From xxxxxx <[email protected]>
Subject The Trump Administration Tried To Silence Mahmoud Khalil, so I Asked Him To Talk
Date August 8, 2025 3:20 AM
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THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION TRIED TO SILENCE MAHMOUD KHALIL, SO I ASKED
HIM TO TALK  
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Ezra Klein interviews Mahmoud Khalil
August 5, 2025
The New York Times
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_ The Palestinian activist discusses the Columbia protests, ICE
detention and free speech in the U.S. The government wanted others
like him to fear them. It wanted noncitizens and immigrants to stop
speaking out. If they could do this to Khalil... _

Mahmoud Khalil being interviewed Ezra Klein, Credit: The New York
Times

 

_This is an edited transcript of an episode of “The Ezra Klein
Show.” You can listen to the conversation by following or
subscribing to the show on the __NYT Audio app_
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Music_
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you get your podcasts_
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Across the 2024 election, Donald Trump and the people behind him said
again and again that they were here to restore free speech to this
country. Then they got power. And his administration came after speech
in a way that the left never dared to do — never wanted to do.

You saw it with the hunt to cancel any grant that had the word
“diversity” anywhere near it. You saw it as countless
organizations that depended on — or feared — the government began
reworking their mission statements or censoring their websites to
avoid any words that might offend anyone in this administration. You
saw it as border agents looked through travelers’ phones to see if
they had said anything that the administration wouldn’t like. And
you saw it as immigration agents begin yanking people off the streets
— for the crime of nothing more than speech.

Among the first of these people was Mahmoud Khalil, a Palestinian
graduate student at Columbia who had been a leader in the school’s
anti-Israel protests.

Khalil is a green-card holder. He’s married to a U.S. citizen. His
sole offense had been to speak out against Israel in a way this
administration did not like. He was detained under the U.S. secretary
of state’s authority to cancel the residency of noncitizens who
threaten U.S. foreign policy.

Did this grad student at Columbia actually threaten U.S. foreign
policy? Is that how fragile our foreign policy is?

No one really believed that.

Khalil was not followed into his building by plainclothes officers and
taken to an ICE detention center in Louisiana for more than a hundred
days — imprisoned there while his wife gave birth — because the
U.S. government feared him. He was imprisoned there because the U.S.
government wanted others like him to fear them. It wanted noncitizens
and immigrants to stop speaking out.

It wanted everyone to ask: If they could do this to Khalil, could they
do it to me? If they could detain him on such flimsy grounds, could
they not come up with a reason to detain me?

Khalil is out now on bail. He is still speaking. So I wanted to hear
what he had to say.

EZRA KLEIN: MAHMOUD KHALIL, WELCOME TO THE SHOW.

MAHMOUD KHALIL: Thank you for having me, Ezra.

SO LET’S START AT THE BEGINNING. TELL ME A BIT ABOUT YOURSELF. WHERE
WERE YOU BORN?

I was born in a very small Palestinian refugee camp in southern
Damascus, called Khan Eshieh. I wouldn’t say it’s a poor
neighborhood — but middle class, lower-middle class.

WHAT DID YOUR PARENTS DO?

My parents are now in Europe, but in Syria, they were both civil
servants. My mom was working in a civil office, issuing passports,
I.D.s, to people. My dad was a welder working in a state company.

DOING METALWORK?

Yes.

WHAT DID THEY WANT FOR YOU? WHEN YOU WERE GROWING UP, WHAT DID THEY
HOPE YOUR ADULTHOOD WOULD LOOK LIKE?

Both my parents really wanted us to be educated and invested a lot in
our education, especially since my dad barely made it to middle
school. My mom only had high school.

When you’re Palestinian in Syria, when you don’t have any
property, there’s nothing in terms of family wealth. So education is
our main investment. My parents would rather us get educated than
actually get food at some point.

WHAT WERE YOU TOLD ABOUT YOUR FAMILY’S HISTORY IN PALESTINE GROWING
UP? HOW WAS THAT IDENTITY FORMED FOR YOU?

What I know about Palestine, I heard from my grandmother, who spent 30
years in Palestine, in Tiberias. Actually, my grandmother would always
tell me that they had Jewish neighbors and she would work on their
farm. So we had a sense that there was coexistence.

My grandparents were exiled from Palestine in 1948. My grandmother,
when she left Palestine, was pregnant with my uncle, and she had to
give birth en route to southern Damascus.

So we had that sense of injustice, that sense that Palestine was taken
from us, was stolen from us. The camp is just about 30, 40 miles away
from the borders. You can see the impact of the Nakba, the Palestinian
exile from Palestine, around you because everyone is talking about it.
And we grew up in an environment where we longed to go back. That’s
why they lived literally in just a normal tent for a number of years
before upgrading it to a mud house. And then they decided to build a
concrete house.

Living in the camps, to Palestinians, is always temporary. It’s a
station until we go back to Palestine.

YOU GREW UP IN SYRIA, AND YOU HAD TO FLEE DURING THE UPRISING. TELL ME
ABOUT THAT MOMENT. WHAT LEADS TO YOU DECIDING YOU HAVE TO LEAVE?

The Syrian people erupted against the autocracy in Syria, against the
Syrian regime.

I was part of that. Palestinians were also oppressed by the Syrian
regime. And, as a result of that, I was part of organizing protests,
relief to displaced persons.

But on Jan. 11, 2013, two of my friends were disappeared, arbitrarily
detained, and I had to flee the next day. And these two friends died
under torture.

HOW DID YOU BECOME INVOLVED IN ORGANIZING THE SYRIAN PROTESTS?
THAT’S A DANGEROUS THING TO DO. YOU’RE HOW OLD?

I was 16 at that point. Palestinian refugees, at the very beginning,
were isolated from the big protests.

A lot of displaced persons — Syrians — would come to the camp,
would come to our schools. So we opened our schools, and we started a
whole relief operation for them. We felt that we needed to speak up,
we needed to protect those who are fleeing from the areas that the
regime is targeting.

With a very small group of friends, we started to organize small
protests. And by a small protest, I mean it would last for five, 10
minutes because you feared that the mukhabarat or the military would
come after you.

The risk of protesting in Syria was your life. It was not an arrest.
It was not a revocation of your degree. It was literally death.

It was a week after my 18th birthday that I left to Lebanon.

SO WHEN YOU REALIZED YOU’RE IN DANGER, WHEN TWO OF YOUR FRIENDS HAD
BEEN DISAPPEARED AND WITHIN A DAY, YOU’RE IN LEBANON — DID YOU
ALREADY HAVE AN EXIT PLAN?

DID YOU JUST GET IN A CAR AND DRIVE? HOW DOES THAT HAPPEN FOR YOU?

I learned about the disappearance of my friends, and at that point, I
feared that, under torture, they would confess my name. Or if they had
anything on their computer about me, I feared that I would be next.

I feared that my name was already with the regime. So literally, that
same day I went to Lebanon.

IN A CAR? DID YOU WALK?

In a car. In Syria, the security branches are very decentralized. So I
wanted to make it as soon as possible to the border so that my name
was not on a list of people who cannot leave Syria.

I had some relatives in Lebanon, so I spent a couple of weeks there.
But I eventually ended up in the Shatila refugee camp, which is one of
the biggest Palestinian refugee camps in Lebanon.

I wanted to continue my education, but I did not speak any English.
Most of the universities in Lebanon are either English or French, and
they’re very expensive. They had no money whatsoever.

So I started working in construction just to make a living. Then I saw
the opportunity to volunteer with a Syrian-American organization
called Jusoor, providing education opportunities for Syrians around
the world.

I volunteered there, and then two weeks later they offered me a job.
That was my first job — $600 a month. A few months after that, they
offered me a scholarship to go to university in Lebanon to study
computer science. I worked with them for five years. I was doing my
undergraduate part-time, working full-time.

Then I joined the British Embassy as a program manager and political
officer in their Syria office.

SO YOU TAUGHT YOURSELF ENGLISH DURING THIS PERIOD?

Yes.

HOW?

Because Jusoor is a Syrian-American organization, we had a lot of
American volunteers. So I would just talk with them. I would
communicate with them. Not with words — like very broken English. It
took me, I would say, until 2017 until I felt confident in my English.
It wasn’t an easy process.

WHAT MADE YOU WANT TO WORK WITH THE BRITISH GOVERNMENT?

Supporting Syrians. I worked in the Syria office. Their policy
regarding Syria aligns with my values, aligns with how I see the
political solution in Syria. I wanted to have that insight and make a
contribution in that process.

It also aligned with my career aspirations in terms of working in
diplomacy and international affairs, as a whole.

WHAT MADE YOU WANT TO STUDY IN THE UNITED STATES?

In Lebanon, I studied computer science. However, my career took a
different path, into international affairs and development. I wanted
to have an opportunity to actually study international affairs
academically rather than just learning that by doing — to actually
spend some time looking into theories, looking into the academic part
of the work that I’d been doing for the past 10 years at that point.

In 2018, I got a scholarship to study an executive course at Columbia
in nonprofit management and leadership at the business school. So I
came here just for a couple of weeks. I liked Columbia, and Columbia
is known in the Palestinian circles because of Edward Said, the
Palestinian-American academic and writer.

I had heard a lot about Columbia, so I was like: Yes, Columbia in New
York, right next to the U.N., where I eventually want to work. So why
not?

WHAT’S YOUR GENERAL IMPRESSION OF AMERICA? HOW DO YOU THINK ABOUT
AMERICA AS AN ENTITY, AS A COUNTRY?

The fact that I worked for this Syrian-American organization gave me a
lot of insight into America being a country of opportunity, a country
at least of democracy, of rule of law.

However, I had my own reservations about the impact of America on me,
because as a Palestinian or as a Syrian refugee in Lebanon,
America’s influence in the Middle East was very negative. So I felt
that impact on me as a Palestinian.

However, working for the British Embassy, I would always meet American
diplomats, because the British and the U.S. policy goals regarding
Syria were quite similar. So I would spend a lot of time with American
diplomats discussing Syria.

The most important thing I liked about the U.S. is the quality of
education. So that is what actually encouraged me to come to the
United States, as well.

WHAT YEAR IS THIS?

The first time I applied to Columbia was in 2020. I got accepted, but
I couldn’t come because of Covid. So I came to the United States in
2022.

BEFORE OCT. 7, HOW WAS THAT FIRST YEAR FOR YOU? WHAT WAS COLUMBIA LIKE
FOR YOU?

I was very much looking forward to starting my degree at Columbia
University. I wanted to take a full load of courses. I wanted to have
that two years to decide if I wanted to continue working in diplomacy
or whether I should shift to the private sector.

However, that was disturbed by the earthquake in Turkey and Syria,
when over 50,000 people died. So I continued. I wanted also to be
involved in as many communities as possible. Being my first time
living in the country, I wanted to have friends. I joined the Middle
East and North Africa Club. I joined the Palestine Working Group. Just
to build community. Because in a city as big as New York, you need a
community.

IT’S A HARD PLACE TO GET A FOOTHOLD.

Exactly. However, the anti-Palestinian sentiment at Columbia was very
obvious. One of the first events we organized as part of the Palestine
Working Group at Columbia was inviting the Middle East director at
Human Rights Watch to talk about Israeli practices in the occupied
Palestinian territories.

And I was surprised that our event was flagged as a special event. I
was like: Why is that? We are inviting someone from Human Rights
Watch.

So I was very surprised that this event was flagged as a special
event. That’s even before Oct. 7. That was, I think, April 2023.

 

Another event — inviting the B.D.S., the Boycott, Divestment and
Sanctions movement, coordinator to come to talk to us virtually —
was also flagged as a special event. We had to fight with the
administration to make it happen.

So clearly there was this anti-Palestinian sentiment, and that was my
first shock at Columbia. It felt to me like: OK, maybe it’s
bureaucratic. It’s not a big deal. But it was more obvious after
Oct. 7 — the fact that the anti-Palestinian prejudice within the
Columbia administration is very flagrant.

TELL ME ABOUT THAT FOR A MINUTE BEFORE WE GET TO OCT. 7 ITSELF,
BECAUSE COLUMBIA NOW HAS THESE DUAL REPUTATIONS YOU’RE DESCRIBING:
IT HAS A BOARD OF TRUSTEES THAT WAS, I THINK IT’S FAIR TO SAY, VERY
CONCERNED ABOUT THINGS LIKE THE BOYCOTT, DIVESTMENT AND SANCTIONS
MOVEMENT. IT’S ALSO A HOME OF A LOT OF VERY IMPORTANT PALESTINIAN
SCHOLARSHIP. RASHID KHALIDI IS THERE AT THIS TIME. THERE’S THIS
QUESTION OF WHETHER IT’S AN ANTISEMITIC PLACE. THERE’S SOME KIND
OF TENSION HERE THAT IS SPECIFIC ABOUT COLUMBIA.

Columbia is a for-profit place. Columbia doesn’t care about Jewish
students, doesn’t care about Palestinian students. They only care
about their brand and money.

SO IT’S A CORPORATION, FUNCTIONALLY.

Absolutely.

OCT. 7 HAPPENS. WHAT DO YOU THINK THAT DAY?

At that day, I was at the cinema with my wife, Noor, at Lincoln
Center. When I left the cinema around midnight, 12:30 a.m., I started
to receive all these notifications.

 

To me, it felt frightening that we had to reach this moment in the
Palestinian struggle. I remember I didn’t sleep for a number of
days, and Noor was very worried about my health. It was heavy. I still
remember. I was like: This couldn’t happen.

WHAT DO YOU MEAN WE HAD TO REACH THIS MOMENT? WHAT MOMENT IS THIS?

I was interning at UNRWA at that point — the United Nations Relief
and Works Agency — at the U.N.’s New York office. As part of my
internship, my research and work were focused on Palestine, on the
situation in the West Bank and Gaza.

You can see that the situation is not sustainable. You have an Israeli
government that’s absolutely ignoring Palestinians. They are trying
to make that deal with Saudi and just happy about their Abraham Accord
without looking at Palestinians — as if Palestinians are not part of
the equation. They circumvented the Palestinian question.

It was clear that it was becoming more and more violent. By Oct. 6,
over 200 Palestinians were killed by Israeli forces and settlers. Over
40 of them were children.

So that’s what I mean by: Unfortunately, we couldn’t avoid such a
moment.

It was absolutely difficult to see not only the horrific images but
also the response of Israel. Because I knew that’s what Netanyahu
wants because Netanyahu thrives on the killing of Palestinians. At
that point, there were already big demonstrations in Israel regarding
the judicial reforms. But I knew that was something that Netanyahu
would use to ethnically cleanse Palestinians.

WHEN YOU SAY YOU HAVE THESE DAYS WHERE YOU’RE NOT SLEEPING — ARE
YOU JUST FOLLOWING THE NEWS AND THE SOCIAL MEDIA RELENTLESSLY? ARE YOU
TRYING TO THINK ABOUT WHAT WILL HAPPEN NEXT? ARE YOU TRYING TO THINK
ABOUT HOW THIS WILL PLAY OUT?

Yes, mostly just thinking about the future, to be honest — worried
about the future. I remember one of the things I said: This is going
to be even worse than the Nakba, the aftermath. I had to think: How
can you stop this? What can we do?

But also just following — a day or two days after when the former
Israeli defense minister said: We’re going to cut everything from
Gaza, “human animals
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So the intent was clear that they wanted to obliterate Gaza.

I REMEMBER I DID A PIECE RIGHT AFTER OCT. 7, AND ONE OF THE THINGS
THAT SEEMED CLEAR TO ME VERY, VERY QUICKLY ON THAT DAY — AS YOU’RE
WATCHING THE IMAGES, YOU’RE HEARING THE SCREAMS, YOU’RE SEEING THE
VIDEOS OF JEWISH ISRAELIS BEING PARADED AROUND, OF CORPSES — IS BOTH
THAT THIS ATTACK IS HORRIFIC AND THAT THE COUNTERATTACK IS GOING TO BE
OVERWHELMING.

ON SOME LEVEL, I UNDERSTOOD THAT AS SOMETHING HAMAS MUST HAVE WANTED.
PULL ISRAEL INTO THIS ATTACK, PULL IT INTO SOME KIND OF WAR. MAYBE YOU
INVOLVE OTHER PLAYERS IN THE MIDDLE EAST. BUT A LOT OF LIVES ARE BEING
USED THERE AS CHIPS ON THE TABLE.

 

WAS THAT YOUR PERCEPTION? OR DID YOU SEE THIS AS SOMETHING THAT NEEDED
TO HAPPEN TO BREAK THE EQUILIBRIUM?

It’s more the latter — just to break the cycle, to break that
Palestinians are not being heard. And to me, it’s a desperate
attempt to tell the world that Palestinians are here, that
Palestinians are part of the equation. That was my interpretation of
why Hamas did the Oct. 7 attacks on Israel.

Because at that point, there was no political process. It was clear
that the Saudi-Israel deal is very imminent, and Palestinians
wouldn’t have any path to statehood and self-determination. So they
had to do that, according to their calculations — which, it’s
obvious, were not right.

I’VE HEARD YOU IN OTHER NEWS BE VERY CLEAR ABOUT CONDEMNING THE
KILLING OF CIVILIANS. OCT. 7 WAS OBVIOUSLY AN OPERATION THAT DID
TARGET AND KILL A LOT OF CIVILIANS. DO YOU SEE THAT AS UNAVOIDABLE,
THAT HAMAS HAD NO OTHER CHOICE? DO YOU SEE IT AS A MISTAKE?

What I know is that targeting civilians is wrong. That’s why we’ve
been calling for an international independent investigation to hold
perpetrators to accountability. It’s very important, for those of us
who believe in international law, that this should happen.

 

And it’s very important to underscore, as well, that Palestinians
have tried all forms of resistance — including nonviolent
resistance. However, this was always targeted by Israel. Palestinians
who participated in the Great March of Return were killed or maimed
because of that.

There’s nothing that can justify the killing of civilians — and
the international law is very clear about that. We cannot pick and
choose when international law applies to us or to others.

But also, there’s another point to this, Ezra: Palestinians don’t
have to be perfect victims. That’s what the world is asking of
Palestinians amid the dispossession, the occupation, the killing, all
of that. Horrible things happened. Nothing can justify that. I would
do everything in my power to stop that from happening.

But we cannot ask Palestinians to be perfect victims after 75 years of
dispossession, of killing people in Gaza, being under siege — at
that point for over 17 years. Palestinians in the West Bank being
stopped at checkpoints, settlers attacking them at every opportunity.
The human dignity of Palestinians was absent — and still is,
unfortunately.

So that’s why, when discussing this — unfortunately, these
horrible things happened, but we cannot ask Palestinians to be perfect
victims.

SO TELL ME ABOUT THE ORGANIZING FOR YOU. HOW DO YOU GET INVOLVED? WHEN
DO THE PROTESTS AND THE ENCAMPMENTS BEGIN? WHAT IS YOUR INITIAL
INVOLVEMENT IN THEM?

It goes back before Oct. 7, my involvement in Palestine organizing on
campus. I started the process with the Columbia administration
creating Dar, which means “home” in Arabic. It’s the Palestinian
student society, to bring Palestinians from different schools together
— that was the goal of it.

I worked with the administration over the summer to build that
society. That positioned me, by Oct. 7, to be the co-president of this
new society, but I was also a co-president of the Palestine Working
Group at SIPA, the School of International and Public Affairs. So I
had this relationship with the Columbia administration. Most of them
were junior officers.

I’VE HEARD YOU DESCRIBE YOURSELF PREVIOUSLY AS A BUREAUCRAT.

Yes.

AND IT SOUNDS LIKE YOU MAINTAIN SOME OF THAT IDENTITY AT COLUMBIA —
A PERSON WORKING WITHIN SYSTEMS.

Yes. I mean, most of the students are young. They don’t have this
experience through these bureaucratic systems.

So I found myself in a position where I would be the one communicating
to the administration the concerns of the Palestinian community.

On Oct. 9 or 10, I sent Columbia an appeal from the Palestinian
students regarding the one-sided narrative that Columbia was trying to
push regarding academic accommodations for Palestinian students like
myself, who had been awake for days, just watching the horrors.

WHEN YOU SAY THE ONE-SIDED NARRATIVE COLUMBIA WAS PUSHING, WHAT
NARRATIVE AND IN WHAT FORM?

The narrative that Columbia pushed from the very beginning was a very
pro-Israel narrative. By Oct. 8, there were hundreds of Palestinians
killed by Israel. Yet Columbia erased that from their communication.

Our ask was very simple: Treat us equally, see us as humans. Yet that
was met with opposition or just no answers whatsoever.

AND THE ASK HERE WOULD HAVE MEANT IN THESE COMMUNICATIONS BEING MORE


Being more balanced in terms of acknowledging the Palestinian death,
acknowledging the humanitarian crisis, acknowledging that Palestinians
are occupied. You either should be consistent with these matters or
just don’t say anything.

 

I GUESS THE PERSPECTIVE OF ISRAELI JEWISH STUDENTS AT COLUMBIA WOULD
BE THAT THERE WAS A HUGE ATTACK THAT MURDERED SOME 1,200 PEOPLE —
THAT THEY WERE AFRAID OF ANTISEMITIC VIOLENCE ERUPTING AROUND THE
WORLD, AND THAT THEY NEEDED TO HEAR SOMETHING ABOUT THAT.

Again, what we asked is not to omit their suffering or their
perspective. We wanted to have equality — as we want in the whole
movement. This movement is about equality and justice.

Columbia did that without the students even asking for it. The first
statement coming from Columbia was on the evening of Oct. 7.

SO THE WHOLE SET OF COMMUNICATIONS FELT LIKE AN ERASURE OF PALESTINIAN
EXPERIENCE?

Absolutely. The whole of Columbia’s communication with the student
body was designed to erase the Palestinian experience.

SO AT THIS POINT, YOU’RE SENDING EMAILS. AT WHAT POINT DOES THIS
BECOME THE PROTEST THAT LATER BECOMES VERY WELL KNOWN?

 

I must mention that the first protest that happened at Columbia was on
Oct. 12 — five, six days after Oct. 7.

For these five days, every single night, there would be a vigil
organized by Israeli and Jewish students at Columbia. Palestinians
made a decision to not hold any vigils during these days, to give them
the space to mourn.

When we wanted to have our protest on Oct. 12, we were met with a
counterprotest. Columbia made the mistake of putting these protests
facing each other.

SO THE UNIVERSITY DECIDES WHERE YOU CAN BE —

Exactly. They gave the students supporting Palestine the East Lawn and
students supporting Israel the West Lawn.

IT’S LIKE A METAPHOR.

Exactly. That was one of the first biggest mistakes that Columbia
made.

 

The protesters literally took a lawn. They wanted to call for their
university to do three things: to divest from companies complicit in
human rights violations, to disclose the investments where Columbia
money goes and to end ties with Israeli academic institutions.

The student movement at Columbia started — it’s not just after
Oct. 7. I really want to highlight that in 2002, Columbia students
voted to demand Columbia divest its investments from companies
associated with or complicit in human rights violations in Israel.

And every year after that, the students would do the same. CUAD, the
Columbia University Apartheid Divest, was not created after Oct. 7. It
was created in 2016 as a partnership between Students for Justice in
Palestine and Jewish Voices for Peace. So this is not a new thing.

The student movement is not only about protests, encampments and civil
disobedience. There’s a lot of work done in terms of political
education, referendums, submitting proposals to Columbia on why they
should divest, research, mutual aid. So it feels very hard when you
hear that it’s only about the protest, and it’s only about the
encampment.

However, the students wanted to continue protesting because Columbia
was not listening to them whatsoever.

YOU DESCRIBED THE GROUPS YOU WERE IN AS PALESTINIAN GROUPS, BUT YOU
MENTIONED A MINUTE AGO THAT JEWISH VOICES FOR PEACE, WHICH IS ALSO A
STUDENT GROUP, WAS INVOLVED FROM THE BEGINNING IN THESE PROTESTS, TOO,
AND IN THE DIVESTMENT MOVEMENT.

TELL ME ABOUT THEM, ABOUT YOUR RELATIONSHIP WITH THE JEWISH STUDENTS
WHO ARE PART OF THESE PROTESTS. WHAT IS THAT SET OF RELATIONSHIPS AND
DYNAMICS LIKE?

Having lived in the Middle East most of my life, unfortunately, the
only Jew you hear about is the one who’s trying to kill you. For
those in Gaza and the West Bank — that’s the only Jewish person
they encounter: the one at checkpoints, the one raiding their homes.

And for me, because I was involved in this international work, I met a
lot of Jews through my work. And coming into the United States, it was
an opportunity for me to expand on that — to really understand what
Israel means to the Jewish population around the world and the Jewish
perspective about Israel.

Jewish Voices for Peace — and not only them, because there are a lot
of Jewish students who are not associated with Jewish Voices for
Peace, who were part of the movement, who felt that they can’t
remain silent while a country is committing crimes in their names, who
wanted to fight antisemitism by showing what real Judaism is, that
their Judaism requires them to speak out. So they were absolutely an
integral part of the movement.

YOU MENTIONED THAT THE PROTESTS HAVE THESE THREE DEMANDS: DIVESTMENT
FROM COUNTRIES THAT HAVE HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSES OR INTERNATIONAL LAW
ABUSES, THE CUTTING OF TIES TO ISRAELI UNIVERSITIES AND KNOWLEDGE OF
WHERE COLUMBIA’S MONEY IS GOING.

THE MORE MACRO DEMAND, THE THING YOU HEAR IN CHANTS, THE THING THAT IS
BEHIND MORE OF THAT, IS THE IDEA OF PALESTINIAN LIBERATION. OF
FREEDOM.

Absolutely.

WHAT DOES THAT MEAN TO YOU?

Palestinian liberation means that Palestinians should live in dignity,
freedom and justice — as simple as that.

They did not have political goals in terms of one state or two states
or what the form of governance would be for a liberated Palestine —
I mean, I have views on that as a Palestinian — but the movement was
just to end this occupation, to end the apartheid, to end the genocide
now and to have justice, freedom and dignity for everyone.

I REMEMBER THE COLUMBIA PROTEST — BEFORE I KNEW WHO YOU WERE —
BECOMING A NATIONAL STORY. AND HEARING ABOUT IT CONSTANTLY AT EVERY
DINNER I SEEMED TO GO TO, AND ITS BEING DEFINED BY POSITIONS THAT FEEL
MORE EXTREME THAN THAT.

 

FAMOUSLY A STUDENT SAYING — THIS GOT ATTRIBUTED TO YOU, BUT IT
WASN’T YOU — THAT ZIONISTS DON’T DESERVE TO LIVE.

SOME PEOPLE HEAR “PALESTINIAN LIBERATION” AND HEAR “JEWISH
ERADICATION” OR “EXPULSION.” IS THAT WHAT YOU MEAN WHEN YOU SAY
IT? IS THAT WHAT YOU HEAR IN THE MOVEMENT WHEN YOU SAY IT?

No, absolutely not.

There are deliberate attempts to demonize the movement. Again, the
movement as a whole is not homogeneous, but also there is some
ignorance in the movement in terms of what Palestinian liberation
could mean. But in no way does it mean the eradication of the Jewish
people.

This is part of the demonization of the movement — that if you get
Palestinian rights, then you wouldn’t get Jewish rights.

To me — as a Palestinian, as an oppressed — I always felt my duty
to also liberate my oppressor from their hate and from their fear.

 

But these were always just a distraction — sentiments about the
movement that it’s violent, that it wants to eradicate Israel or the
Jewish people. Because it’s not. We are at a time where Palestinians
are getting killed every minute. That’s what the focus was — and
still is.

YOU END UP AS A NEGOTIATOR ON BEHALF OF THE COALITION OF GROUPS THAT
ARE PROTESTING. WHAT IS THAT ROLE? WHO ARE YOU NEGOTIATING WITH? WHAT
ARE YOU NEGOTIATING FOR?

Given my relationship with the Columbia administration and given my
experience in diplomacy, the students and faculty approached me to
negotiate on their behalf. And also, as a Palestinian, I can relate
more to the demands.

So I was negotiating with two top administrators at Columbia. However,
Columbia did not want to negotiate. They just wanted to buy time.

It was disheartening because these students were protesting since
October. Every single week you have a protest. The students submitted
proposals to Columbia’s committee on divestment, and the proposals
were rejected.

 

When you have Columbia suspending S.J.P. and J.V.P. for the protests
in November and then disciplining students for protests, then the
students had to step up their game. Because clearly the university
wouldn’t listen to them unless they escalated.

That’s how the encampment happened. They did not take us seriously
at the beginning. Then they took us more seriously, but it was clear
that they did not want in any way to criticize Israel. They did not in
any way appear to be capitulating to the students.

It was very intense. I was threatened at the negotiation table. They
told me: This is our offer. If you don’t sign, the police or
National Guard will come today at midnight.

TO UPROOT THE ENCAMPMENTS?

Yes. Exactly.

MANY OF THE PEOPLE PROTESTING AND THE LEADERS OF THE PROTEST WOULD DO
SO WITH THEIR FACES COVERED. YOU DIDN’T. WHY?

I wasn’t doing anything wrong. That doesn’t mean that others were
doing something wrong because they covered their faces. It means that
my risk calculation is different — because the risk is real. Right
after Oct. 7, there was doxxing — trucks displaying the faces of
students.

THESE WERE TRUCKS GOING AROUND COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY —

Calling students a Jewish-hating group or Jewish-hating students,
something like that. So students feared revealing their identity. Also
there were groups like Canary Mission and Betar harassing these
students and posting their information online, calling their parents,
calling their employers.

There was this fear —

AND YOU’RE A TARGET OF THESE GROUPS.

I was a target — I’m still a target — of these groups. But my
risk appetite was higher than others’. Why would I hide my face for
protesting a genocide? If an employer doesn’t want to employ me for
my views on Palestine, then I don’t want to work there.

WELL, WAS IT YOUR RISK APPETITE? OR WAS IT ALSO A DIFFERENT RISK
ASSESSMENT? WE’RE GOING TO TALK ABOUT YOUR ARREST AND DETENTION IN A
SECOND, BUT DID THAT NOT SEEM TO YOU LIKE A THING THAT HAPPENS IN
AMERICA?

Yes. I was ultimately wrong with that assessment. Because, once again,
I wasn’t doing anything wrong to hide my face. And the focus of
these groups was more mainly like employers, opportunities and
smearing you online.

At no moment did I feel that there would actually be government
collaboration with these groups. None of my statements were
problematic. Not to mention, even if they were problematic, they would
be covered by the First Amendment. But I did not feel that the
government would actually act on such baseless claims against me.

 

I was wrong. Eventually the U.S. government depended on these profiles
to target students.

SO DONALD TRUMP IS INAUGURATED FOR A SECOND TERM IN JANUARY 2025. WHEN
HE WON THE ELECTION, AND WHEN HE WAS INAUGURATED, WHAT DID YOU THINK
THAT MEANT, FIRST, FOR THE SET OF ISSUES THAT YOU CARE ABOUT — THE
CONFLICT, AMERICAN POLICY? BUT ALSO DID YOU THINK IT MEANT ANYTHING
FOR YOU AND OTHER STUDENTS IN YOUR MOVEMENT PERSONALLY? DID THAT SEEM
LIKE A LIKELY OUTCOME?

The election of Trump, when it comes to Palestine, unfortunately, is
the same as Biden. Biden was equally bad.

Biden was gaslighting us that they care about Palestinians. But in
fact, Biden laid the groundwork for Trump to do what he’s doing
right now. It’s just to us, Trump would expose this hypocrisy.

SO YOUR VIEW IS THAT THEIR POLICIES WERE NOT THAT DIFFERENT — TRUMP
WAS JUST HONEST ABOUT IT.

Exactly. When it comes to actually using government resources to come
after students to set the movement back — because one of Trump’s
campaign pledges was to set the Palestine movement in this country
back 20 years. I think that’s what he said in the summer of 2024.

But my view is that this only exposed that there is a Palestine
exception in this country — when it comes to the First Amendment and
when it comes to the U.S. government institutions.

IN THE EARLY DAYS OF MARCH, YOU REACH OUT TO COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY. YOU
SAY THAT SOMETHING IS CHANGING, THAT YOU’RE FEELING UNSAFE.

WHAT WERE YOU SEEING?

After the executive order by the Trump administration in January
targeting student activists, these shady groups like Canary Mission
and Betar became more emboldened. They were more vicious in their
attacks online.

And the week leading to my arrest, I noticed that all my friends would
text me these tweets from Canary Mission and these groups tagging
Rubio, tagging D.H.S., ICE, all of that.

So I sent the Columbia administration a couple of emails, mainly
asking for a lawyer to send these organizations a cease and desist
letter.

WALK ME THROUGH WHAT HAPPENS ON MARCH 8.

On March 8, I was coming back from an iftar dinner with my wife, and I
entered the lobby of my building. Then I noticed that someone was
following us.

 

They asked me: Are you Mahmoud Khalil? And I was like: Yes, who are
you?

They said: We are the police. I was like: What police? Because they
were in plain clothes. There were two at that point. Then they said
they were with the Department of Homeland Security and my visa had
been revoked.

I said: I don’t have a visa. I’m not here on a visa. I’m a green
card holder.

He looked very confused at that point, and he called in someone else.
So at this point there were four people. I asked if they had any
arrest warrant or anything to show me, and they refused to do that.
They threatened Noor, my wife, with arrest if she didn’t leave.

So Noor went to get my green card because it wasn’t on me at that
point. They were just confused about the green card part of this. And
when Noor brought it, and they saw it, he looked even more confused.

So he had to call someone, and that someone told him: Bring him
anyway.

During all that period, I was chill. I was very calm. I’ve dealt
with power all my life. I knew I didn’t do anything wrong. I
thought, given their first comment about the visa, maybe this is just
a misunderstanding. I would go to the office, and it would be solved.

But I was very scared because they were wearing plain clothes. The
cars were unmarked cars. I was taken to their office in New York, and
five hours later they showed me that there would be a termination —
that my presence in the United States presents, I think — I can’t
remember. But it’s a foreign policy threat.

 

HERE, I’LL READ IT. THE PROVISION HERE THAT THEY’RE WORKING OFF,
THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION, IS: “AN ALIEN WHOSE PRESENCE OR ACTIVITIES
IN THE UNITED STATES THE SECRETARY OF STATE HAS REASONABLE GROUND TO
BELIEVE WOULD HAVE POTENTIALLY SERIOUS ADVERSE FOREIGN POLICY
CONSEQUENCES FOR THE UNITED STATES IS DEPORTABLE.”

Exactly.

SO THEY SHOW YOU THAT?

After five hours. And I laughed when I saw it. I was like: What are
they doing? Even the officer shrugged while giving me the N.T.A., the
notice to appear.

But at the same time, I heard someone approaching the officer that the
White House was requesting an update, and I requested endless times to
call my lawyer.

I told him I want to talk to my lawyer before signing, just to know
what’s happening. And they refused.

Then they moved me to New Jersey, then back to New York, to J.F.K., to
Texas, to Louisiana — in a matter of 30 hours.

WAIT, SAY THAT AGAIN? THEY MOVED YOU FROM J.F.K. —

To Texas.

TO TEXAS —

To Louisiana.

IN 30 HOURS?

In 30 hours. So everything was very quick, without me knowing where
I’m going. I was shackled. And you’re expected to follow orders,
so —

HAD YOU BEEN GIVEN A LAWYER, AN OPPORTUNITY TO CALL SOMEONE?

Nothing. Nothing at all. These practices were present in Syria, where
you have a security branch kidnapping you from the street or
disappearing you and arbitrarily detaining you.

I never felt that this would happen to me in the United States —
where they would show up without any arrest warrant, without anything,
and just take me.

That’s why I keep saying it felt like a kidnapping. Because from
Saturday evening until Monday morning, I had no contact with anyone.
No lawyers, no family, nothing.

The last thing I heard from them — when they were taking me to the
car, they were threatening Noor with arrest. And she was eight months
pregnant at that time. And that was the only thing I was thinking
about during these 30 hours: Did they arrest Noor? Is the baby OK? Is
she OK?

I wanted answers, but they refused to give any answers. And I was,
again, shackled and expected to just follow orders.

I only knew that I was going to Louisiana when we were boarding the
plane.

TELL ME ABOUT WHAT HAPPENS IN LOUISIANA.

I didn’t know where I was going. Like, is it a jail? Is it an
office? Is it a detention center for immigrants? I didn’t know any
of that.

So when we arrived there, we arrived at 1 a.m. We get to the detention
center, and they put me in this dorm with over 70 men.

In the morning, I learned that this is an ICE detention facility and
that everyone here is undocumented or they are here because of their
documents. I felt better because now I can talk to people and ask
what’s happening. I can see there’s a phone.

So when I woke up, I went to ask someone how I can operate the phone,
and I called Noor. I just wanted to know: Is she going to pick up? Not
like: What’s happening in the outside world?

Noor picked up, and we talked, and the first thing she told me was:
The White House has tweeted about you.

WHAT DID TRUMP SAY ABOUT YOU THAT DAY?

“Shalom Mahmoud.”

RIGHT. I REMEMBER THAT TWEET.

Yes. He later said a lot of things about my being a Hamas sympathizer.
Rubio said: young aspiring terrorist. Or something like that.

It felt like within a couple of days, the media was painting a totally
different image of who Mahmoud Khalil is. The dehumanization of such
tweets and such a portrayal in the media was so difficult to me on a
personal level.

But I kept asking: Is what’s happening legal? I fled Syria fearing
political prosecution to come to the United States to face the same
fate of political prosecution.

 

DO YOU HAVE A VIEW ON WHY IT WAS YOU? I WILL SAY — BECAUSE I HAD TO
PREPARE FOR THIS SHOW — I NEEDED TO MAKE SURE I KNEW THE REALLY
INFLAMMATORY THINGS YOU’VE SAID.

AND I FOUND INFLAMMATORY THINGS SAID BY PEOPLE NEAR YOU AT DIFFERENT
TIMES. OR BY AN INSTAGRAM ACCOUNT THAT’S PART OF A GROUP YOU’RE A
PART OF. THAT KIND OF THING. BUT I COULDN’T FIND THAT MUCH FROM YOU.

Yes. I joked with a couple of friends before my detention that I would
be Trump’s perfect target if he wanted to do anything regarding
that. But it was a joke, I didn’t think that —

WHY WOULD YOU BE HIS PERFECT TARGET?

A Palestinian. My name is Mahmoud, and I was vocal in the media.
That’s the perfect target to make an example out of. Because it’s
not about me. It’s not because he hates me. It was just the perfect
recipe to make an example out of because the main goal of targeting me
is to chill speech in this country. To make an example out of me, that
even if you are a permanent resident, you’re not safe. That we have
ways to come after you.

That’s the main message that they wanted to deliver by targeting me.

The other thing is because I present a different narrative than what
the Israel lobby and this administration wants to show — that
Palestinians are violent. Palestinians just want to bomb things.

But I presented a different reality to that — that we know what
we’re doing. We want justice and freedom and dignity for everyone.
That we are educated, that we are doing this from the strong belief in
human rights and in the dignity of all people.

I WANT TO GO BACK TO THE RUBIO TERMINATION NOTICE.

THE LEGAL GROUNDS HERE ARE THAT SOMEONE — AN ALIEN IN THE LANGUAGE
OF THE LAW HERE — WHO THE SECRETARY OF STATE HAS REASONABLE GROUNDS
TO BELIEVE WOULD HAVE POTENTIALLY SERIOUS ADVERSE FOREIGN POLICY
CONSEQUENCES FOR THE UNITED STATES.

I’VE TRIED TO LOOK AT WHAT THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION HAS SAID ABOUT
THE JUSTIFICATION OF THIS. THEY’VE OFFERED A FEW. ONE IS A VIEW THAT
FIGHTING ANTISEMITISM IS A FOREIGN POLICY PRIORITY OF THE UNITED
STATES, AND THAT YOU ARE ANTISEMITIC AND THAT YOUR PRESENCE HERE IS
THEN IN CONFLICT WITH THAT PRIORITY.

HOW DO YOU RESPOND TO THAT?

It’s just baseless. There isn’t any truth to that, and it’s
absurd. In fact, what is a threat to combating antisemitism in this
country is this administration’s unconditional support to a country
that’s committing a genocide in the name of the Jewish people.
They’re trying to conflate antisemitism with anti-Zionism, with
anti-Israel policies or sentiment.

The same way they’re also trying to now conflate pro-Palestine
activism and pro-Hamas speech. That’s their main goal. But a federal
court judge said that it’s likely unconstitutional that the
administration targeted me.

 

I’m not sure how much you know, but this provision was used in the
1950s to go after Jewish immigrants in this country.

IT HAS A VERY PROUD LINEAGE.

YOU TOUCHED ON THIS GLANCINGLY, BUT ONE OF THE ARGUMENTS THEY’VE
MADE ABOUT YOU IS — I THINK THE WORD THEY USED WAS “ALIGNED”:
THE ACTIVITIES ARE ALIGNED WITH HAMAS. AND HAMAS IS A DESIGNATED
TERRORIST ORGANIZATION UNDER U.S. LAW. SO AGAIN, THAT WOULD MAKE YOU
POTENTIALLY IN CONFLICT WITH AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY.

This goes again into the attempt by this administration, or just
Israel, in general, to group pro-Palestine activism with supporting
Hamas — which is not true.

What I stand for, what I’m advocating for, is the end of the
genocide, the end of the occupation, the end of the apartheid regime
and the end of complicity of Columbia University in this regime.

As simple as that. I don’t how that makes me aligned with Hamas or
with anyone, but that’s what I stand for.

ANOTHER THING HAS BECOME MORE PRESENT IN THE ADMINISTRATION’S
RHETORIC — AND NOT JUST ABOUT YOU. JD VANCE JUST GAVE A SPEECH ABOUT
CITIZENSHIP WHERE HE MAKES THIS POINT ABOUT ZOHRAN MAMDANI, AND IT HAS
BECOME A MORE SIGNIFICANT PART OF THE RATIONALE FOR A LOT OF WHAT
THEY’RE DOING, WHICH IS: BEING IN AMERICA IS A PRIVILEGE — IT’S
NOT A RIGHT. AND THAT THE RIGHT RESPONSE TO THAT PRIVILEGE, THAT GIFT
— YOU CAME HERE FEARING PERSECUTION IN OTHER PLACES — IS
GRATITUDE, NOT PROTEST.

THEY BELIEVE IT WEAKENS AMERICA TO ALLOW THE PRESENCE OF IMMIGRANTS
WHO ARE CRITIQUING WHAT AMERICA IS, WHAT AMERICA’S FOREIGN POLICY
IS.

MAYBE — I THINK ONLY MAYBE, BUT — MAYBE CITIZENS ARE ALLOWED TO
DO THAT. MAYBE NATIVE-BORN AMERICANS ARE ALLOWED TO DO THAT. BUT YOU,
HERE ON THE LARGESS OF THE AMERICAN GOVERNMENT, YOU SHOULD BE QUIET
AND GRATEFUL AND TREAT YOUR PRESENCE HERE AS A PRIVILEGE. AND THEY
HAVE DECIDED TO START DEPORTING PEOPLE WHO DON’T.

HOW DO YOU THINK ABOUT THAT ARGUMENT?

This is a very dangerous argument.

This is then about selective democracy — selective rights to people.

This administration is trying to target anyone who doesn’t fit the
very narrow definition of what an American should be or who is a real
American in this country.

 

If you don’t look like Stephen Miller, then you’re not an
American. That’s eventually what they want us to do.

Same with the privilege part of it. It’s a privilege of the law —
not a privilege of the administration — to be in this country. I’m
married to an American citizen who was born in this country. My son is
American. So I get that privilege from the law.

This is how this administration is trying to portray everything right
now — that anything is a privilege. Federal funding is a privilege.
Medicare is a privilege. Birthright citizenship is a privilege.
Freedom of speech, due process is a privilege.

This is very dangerous because you can’t have a democracy for some.
It’s not democracy, then. It’s just — I’m not sure of a word
to describe that, but it’s absolutely not a democracy. It would just
be an autocracy.

WHEN YOU WERE IN THE ICE DETENTION FACILITY, YOU HAD BECOME BY THIS
POINT A NATIONAL CAUSE — WITH THE RIGHT CALLING YOU ALL KINDS OF
NAMES BUT MANY PEOPLE ALSO RALLYING AROUND YOU, BRINGING ATTENTION TO
YOUR CASE. “SHALOM MAHMOUD” MADE SURE A LOT OF PEOPLE KNEW WHO YOU
WERE.

YOU WERE THERE WITH A LOT OF PEOPLE WHOSE NAMES WERE NOT KNOWN. TELL
ME A BIT ABOUT YOUR FELLOW INMATES. TELL ME WHAT YOU LEARNED AND SAW
ABOUT WHAT’S HAPPENING IN THE IMMIGRATION SYSTEM, IN THE ICE
DETENTION CENTERS, DURING THOSE 104 DAYS.

Coming to America to study and to live, to build a life here — I
never imagined that there is such injustices happening on U.S. soil.

One example is a 45-year-old man who has been in this country since
2021. He was picked up from his court hearing, leaving behind his
wife, who’s battling cancer, and four children under the age of 11.

This man was at his court hearing, going through the process of
getting documentation. His wife had a chemotherapy appointment
upcoming, and he was literally crying every day.

It was so normal seeing people crying in the detention center.

Another story is a person coming to me, showing me a piece of paper
and asking: What is this paper about?

 

Since I have a master’s degree and I know how bureaucracy works, a
lot of people would come to me with questions. I was like: You don’t
know what this is? And he was like: No. They gave it to me. They made
me sign it.

And it’s his deportation order, and the next day he was deported.

A 19-year-old came to ask me: Can my mom continue to visit me? His mom
would drive every week for four hours from New Orleans to see him, but
she’s also undocumented. So he came to ask me if it was safe for her
to come to visit. And I had to tell him: No, it’s not safe, because
they may arrest her, and then you wouldn’t have anyone to support
you on the outside.

Just so many stories, left and right. You see the injustice happening
there, the dehumanization of being called criminals on the news, while
the vast majority of them were either picked up from court hearings,
from ICE check-ins or from their work.

Maybe it’s because of my ignorance, but I never thought that this
was actually happening — where the immigration system is very
corrupt. It is, in fact, a kangaroo court. It’s fully controlled by
the executive branch, fully controlled by the attorney general.

IN A LETTER YOU WROTE OR THAT YOU DICTATED THERE, YOU REFERENCED THIS
LINE FROM HANNAH ARENDT: WHO HAS THE RIGHT TO HAVE RIGHTS?

Yes. That was, to me, the most difficult part of the whole experience
— that the moment you enter the facility, you don’t have any
rights. All your rights are just taken away from you.

That’s why I thought at that specific moment when writing about who
has the rights to have rights — if, being a legal, permanent
resident in this country, an educated person, I was stripped of all
these rights in a matter of days, in a matter of moments?

WHILE YOU’RE IN THERE, YOUR WIFE, WHO WAS EIGHT MONTHS PREGNANT WHEN
YOU WERE PICKED UP, GIVES BIRTH. WHAT WAS THAT EXPERIENCE LIKE FOR
YOU?

I was always hoping that I would be out before the birth of my son.
Noor and I have always dreamed about this moment. I mean, every parent
has done the same. To lose that moment because a person decided so
felt difficult.

The dehumanization of that moment, that I had to be on the phone
listening to my wife at 2:30 a.m., just listening to her screams, and
I can’t hold her hands or give her any supporting words — in a
place where I can’t even raise my voice at that time.

 

YOU’RE LISTENING IN THIS ROOM WITH —

I was on the phone. There were like 70 people. They were asleep, the
majority of them. I was also trying to resist crying at that moment. I
didn’t want them to see me crying.

This is one of the moments that I would never forgive them for taking
from me. This is part of the cruelty that was imposed on me. We went
to ICE, to D.H.S., to request furlough, temporary release, but it was
refused immediately.

We offered that they could put all the conditions they wanted just for
me to be in that room for two hours. I have no criminal history, no
risks whatsoever. Yet they refused because their main goal out of this
is to punish me, to make an example out of me, to be as cruel as
possible.

I always struggle to answer this question about that feeling, because
I tried to prepare for that moment. I collapsed when I was on the
phone, and I had to wait a number of hours until I could receive a
picture of Deen, of the newborn.

But then the detainees actually made me a cake that night. I did not
tell anyone, but then someone approached me and was like: You’re not
OK.

I had stayed in my bunk the whole day. And he told me: You’re not
OK. So I told him that my wife had given birth today. Then, an hour
later — it’s a detention-made cake. It’s not a real cake, but
that felt — to have them — and usually people save these things,
but they brought it to me, and we celebrated that together.

THAT’S NOT A MOMENT YOU CAN PREPARE FOR.

I always say it’s a drop in the sea of sorrow that Palestinians go
through every day. It’s just a microcosm of what a Palestinian story
is, why Palestinians are so dehumanized in this country and in the
West — that all this administration had to say was that I’m
Palestinian.

This is what we are fighting against now — the dehumanization of the
Palestinians.

THERE’S A WAY IN WHICH YOUR EXPERIENCE INVERTS THE NARRATIVE THAT
HAS TAKEN HOLD.

LOOK, I’M JEWISH. I DON’T TAKE ANTISEMITISM LIGHTLY. YOU SHOULD
SEE MY INBOX. AND IT CAN BE TRUE THAT JEWS CAN BE UNSAFE, BUT THE IDEA
— IT IS REAL THAT THERE WAS ANTISEMITISM AT COLUMBIA, YET NOBODY
THERE ENDED UP AS UNSAFE AS YOU DID.

I would push back regarding antisemitism at Columbia. I would really
push back on that.

THERE WAS NONE?

I wouldn’t say there was none. I would say there is this
manufactured hysteria about antisemitism at Columbia because of the
protests.

Because Proud Boys were at the doors of Columbia, the very right-wing
group. And there are incidents here and there. But it’s not like
antisemitism is happening at Columbia because of the Palestine
movement.

This is why I would always push back. I have a strong belief that
antisemitism and anti-Palestinian racism rise together. The incidents
rise together because the same groups are perpetrating that in
different ways.

I’m not trying to sanitize history or sanitize the present when it
comes to that. But going back to what you said, I paid so much because
of that rhetoric, because of Columbia’s complicity, and a lot of the
students who targeted me are pro-Israel students.

The same four or five students would tweet about me every day, just to
silence me because it was easier for them to silence me, to throw me
in prison, than to actually reflect on what I’m saying, to actually
listen to this — even if it’s uncomfortable.

 

And I know it’s uncomfortable. Because supporting a genocide should
be uncomfortable. Being uncomfortable is very different from being
unsafe.

I want to get into the chants — like “From the river to the
sea,” “Globalize the intifada.” I heard someone on your podcast
say: Oh, I don’t like the chant “Globalize the intifada.”

Yes, you don’t like it. It’s not being chanted for you to like,
it’s actually to make you uncomfortable — so you have to think
about your complicity in what’s happening.

Words matter. The fact that Palestinians are being attacked for
whatever chants, symbols, anything they do should be addressed.

You have the B.D.S. — the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions
movement. It’s a very peaceful movement. And yet it was labeled
antisemitic and criminalized — and criminalized in the United States
in many states.

You have people dictating what your chants should be. And with
“Globalize the intifada” being made to be about violence and
globalized killing. It’s not. It was overwhelmingly civil
disobedience against the Israeli occupation.

The second intifada included some instances of violence —

IT INCLUDED MANY SUICIDE BOMBINGS.

Yes, 100 and something. But it also included the killing of 3,000
Palestinians.

I’M NOT — I’M JUST SAYING THAT THE FACT THAT MANY JEWISH PEOPLE
HEAR “GLOBALIZE THE INTIFADA” AS “GLOBALIZE THE VIOLENT
STRUGGLE” IS NOT BASED ON NOTHING.

I think it’s based on policing Palestinian thought and speech.
That’s what it’s based on. Because “From the river to the sea”
— from the Palestinian perspective — no one ever said that it’s
a violent call.

Yet you see this narrative that it’s a call to erase Israelis from
Palestine — which no one said that. It’s actually the Likud party
that says that from the river to the sea should all be Jewish
sovereignty there. It’s not Palestinians who said that.

 

BUT THERE HAVE ALWAYS BEEN DIFFERENT FACTIONS OF PALESTINIANS. IN THE
SAME WAY THAT YOU’RE SAYING IT’S NOT FAIR TO ASK PALESTINIANS TO
BE PERFECT VICTIMS, IT’S ALSO, I THINK, NOT REASONABLE TO COLLAPSE
— THERE HAVE BEEN MANY MORE VIOLENT FACTIONS OF THE PALESTINIAN
STRUGGLE. THERE HAVE BEEN PLENTY OF PERIODS WHEN WHAT HAMAS MEANT FROM
THINGS LIKE THAT WAS MUCH MORE ANNIHILATORY.

Yes. But the intifada was not started by Hamas.

NO, I AGREE. BUT THE SECOND INTIFADA VERY MUCH INVOLVED THEM.

It involved — but that doesn’t mean it started because of —

I’M JUST SAYING THAT WHEN YOU SAY THAT NOBODY EVER SAID IT THIS WAY


No, no, I’m saying the way that the students are saying that.

THE STUDENTS — THAT’S FAIR.

The students never said that. To us, it means let’s globalize the
struggle to liberate Palestine.

That it shouldn’t feel convenient when Palestinians are being killed
every day and the world is silent. That’s what the uprising is
about.

 

And again, I don’t want to sanitize history. Like I told you, the
second intifada involved violent acts, but overwhelmingly, they were
peaceful. And in the second intifada, over 3,000 Palestinians were
killed by Israel. In the first intifada, 1,000 Palestinians were
killed by Israel, too.

THE PLACE WHERE I OVERWHELMINGLY AGREE WITH YOU IS THAT THERE IS A
BROAD EFFORT TO DEMAND THAT PALESTINIANS SPEAK PERFECTLY THAT IS NOT
DEMANDED OF JEWISH PEOPLE.

THERE IS NO END OF CHANTS THAT HAPPEN ON JERUSALEM DAY IN ISRAEL —
AND NO END OF RHETORIC.

Mm-hmm.

I WENT TO A SYNAGOGUE WHEN I WAS YOUNG THAT I ENDED UP WALKING OUT OF
WHEN MY RABBI TOLD MY CONFIRMATION CLASS THAT ISRAEL WOULD BE WITHIN
ITS RIGHTS TO DISPLACE ALL PALESTINIAN PEOPLE. THAT WAS NORMAL. THAT
WAS A REFORM SYNAGOGUE.

I WATCHED AN INTERVIEW YOU WERE GIVING AND HEARD THE REPEATED DEMANDS
THAT YOU DENOUNCE HAMAS. NOT JUST KILLINGS OF CIVILIANS, BUT HAMAS
ITSELF.

THERE IS AN INSISTENCE THAT PALESTINIANS, IN MY EXPERIENCE, DENOUNCE
STRUGGLE ALMOST ENTIRELY. AND IT’S NOT APPLIED EQUALLY. THE DEMAND
THAT YOU WOULD DENOUNCE EVERY PART OF ISRAELI GOVERNMENT OR LIFE,
INCLUDING THE RULING GOVERNMENT RIGHT NOW THAT IS CREATING A MASS
STARVATION, IS NOT DEMANDED OF JEWISH PEOPLE.

SO THERE’S A HUGE DOUBLE STANDARD HERE.

Yes, absolutely. That’s why you wouldn’t find many Palestinians
answer that question. It’s not about Hamas — it’s about just the
perspective of asking this question, the dehumanization of asking this
question.

Because it’s not about my political view about Hamas. They only want
to hear yes or no. That’s it. It’s not about what I think about
it.

And this is being used to credit or discredit Palestinians. If I
condemn Hamas, then I am a Palestinian worthy of listening to. If I
don’t, then I’m not.

And this is what gets Palestinians angry with this line of
questioning. Because as I said, Palestinians are the ones now being
starved and genocided.

Because even if Hamas does not exist tomorrow, the Israeli occupation
and supremacy would continue against the Palestinians. So it’s not
about Hamas.

I WANT TO PICK UP YOUR STORY HERE. WHAT LEADS TO YOUR RELEASE?

I’m out on bail with very restrictive conditions. I have to reside
in New York, I have very few places to go to.

But a federal court ordered that my detention was likely
unconstitutional, that I was targeted for my freedom of speech. That
there is no evidence of what the administration has said about me.

But the legal fight is long. The administration is waging lawfare
against me. They are basically appealing every decision, trying to
bring retaliatory charges against me so I just shut up and leave the
country.

But we’ll continue to fight because, unfortunately, there’s no
other option right now.

YOU’RE GIVING INTERVIEWS LIKE THIS ONE. YOU WERE ON CAPITOL HILL
RECENTLY. TELL ME ABOUT THAT DECISION.

I’m demanding accountability for the overreach, for the illegality
of my detention.

I want to bring it to what really matters, which is ending the
genocide in Gaza. That’s why that was central to my conversation,
whether with the media or with Congress members.

 

Because what’s happening to me and to others is just a distraction
from the real issue, which is the U.S. complicity in the genocide in
Gaza.

A lot of people tell me to take a break or ask why I’m taking all
these risks. But I really can’t take a break when the genocide is
not taking a break. When, as of today, there are over 100 people who
were starved to death.

There is a moral imperative for me to speak up, especially now that I
have this platform that I should continue to use. Unfortunately, I did
not choose this place. ICE did. However, I want to take that
responsibility with pride and continue advocating for the rights of my
people.

AS ALWAYS, OUR FINAL QUESTION: WHAT ARE THREE BOOKS YOU’D RECOMMEND
TO THE AUDIENCE?

The first book I would recommend is a newly published book: Omar El
Akkad’s “One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This.”
It’s exposing the hypocrisy between the West’s ideals and actions.

The second book is Edward Said’s “The Question of Palestine.”
That was actually published in, I think, the late ’70s, before Hamas
was founded. It’s a good glimpse into Palestinian thought when it
comes to Palestine and Zionism, and Zionism from the perspective of
Palestinians.

The third book is “My Promised Land” by Ari Shavit, which mirrors
Rashid Khalidi’s “The Hundred Years’ War on Palestine.” To me,
that was helpful because it shows that the Zionist, colonial project
started in the 1880’s and confirms what Rashid Khalidi says in a lot
of places.

Those are the three books that I would recommend.

MAHMOUD KHALIL, THANK YOU VERY MUCH.

Thank you, Ezra.

_You can listen to this conversation by following “The Ezra Klein
Show” on __NYT Audio app_
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you get your podcasts_
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View a list of book recommendations from our guests __here_
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_This episode of “The Ezra Klein Show” was produced by Rollin Hu
and Jack McCordick. Fact-checking by Michelle Harris. Our senior
engineer is Jeff Geld, with additional mixing by Aman Sahota. Our
executive producer is Claire Gordon. The show’s production team also
includes Marie Cascione, Annie Galvin, Elias Isquith, Kristin Lin,
Marina King and Jan Kobal. Original music by Carole Sabouraud, Aman
Sahota and Pat McCusker. Audience strategy by Kristina Samulewski and
Shannon Busta. The director of New York Times Opinion Audio is
Annie-Rose Strasser._

_[EZRA KLEIN joined Opinion in 2021. Previously, he was the founder,
editor in chief and then editor at large of Vox; the host of the
podcast “The Ezra Klein Show”; and the author of “Why We’re
Polarized.” Before that, he was a columnist and editor at The
Washington Post, where he founded and led the Wonkblog vertical. He
is on Threads [[link removed]].]_

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