All That’s Write

All That’s Write is a living archive of Diaspora opposition to the Occupation, specifically on-the-ground in Israel-Palestine.

Since its inception in 2013, this blog has allowed anti-occupation activists to share stories, analyses, photographs, poems, and other personal expressions in an openly accessible forum.

You can submitting a piece by messaging us on Facebook 
or by emailing 
allthatsleftcollective@gmail.com 💌

  • What’s So Bad About Excommunication?

    By Barry DredzeMuch of Jewish political discourse focuses on drawing borders and determining who is “in” and who is “out.” This dysfunction, primarily as it relates to Israel and Zionism, has led to attempts at ostracizing and outcasting not unlike the traditional rabbinic herem, or communal excommunication.

  • Jewish and Anti-Occupation

    By Leigh HoffmanJewish.Anti-occupation.These words together are no longer an anomaly; their co-existence is becoming more than just whispers in Jewish consciousness. The convergence of the identity of “Jewish” and the politics of “anti-occupation” is still met with disdain, exclusion, and social violence within mainstream Jewish communities, yet its power is growing.

  • The Yishuv

    By Sophie SchorI’m not supposed to be writing this right now. It is Shabbat and I’m sitting in a room in my cousin’s house. Not just any house, it is a Haredi house. Not just any Haredi house, it is in a settlement in the West Bank. Writing is not allowed, but it is nap time…

  • Colonizing the Cities and Gentrifying the Desert

    By Gabi KirkLast week marked turning points in three important cases which, at first glance, seem to be wholly unrelated. Yet all three have crucial repercussions on future struggles resisting displacement, in Israel-Palestine and in the U.S., and on how we define where one is “from.”

  • Diaspora Jews, it’s time to step up

    By A. Daniel RothThe way the world is talking about the Israeli occupation is changing. Alongside that change, opportunity is knocking for those of us standing in opposition: calls for diaspora Jews to be present on the ground in Israel and Palestine are increasing. An important shift is beginning to take place — right now.

  • Some Words with Rachel Sandalow-Ash on inclusion, debate, and Open Hillel

    By Yonit FriedmanAt the Open Hillel conference at Harvard University in October 2014, Rachel Sandalow-Ash scanned the crowd of 350 people. “This,” she remarked, “doesn’t look like just a small group of radical activists.” Despite her not-so-subtle jab at Eric Fingerhut, the CEO of Hillel International, Sandalow-Ash, a founder of Open Hillel, is a product…

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