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What is desperately needed now is for Pope Leo XIV and other religious leaders to venture out onto the Mediterranean to join the Global Sumud Flotilla as it sails toward Gaza.
As this appeal to Pope Leo XIV was being prepared for publication Monday, an incendiary bomb was dropped, apparently by Israel, on one of the lead vessels of the Global Sumud Flotilla, Family Boat, as it was moored in a Tunisian harbor awaiting the resumption of the flotilla’s voyage to the shores of Gaza.
A video, provided by Al Jazeera, shows the moment of the attack when a drone, seen and heard by crew members on Family Boat, dropped a flaming fireball onto the deck of the vessel.
The video contradicts a claim by the Tunisian interior ministry, reported by Reuters, that there was no drone attack and that the fire on Family Boat was ignited by something on the boat itself.
A flotilla spokesperson, Saif Abukeshek, said in a video posted on the flotilla’s Instagram page, “There is no other authority that would do such an attack, such a crime, except the Israeli authorities.”
The attack is reminiscent of the May 2025 anonymous drone bombing that disabled the vessel Conscience while it was anchored off Malta, thwarting its Freedom Flotilla mission to bring relief supplies to Gaza. Israel was held responsible by the flotilla, and an Israeli C-130 aircraft capable of launching drones was tracked in the area at the time of the attack.
None of the crew of The Family Boat were injured in yesterday’s attack, and the vessel seems to have suffered relatively minor damage. It will likely be in the flotilla when it resumes sailing for the Gaza Strip in a race against time to get food and medicine, however little, to starving, desperately ill Palestinians, all the time generating moral and political pressure to halt the relentless, increasing Israeli-US slaughter of Palestinians.
Greta Thunberg, the famous organizer against climate disaster, who was expected to sail on Family Boat, explained the need for the flotilla last week on TikTok:
The story here is how the world can be silent, and how those in power, those who are supposed to represent us, are in every possible way betraying and failing Palestinians, and all oppressed peoples of the world.
What we are witnessing in the flotilla is an historic citizen-led, nonviolent intervention to confront two of the world’s major military powers, and their allies. The flotilla enterprise is unprecedented in its size and in the numbers of civilians who are voluntarily putting themselves at risk to stop mass killing.
The flotilla, whose title in Arabic means steadfastness or resilience, is comprised of at least 50 vessels, crewed by citizens of at least 44 nations. They will be carrying an estimated 300 tons of food and relief supplies. The World Food Program estimates that 62,000 tons of food alone, per month, are needed to feed Gaza’s 2.1 million souls.
Weather permitting, the flotilla is expected to arrive of Gaza’s shores in mid-September.
There have been many civilian attempts to break the Israeli siege of Gaza by sea since Israel established a naval blockade there in 2007.
“In 2008,” Al Jazeera reports, “two boats from the Free Gaza Movement successfully reached Gaza, marking the first break of Israel’s naval blockade. The movement, founded in 2006 by activists during Israel’s war on Lebanon, went on to launch 31 boats between 2008 and 2016, five of which reached Gaza despite heavy Israeli restrictions.”
All flotilla attempts have been intercepted by Israel since 2010 when Israeli commandoes boarded the Mavi Marmara in international waters, killed 10 volunteers, and injured dozens more. Flotilla missions were launched in 2011, 2015, and 2018.
The need for the Pope’s physical presence on the flotilla is made even more clear by the bombing of Family Boat.
The first flotilla mission in 2025 was thwarted when the vessel Conscience was disabled by a drone attack. The second 2025 attempt by The Madleen ended with boarding by Israeli commandos and detention of the 12-person crew, including Greta Thunberg; they were released at varying times, with the last two being freed after four days in captivity.
Thousands of ordinary people have raised hundreds of thousands of dollars for the current flotilla and have organized for months to support hundreds of flotilla “sailors.”
In Tunisa alone, Al Jazeera reports, flotilla organizers collected donations in six cities.
“The special thing about this campaign,” Tunisian flotilla organizer Ghassan Boughdiri told Al Jazeera, “is the number of people who showed up to give donations. We’ve had people bringing five and 10 dinars ($1.70 to $3.40). If your day’s pay is 20 dinars ($6.80), those five dinars are so precious for us. It shows we’ve managed to act collectively to help our people in Gaza.”
The flotilla crews are, in turn, supported by much of Mediterranean civil society, including Genoa, Italy dockworkers who announced that if any of the flotilla ships are stopped, they will shut down European ports servicing ships bound for Israel.
“13,000 to 14,000 containers leave this region every year for Israel,” said Riccardo Rudina, a spokesperson for a collective of Italian unions, as reported by Novaramedia. “Should the flotilla be prevented from reaching Gaza, not a single nail will leave anymore.” And, he said:
“Our young women and men must come back without a scratch, and all of this cargo, which belongs to the people and is going to the people, must reach its destination, down to the very last box.”
This is something the world has not seen before.
The big question is: Is this enough? Can the flotilla stop the extermination of Palestinians that is brazenly and defiantly flaunted before the world by the US and Israel as if to say: “Get used to the new world order”?
Meanwhile, Palestinian Nongovernmental Organizations (PNGO), a coalition of 140 Palestinian civil society organizations, and their international allies, including Friends of the Hague Group, are desperately working against long odds to win an early vote by the 193 nations of the United Nations General Assembly on a “Uniting for Peace” resolution that would send a multinational “protection” force into Gaza to stop the killing and ensure food and aid are safely distributed and that medical and other essential services are restored. This is opposed by the US and Israel.
The supporters of “Uniting for Peace” are calling upon the General Assembly to override the UN Security Council’s control of over measures to end the occupation and genocide because it has failed to fulfill its mandate and take action to achieve peace, primarily due to the veto power of the US.
Craig Mokhiber, who resigned from his post as UN director of the New York Office of the High Commissioner in October 2023 in protest over the UN’s failing in its duty to stop the genocide against the Palestinian people, explained “Uniting for Peace” in a September 3, 2025 interview with “Between the Lines”:
…the call now is for the General Assembly to take up its responsibilities and to deploy a UN protection force for Gaza, ultimately to expand to the West Bank. But immediately to Gaza to enter by land, sea, air, either through the Sinai and the Rafah entry or using navies to enter at the Gaza Beach or to parachute in—whatever it takes to break the siege, to bring in mandated forces, and to deliver humanitarian aid, to protect civilians, to preserve evidence of Israeli war crimes, and to begin the process of recovery and reconstruction.
On September 5, 2025, 27 special rapporteurs and experts selected to advise the UN called on the General Assembly to “convene an emergency meeting” to act under “Unity for Peace.” Addressing Israel, the group said:
A State responsible for creating genocidal conditions aimed at destroying Palestinians in Gaza as a group by also starving them cannot and shall not be entrusted to control access, distribution, or supervision of humanitarian aid.
A global strike is being organized for September 18, 2025 to mark the UN General Assembly’s deadline for Israel to fully withdraw from the West Bank, Gaza Strip, and East Jerusalem and also to support the passage of “Uniting for Peace.”
Meanwhile, France and Saudi Arabia are pushing for quick UN Security Council approval of the “New York Declaration” of July 4, 2025, a so-called “two-state” plan. This is a bogus, unworkable scheme that promises side-by side Israeli and Palestinian states, except Palestinians would not have economic or defensive equality.
The French-Saudi plan includes a “stabilization” force to end the current fighting. But there are concerns that those in control of this force would continue violent subjugation of Palestinians and facilitate their eventual removal to other nations. This plan, if anointed by the UN, would likely be imposed on Lebanon, Syria, and possibly elsewhere in the Middle East.
The rugged path for “Uniting for Peace” forces us to look back to the Sumud Flotilla as possibly the very best hope for saving Palestinian lives and for, in the process, undercutting the French-Saudi plan.
As the headline of this article notes, what is desperately needed now is for Pope Leo XIV to venture out onto the Mediterranean to join the Sumud flotilla, unleashing the power of his moral authority to stop the extermination of the Palestinian people in illegally occupied Palestine. The need for the Pope’s physical presence on the flotilla is made even more clear by the bombing of Family Boat.
In this naval sojourn, he would be walking in footsteps of his dad, Louis Marius Prevost, who commanded an infantry landing craft on D-Day in World War II and again in southern France in 1944 in an action called Operation Dragoon, intended to open another front against the German occupiers.
An infantry landing craft like the kind Louis Marius Prevost would have commanded is shown. (Photo by US Army)
The Sumud flotilla offers Pope Leo an opportunity to nonviolently fight for lives and to also tread the courageous path of his predecessor, Pope Francis, who, the Catholic News Agency reported, “called Israel’s actions in Gaza ‘terrorism’ and on two occasions said what was happening there might qualify as genocide.”
“Pope Leo,” the agency reported, “has taken a more restrained approach, calling for ceasefires and the release of hostages and emphasizing the need for dignified humanitarian aid and respect for law.”
Ideally other world religious leaders would join Pope Leo in their own boats. And, there are extremely wealthy celebrities who have yachts on the Mediterranean who can join the flotilla.
And, finally, there are well-known global politicians who can hire boats and join the flotilla, who can show the world that they cannot be bought and will not be complicit with the 21st century’s most famous, in-your-face, everyday, genocide.
These closing words from a book titled A Small Town Near Auschwitz seem appropriate here:
…the Holocaust was made possible by the actions of so many, yet actually intended by so few… some people could later claim that they had “always been against it” with varying degrees of honesty, while their behavior at the time had in fact propelled the dynamism of Nazism on to the murderous conclusion that was Auschwitz and all that it stands for.
At some point, of course, there will be a reckoning, just as there was after World War II. Those who participated in the Sumud Flotilla will be honored. By their boats ye shall know them.
Reading Tennyson in the morgue of the spirit.
I saw my first corpse up close when I was nineteen years old. My friend Rusty helped me get a nurse’s aide job in the hospital where he worked. I took it for the same reason most people get a job: I needed money. But I had also spent years feeling detached from my own body, and from the human body in general. I hoped that a workday spent lifting, dressing, feeding and washing the sick and dying would help with that.
Besides, Jesus washed the feet of his disciples, so I figured there must be some benefit in it.
My first day on the job was actually my first night—working the graveyard shift in an acute diseases ward. A woman had died just as the previous shift was ending, so they left the corpse for us. The other aide told me that was a lucky break. “We’ll wash the body and take it down to the morgue,” he said, “then we’ll wait for the undertaker and help him load it into the hearse.”
I wondered how, exactly, that made us lucky. “He’ll tip us five bucks each.” By 3 am I had my five bucks.
My alienation from human physicality reflected a diseased society, one that’s grown too distant from death. Deaths in our world typically happen behind closed doors, in sterilized rooms and shadowed midnight wards. Sure, we might see a traffic fatality from time to time, as we stare from sidewalks or passing cars. Maybe we’ve been to funerals with open caskets, but those decorated cadavers aren’t corpses anymore. They’re waxwork mannequins filling the space once occupied by a corpse. That’s not death; it’s a poorly-constructed simulacrum of life, an approximated face from the uncanny valley.
Gaza is the morgue in the American basement. It’s the dark room where our consciences lie dead and frozen. We disfigure our own souls every time we go down there, our hands out for a tip from the hand of death.
The children of Gaza have seen plenty of corpses, very close. A child who’s too young to count to ten has already seen hundreds, probably thousands, of them. They’ve witnessed death in all its forms: Fast death. Slow death. Death from gunfire and from bombs. Death by fire and by smoke. Death by disease and starvation. Deaths you and I can’t even imagine.
The children of Gaza are the corpses, too, of course; they make up nearly half of the dead. In the tens of thousands—and probably much more—the children of Gaza have left a world they never had a chance to experience.
The rest of us—even the best of us—resemble the self-anesthetizing addicts in Tennyson’s poem “The Lotus Eaters,” sipping our nectar as “the bolts are hurled/far below in the valleys.” We bask in the luxury of food and shelter while
the clouds are lightly curl'd
Round ... golden houses, girdled with the gleaming world:
Where they smile in secret, looking over wasted lands,
Blight and famine, plague and earthquake, roaring deeps and fiery sands,
Clanging fights, and flaming towns, and sinking ships, and praying hands.
Gaza is the morgue in the American basement. It’s the dark room where our consciences lie dead and frozen. We disfigure our own souls every time we go down there, our hands out for a tip from the hand of death.
Our “bolts” are drones and rockets. This famine is made by soldiers carrying US weapons, turning away aid convoys while our government provides diplomatic cover. Our golden houses overlook the wasted land of Gaza. (We “overlook” it in both means of the word—by looking down on it from above, and by failing to take note of it as we go about our lives.)
Our “leaders” are as tongue-tied and incoherent as the worst addict. Watch the video of Pete Buttigieg here, for example. He’s supposed to be liberalism’s great communicator, but his voice and affect evoke Tennyson’s lotus eater:
His voice was thin, as voices from the grave;
And deep-asleep he seem'd, yet all awake
Even as some politicians sidle slowly toward—maybe, someday, timidly—doing something that more closely resembles the right thing, the incoherence lingers. Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, the ranking Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee, listened as her interviewer quoted a UN-backed agency which described the starvation in Gaza as a “man-made famine.” The reporter also quoted the King of Jordan as saying (correctly) that “Israel is starving Palestinians with impunity” and that is it a “war crime.”
Then the senator was asked a simple question: “Would you say that the three-month blockade by Israel of Gaza is a war crime?”
“I think is it is a shameful black mark on humanity that the world has allowed this to happen,” Shaheen answered, “and that Israel is allowing this to happen.”
No, Senator. “The world”—Earth, our home—bears no guilt for our deeds. The world includes the dead and dying children of Gaza. The only black marks on them are the ones left by American-made weapons.
The words of our politicians are waxwork faces in open coffins.
As for Israel, it—and we—are actively creating this man-made famine. To say that it (and we) are “allowing this to happen”—as if the annihilation of an entire people was mere carelessness, like leaving the fridge door open—requires a conscious and determined resistance to truth.
Politicians want to keep raising money from pro-Israel PACs and billionaires. The rest of us don’t want to upend our lives for deaths that, in the end, feel like abstractions. This, then, is the moral lethargy of our civilization:
Let us alone. What is it that will last?
All things are taken from us, and become
Portions and parcels of the dreadful past.
Let us alone. What pleasure can we have
To war with evil?
Meanwhile, back in that hospital all those years ago: One night I watched a dying woman, her brain ravaged by cancer, staring out the window during a thunderstorm. The trees outside the third-story ward were swaying violently. “Oh,” she said, “there’s nothing more beautiful than a storm on the sea. Just look at those waves!”
Naively, I asked Rusty if we should correct her. “No, man,” he said, his eyes twinkling. “She’s havin’ a nice cruise.” The power lines went down that night but the dying woman slept right through it.
Palestine must be saved. But the West? There’s nothing left for this hemorrhagic empire but trouble on trouble, pain on pain.
We’re more delusional than that dying woman. We’re brain-ravaged by a terminal disease of the spirit, as strung out on our drug—indifference—as Tennyson’s Odyssean sailors are on theirs. Why make war against evil? Leave us alone. But somewhere deep inside we fear retribution. We fear justice. We’re afraid of a moment when the wires go down and the power goes out for good.
No wonder we anesthetize ourselves. No wonder our rhetoricians have grown incoherent, their ideology ever more viperous and unintelligible. Tennyson describes a
confusion worse than death,
Trouble on trouble, pain on pain,
... Sore task to hearts worn out by many wars
And eyes grown dim with gazing on the pilot-stars.
That’s us.
Palestine must be saved. But the West? There’s nothing left for this hemorrhagic empire but trouble on trouble, pain on pain. As the poem says:
Let what is broken so remain.
But, for God’s sake, let’s try to save as many children as we can before we go.
"When the law is used as a tool to crush civil liberties, it does not extinguish dissent—it strengthens it," said the group who faced nearly 900 arrests over the weekend for peaceful protest.
A mural by the world-renowned street artist Banksy depicting a judge magistrate beating a bloodied demonstrator on the ground with his gavel appeared Monday morning outside the Royal Courts of Justice building in London—a piece of commentary on the ongoing controversy surrounding the right to free speech in the UK when it comes to Palestinian rights.
The new artwork, which the artist confirmed was his in an Instagram post, comes amid uproar over a UK government law that has been used to ban individuals and entire groups from protesting under anti-terrorism laws.
On Saturday, nearly 900 people were arrested during a protest led by a group called Defend Our Juries, which has been calling for the lifting of a blanket ban on a separate group, the nonviolent Palestine Action, deemed a terrorist supporter in relation to its advocacy of Palestinian rights and a demand for an end to the genocide in Gaza.
The Met Police reported that 890 people were arrested in total on Saturday. Of those, 857 were arrested for the sole offense of voicing their support for Palestine Action, now a crime in the UK. The other 33 arrests were for various infractions, including 17 for assault of police officers.
Banksy's artwork was seen as a keen commentary on the subject.
London-based journalist Barry Malone called the piece "extremely powerful," especially given the context. "The timing, the placement," he said. "It's perfect."
In a statement Sunday about the weekend's arrest, Amnesty International's director of campaigns and communications, Kerry Mascogiuri, said the "staggering number of arrests" by police at a "peaceful protest marks a new low for protest rights in this country."
"It's completely ridiculous for police to be targeting and arresting people for sitting down, quietly holding a sign," Mascogiuri said.
She said observers from Amnesty witnessed how the crowd was "entirely peaceful," despite some people hurling insults at officers. She said it was a misrepresentation to say that protesters became violent, though some did try to prevent those targeted for arrest from being carried away.
"Police officers, on a number of occasions, were aggressive towards supporters of the protest," Mascogiuri added. "This included violently shoving people away and pulling out batons to make space whilst protesters were arrested and hauled into police vans.
"Peaceful protest is a fundamental right," she concluded. "The scenes yesterday were a shocking demonstration of how the UK's overly broad terrorism laws are being used to suppress free speech."
Meanwhile, outside the High Court in London on Monday, security guards and metal barriers were promptly dispatched to cover up the mural.
In a statement, a spokesperson for Defend Our Juries said the work by Banksy "powerfully depicts the brutality unleashed" on peaceful protesters by the former Home Secretary Yvette Cooper, who led the prohibition against Palestine Action.
"When the law is used as a tool to crush civil liberties, it does not extinguish dissent–it strengthens it," the spokesperson continued.
"As Banksy's artwork shows, the state can try to strip away our civil liberties, but we are too many in number and our resolve to stand against injustice cannot be beaten—our movement against the ban is unstoppable and growing every day," they said. "We hope everyone who is moved by Banksy’s inspiring work of art will join our next action, which will be announced soon.”