This book was thought-provoking and sometimes difficult, even though the audiobook (read by the author) was easy to listen to. It took me awhile because I kept pausing for a few days between listens to absorb and think, not just about the book but my reactions to it.
Sim Kern is a Jewish anti-Zionist, pro-Palestine activist who became well-known on TikTok for videos condemning Israel’s genocide in Gaza. Kern’s premise is simple, and it’s all in the title: Genocide is bad, no matter who is committing it or for what reasons, and it can never be justified.
I’m definitely in agreement with this premise, and absolutely in agreement that, while the Hamas terrorist attacks of October 7, 2023, were horrific crimes, the Israeli government response has been brutal and disproportionate. Kern dives deeply into history that goes back long before October 7, to the roots of the Zionist movement. Their basic premise is that the statement “Israel has a right to exist” is incorrect: no nation has a right to exist as an ethno-state that only offers full citizenship and human rights to one group of people.
Again, so far, so good. However, I think Kern’s speculations about what “Free Palestine” might mean in practice are unrealistic and oversimplified. Kern is an anti-capitalist and an anarchist who believes in the dismantling of all empires and all oppressive systems, and urgers their readers to imagine broader possible futures than capitalism and neo-liberalism allow. While I’m not an anarchist, I definitely agree that there are better ways to imagine and organize human societies than what we’re currently doing, and imagining and exploring such possibilities could lead us to a more peaceful and sustainable world.
But I think you also have to be a realist and recognize that often (many times just in my lifetime), well-intentioned revolutionary movements calling for freedom have been co-opted by totalitarians, so that people wanting freedom end up just living under a different type of authoritarianism. I absolutely believe that the horrific and genocidal attacks on the people of Gaza by the current Israeli government need to stop, and that anything Canadian government, institutions, and business can do to stop funding this is essential. I also believe that all Israelis and all Palestinians deserve to live in peace and freedom. But the path to getting there is hardly straightforward, and ignoring the possibility that a “free Palestine” could become a puppet state for another power, posing the threat of another genocide against Israeli Jews, is naive.
This book definitely opened my eyes to some history and some present reality that I was previously unaware of, and confirmed my belief that, yes, “genocide bad” in any and every situation. I just think the path out of the current situation that Kern proposes is, like most proposals put forward by anarchists, a utopian dream that doesn’t honestly wrestle with geopolitical realities. So on that ground, it left me with mixed feelings.









