Germany's Basic Law) is thus reduced to nothing.

For almost two years, Berlin has banned all pro-Palestinian demonstrations. Now, at Hermannplatz, on Sonnenallee, and throughout Neukölln, police are harassing individuals for wearing a kuffiyeh, a Palestinian scarf. They even banned a demonstration by »Jewish Berliners Against Violence in the Middle East.« Does this sound like a celebration of Hamas?

One Israeli Jewish woman tried to demonstrate all by herself, standing at Hermannplatz with a sign: »As a Jew and an Israeli – Stopp the Genocide in Gaza!« Police immediately approached her to declare this an »unlawful assembly.« How can one person be an assembly? It doesn't matter. The video ends with a heavily armed German cop in a black uniform detaining a Jewish person for expressing the wrong opinion. Does this look right?

Column »Red Flag«

Red Flag is a column on Berlin politics by Nathaniel Flakin. It appeared in Exberliner magazine from 2020 to 2023 and found a new home at the Berlin newspaper nd – as their first content in English. If you like a regular dose of very local communist content, please share. Nathaniel is also the author of the anticapitalist guide book Revolutionary Berlin.

Read this article in German

The United Nations are saying that Israel's siege of Gaza is a »a blatant violation of international humanitarian law.« In Berlin right now, it is not possible to express UN positions on the street.

By cutting off water and electricity to the more than two million people of Gaza, the Israeli army is committing a war crime. Just listen to Ursula von der Leyen, the conservative German politician who heads the EU: »Attacks against civilian infrastructure, especially electricity, are war crimes. Cutting off men, women, children of water, electricity and heating with winter coming – these are acts of pure terror. And we have to call it as such.«

However von der Leyen was accusing Russia of war crimes, not Israel. Attacking civilian infrastructure is apparently no longer »terror«, but in fact covered by the »right to self-defense.«

For Americans in Berlin, the biggest shock came when Bernie Sanders visited last week. Sanders, whose father's family was »wiped out« in the Holocaust, might well be the most famous Jewish politician in the world. Yet Saskia Esken, the head of Germany's Social Democratic Party, cancelled a meeting with Sanders because he had stated: »The targeting of civilians is a war crime, no matter who does it.«

It would be nice if the German state were serious about fighting antisemitism. But just look at Hubert Aiwanger. As a teenager, he distributed fliers at school calling for a new Auschwitz. When this was revealed, he didn't apologize. He just mumbled something about an evil twin. Aiwanger was just confirmed as Bavaria's vice-premier. This is no isolated case: Maaßen, Sarrazin, and Höcke are among the politicians who have gone public with antisemitic views. The German state only fights antisemitism when that can be instrumentalized to repress racialized people and migrants. 

This is a very strange time for us »Ausländer*innen« in Berlin. In our home countries, it's a matter of course for leftists to stand with colonized people being besieged and bombarded. This is why you hear so much English at Berlin's banned demonstrations.

Does anyone seriously believe that tens of thousands in London, New York, or Paris – including thousands and thousands of Jewish leftists – are motivated by hatred of Jews or love of Islamists? What a dark view of the world! The reality is that many people desire peace and justice. The Berlin government cannot ban such sentiments forever.

Werde Mitglied der nd.Genossenschaft!
Seit dem 1. Januar 2022 wird das »nd« als unabhängige linke Zeitung herausgeben, welche der Belegschaft und den Leser*innen gehört. Sei dabei und unterstütze als Genossenschaftsmitglied Medienvielfalt und sichtbare linke Positionen. Jetzt die Beitrittserklärung ausfüllen.
Mehr Infos auf www.dasnd.de/genossenschaft

Das »nd« bleibt gefährdet

Mit deiner Hilfe hat sich das »nd« zukunftsfähig aufgestellt. Dafür sagen wir danke. Und trotzdem haben wir schlechte Nachrichten. In Zeiten wie diesen bleibt eine linke Zeitung wie unsere gefährdet. Auch wenn die wirtschaftliche Entwicklung nach oben zeigt, besteht eine niedrige, sechsstellige Lücke zum Jahresende. Dein Beitrag ermöglicht uns zu recherchieren, zu schreiben und zu publizieren. Zusammen können wir linke Standpunkte verteidigen!

Mit deiner Unterstützung können wir weiterhin:


→ Unabhängige und kritische Berichterstattung bieten.
→ Themen abdecken, die anderswo übersehen werden.
→ Eine Plattform für vielfältige und marginalisierte Stimmen schaffen.
→ Gegen Falschinformationen und Hassrede anschreiben.
→ Gesellschaftliche Debatten von links begleiten und vertiefen.

Sei Teil der solidarischen Finanzierung und unterstütze das »nd« mit einem Beitrag deiner Wahl. Gemeinsam können wir eine Medienlandschaft schaffen, die unabhängig, kritisch und zugänglich für alle ist.