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 💌

  • Dead Sea Capitalism

    Written on the shore of the Dead Sea, this poem explores how appearances can be deceiving and what the future may have in store for humanity. 

  • The White-Wash Connection (A Poem)

    This poem expresses many of my often contradictory feelings about being a left-wing, Ashkenazi, American-Israeli.

  • Ashkenazi Rollercoaster Exodus Into/Out Of The West Bank

    By Emily Miller “Ashkenazi Rollercoaster Exodus Into/Out Of The West Bank” (2016) | 54×68 | in Oil, acrylic, spray paint, and cut paper on canvas Ashkenazi Rollercoaster Exodus Into/Out Of The West Bank” is a West Bank Dream-scape. A stereotypical religious Jewish family from Brooklyn is transplanted into the middle of occupied territory. They do…

  • Reflections on being detained in Hebron; privilege and identity in anti-Occupation activism

    For 7 hours it was not Jewish-Israelis against Palestinians, but rather the forces of occupation against those who are opposing it. This is something I knew before, thought I understood and truly believed in, but again had never felt or experienced. 

  • Emergency Call to Action: Global Shabbat Against Demolition!

    .שבת של שלום, לא  של מלחמה Dear friends and colleagues,  The State of Israel is threatening the imminent demolition of four villages home to hundreds of Palestinian families. In the past weeks, bulldozers continued preparing the land of Al Araqib for a future JNF forest, and crept closer to Umm El-Hiran, a village set for demolition to make…

  • The Worst of Jerusalem: Documenting the March of Flags

    Meanwhile, a cute family were posing for a photograph. They smiled as they basked in the joy of the Jewish conquest of Jerusalem 49 years ago. Their backdrop? A shuttered Palestinian coffee shop. It was an almost comically perfect portrait of the dual realities that coexist in space and time in this city.

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