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Activism within the Queer Community – Attitudes and Engagement

Invitation to take part in my survey


09/04/2025

I am a PhD student at the SFU in Berlin researching how queer/ LGBTQIA* individuals define activism, and how they interact or have interacted with this concept it in their personal lives. I started out my PhD with the intention of researching online activism and social dynamics in online spaces, but soon decided to move my focus away from specifically online interactions. I instead started trying to materialise my many layers of interest in how activism works more broadly.

My contact with the idea of activism was shaped by my upbringing and the many conversations I have had with friends and acquaintances over the years discussing political topics. These conversations, especially ones with people who are more informed, more personally active, or know more about an area of the world than I do, have been very enriching and important to me. At the same time they have become the subject of my scientific curiosity.

Who had made their points in what way? What were the arguments and strategies, the points in common, the disagreements? How did people name the collection of their world views? Did these definitions differ between people? What was the significance of being called a communist, anarchist or Marxist-Leninist? How were groups and projects assessed when their labelling didn’t match up with one’s own? Where were lines in what people consider legitimate and illegitimate action?

While all of these questions popped up and were slowly crystallising in my head, I found myself more and more also focused on the issue currently most central to myself (as often happens with psychological research projects):

How come some people found a “way in” to social or political areas of action and some ended up stuck hoping they were helping in some way? How did people wind up associated with certain groups, or finding their way into different activities? What effects did these activities have on the world? Did they make the people doing them feel enriched, hopeful? What reasons were people identifying when they felt they couldn’t/didn’t want to make the step into being active themselves?

As I am a queer person and the majority of my friends use this label or would place themselves within the LGBTQIA* umbrella, I felt that my curiosity about activism at large has been strongly intertwined with my curiosity about queerness. A lot of texts I read emerged from the fields of gender studies or queer studies, and many of the lived experiences of the people around me were shaped by intersectional experiences of oppression. The awareness of being part of a minority and experiencing discrimination shaped many discussions and world views. Inside of my own in-person group as well as on the internet and in larger community spaces, discussions about the intricate political aspects of queer identities were prevalent.

Who received more privilege and why, and was this distinction even important to make? Were queer issues tied to other discriminated/ oppressed groups? And if yes, in what ways and what was to be done about it? How could solidarity between people with different identities and issues work? Was queerness inherently political, and if yes what did “queerness” and “political” even mean to the people discussing the question?

Most of these above-mentioned topics have been widely discussed and analysed across many disciplines throughout the years, as well as being thought about and figured out anew by every queer individual and friend group. I do not expect to be able to solve any of these discussions with my work.

Through my PhD project, I am only trying to condense all my questions into one project and get a multilayered pool of answers to better understand how all the factors play together to shape individuals’ interactions with the topic.

The final motivator for my project is, paradoxically, the feeling of being stuck and unable to become more politically active. Talk about not knowing where to start or not feeling qualified/ oppressed/ knowledgeable enough is everywhere I look on social media and in personal chats with friends. The worsening political situation is leaving many people feeling scared, angry and hopeless without the feeling of being able to engage meaningfully and make a change. At the same time, it seems that many people who are struggling and would like to find a way to start find it difficult to get in touch with people who are already more active and ask for guidance.

The final form of my project was developed to reflect the connection and layeredness of all the aforementioned topics.

  • I want to understand what activism means to others, so the survey explores personal definitions of activism and what activities fall under it.
  • I want to understand what helps people take agency, so the survey explores obstacles that people encounter while trying to work towards being politically active, as well as support systems and strategies that people found to break through.
  • I want to understand what role queer identities, communities and discourse around queerness plays, so the survey explores nuances of belonging and personal identities.
  • I want to understand how systems of oppression affect people trying to break through, so the survey explores factors such as economic situation, health, mental capacities and experiences of discrimination.

Hopefully the answers to these questions will shed light onto the phenomenon in general, but will also help support those that wish to engage (more). In future steps of this project, I hope to make my results available to organisations and anyone else looking for information about entry barriers to activism.

To be able to do all of this, we need your input! Experience with activism is not necessary!

As a first phase of this project, we have created an online questionnaire of about 20-30min with a mix of open and closed questions. If you identify as queer or part of the LGBTIA* community in any way and would like to share with us your views on the topic, please follow this link.

In the second phase, we will conduct in-depth qualitative interviews to really dive into the nitty-gritty of how each individual person navigates their own complex situation and how their decisions shape their interaction (or lack thereof) with activism.

Boycott Erdoğan and TRT

Statement by the Fatal Hata Collective

To all Friends and Comrades around the World,

Following the arrest of the Mayor of Istanbul on March 19th and the ensuing demonstrations, students in Turkey have called for a boycott of universities. Following this, a call for boycotting pro-Erdoğan brands and institutions has started—led by students and developed by the opposition. While most mentioned companies operate in Turkey, some are also active within the international community.

Most importantly Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (TRT), the state’s TV and radio channel, is entirely instrumentalized by the Erdoğan regime. TRT World in particular, and some other branches of TRT, have gained a following for their coverage of the genocide in Palestine. This is in complete contrast with the propaganda used to sustain the oppression of all minorities and opposition groups in Turkey; they regularly attack women and LGBTIQ+ groups in Turkey, the Kurdish opposition, workers’ organizations, unions, and so forth. 

Erdoğan, while rhetorically using the Palestinian plight for his benefit and profit, does not shy away from aiding Israel: Azerbaijan State Oil Company (SOCAR) goes to Israeli occupation through Turkey to fuel the ongoing genocide. Moreover, nine activists from the 1000 Youth for Palestine (Filistin İçin 1000 Genç) initiative who voiced dissent regarding this issue at a TRT World event have been detained in Turkey, and two of them, who are Palestinian, are facing charges to be deported from the country.

We invite you to unfollow TRT and its affiliates from social media and block them to limit their reach. Since the target companies and channels of the boycott were announced, the importance of the call has already been proven economically and politically. Companies are losing their stock value, and the targeted media is desperately trying to prove their innocence. Join us to put pressure on TRT!

All dictators everywhere must fall!

Anti-Palestinian Racism in the Reporting on the Barbakh Family

Statement by Pallies, Palestine Speaks and the Arrest Press Unit


07/04/2025

How German Media Criminalize Palestinians

For several months now, Berlin has been experiencing a targeted smear campaign against Palestinian refugees, in particular against the Barbakh family from Gaza. The reporting on this family is a shocking example of the systematic anti-Palestinian racism that has long become normalized in Germany’s mainstream media.

Instead of truthful reporting, media outlets such as WELT, BILD, FOCUS, BZ and Berliner Zeitung produce a racist narrative in which this Palestinian family is broadly criminalised and portrayed as a security threat. The Barbakh family is stylised as a projection for societal fears—while the reality in Gaza, occupation, apartheid, and genocide are largely ignored.

In recent months, the reporting of these media houses has repeatedly contributed to the public stigmatisation of the family – not based on facts, but by completely disregarding any journalistic standards. In the articles, a threat is constructed from a family – a so-called ‘Gaza clan’ – a racist cipher that mixes and criminalises origin and political attribution. WELT writes of ‘Hamas incitement in Berlin living rooms’, FOCUS fabulates of a ‘clan family from Gaza terrorising Berlin’. Evidence? None. Instead, rumours and generalized suspicion are reformulated as truth.

What supposedly turns a family into a ‘clan’ is never explained. Rather, the tabloid-style, unserious, and racist reporting presumes that the racist narrative of ‘Arab clans’ needs no definition, as it is already firmly anchored in the imagination of a right-wing discourse.

This reporting does not follow journalistic ethics, but serves political purposes: Palestinian life is to be delegitimised and pushed out of the public sphere in order to legitimise, among other things, the Israeli state’s crimes under international law and to maintain support for genocide and ethnic cleansing.

A Textbook Example of Racist Reporting

1. Dehumanization through Language

    Terms like “Gaza clan” or “agitators in the most negative sense” (WELT) strip members of the Barbakh family of all individuality. FOCUS fantasizes about a family “terrorizing Berlin.” BILD writes about a “whining clan member.” The people disappear behind racially charged labels—Gaza, clan, terror.

    2. Collective Guilt and Guilt by Association

      Several reports hold the entire family responsible for the alleged actions of individuals. The principle of guilt by association is stretched to the extreme: anyone from Gaza or anyone who knows people from Gaza is automatically associated with Hamas—regardless of actual political stance. It is implied that merely living in Gaza or having contact with Palestinians

      automatically indicates proximity to Hamas. The fact that most residents of Gaza no longer have a livelihood due to Israel’s genocidal violence is of no interest. Political complexity is sacrificed in favour of a racist simplification.

      3. Cultural Racism

        Language, clothing and origin are instrumentalised to mark ‘foreignness’. The Barbakh family is not portrayed as part of this society, but as an ‘other’, dangerous element that must be controlled, monitored or deported.

        The media campaign against the Barbakh family is emblematic of structural anti-Palestinian reporting

        Media such as WELT, BILD, FOCUS, BZ, and Berliner Zeitung disregard journalistic, ethical and legal boundaries – and do not even stop at minors. They use the family’s Palestinian origin as a projection surface for racist stereotypes. This fuels anti-Palestinian sentiment among the public.

        Violation of Privacy Protection for Extraordinary Vulnerable Youth: Faces and Names Are Published

        Children and adolescents from the Barbakh family are also criminalised by the reporting. Guidelines on how to deal with children and adolescents in journalism are disregarded in the reporting. Their faces are shown uncensored, personal details are revealed and political statements are taken out of context.

        Violations of the Press Code and Child Protection Directive

        The German Press Code has clear guidelines on the protection of children and adolescents:

        The aim is that, during interviews with children and adolescents, their well-being, protection, and safety, as well as their rights to participation, are respected by those conducting the interviews.”

        The guideline of the child protection directive from the network for the implementation of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child is also clear:

        “Before the child consents to an interview, they must be informed about the aim and the planned topics of the interview, as well as the child’s right to withdraw their consent at any time.(…) Before the interview begins, it must be made clear that the child only has to speak if they feel comfortable and that they can withdraw consent at any time.”

        These standards are regularly ignored by newspapers such as the BZ, FOCUS, Berliner Zeitung and BILD when it comes to writing tendentious and stigmatising hate pieces against refugees from the Barbakh family.

        For example, the Berliner Zeitung recently published an article by Carola Tunk in which she rambles about how she searches for an underaged refugee from Gaza in Neukölln, whom she describes in a lurid manner in the headline as “Gaza Mohammed” of the “Barbakh clan.”

        Such a dehumanisation of minors not only reflects racist projections, the author’s entire ‘research’ is also in direct contradiction to the press code, which clearly states that the identity of minors must be particularly protected (German Press Code Section 8) and that the consent of the parents or guardians of minors must always be obtained.

        In addition, the press code stipulates the protection of the dignity of children and adolescents (Section 9), a rule that newspapers such as the Berliner Zeitung, BZ, BILD and FOCUS disregard when it comes to stigmatising young people who are regularly arrested by the police solely because of their participation in protests against the genocide.

        Participation in demonstrations, which is also permitted for refugees in a democracy and should be protected by freedom of assembly and freedom of expression, is reinterpreted as ‘criminality’ in the anti-Palestinian agitation.

        Stalking of Minors on Social Media and in the Streets by Berliner Zeitung

        Not only do the aforementioned newspapers now seem to consider it normal to approach Palestinian children and adolescents without the consent of their parents or guardians, in violation of all journalistic guidelines, the Berliner Zeitung author Carola Tunk (as she herself describes) repeatedly ignored the clear statement of the minor concerned and his friends that they did not want to speak to her.

        In blatant violation of press law, she wrote to him several times on social media, where she asked him personal questions and tried to find out where the minor was. However, the author did not make it clear what she actually wanted to write about in any of her attempts to speak to him.

        This practice is not only profoundly immoral, but also a blatant violation of the Press Code, in particular:

        • Section8 (Protection of Personality): The identity of minors must be specially protected.
        • Section 1 (Truthfulness): The reporting is one-sided, distorted, and full of speculation.
        • Section 9 (Protection of Honor and Dignity): Children are violated in their dignity and deliberately stigmatized.

        Anyone conducting interviews with minors should therefore not only obtain the minor’s consent but also that of their legal guardians—ideally in writing for evidence. (…) Consent should cover both the interview itself and any additional aspects—such as recording or publishing the interview.”

        In its decision of 18 March 2025, the Press Council’s Complaints Committee itself had already ruled that the BILD and BZ articles “Gaza clan smuggles Hamas supporters to Berlin” of 22 October 2024 violated the Press Code and had issued a statement of disapproval and recommended that the editorial offices print them. This has not yet happened. On the contrary, the aforementioned media continue to pursue their smear campaign against the Barbakh family regardless.

        Criminalization through Semantic Construction

        The portrayal of the Barbakh family is based on a discursive mechanism of demonization, in which political reality is replaced by racist fantasies:

        • “Clan” instead of family
        • “Gaza” instead of origin
        • “Hamas” instead of political diversity
        • “Terrorism” instead of resistance, escape, or trauma processing

        Double Standards and Complicity with State Repression

        While German media criminalise Palestinians, their reporting on the crimes committed by the Israeli military in Gaza remains one-sided to tendentious. The same public that defames the Barbakh family remains silent about the systematic destruction of their homeland: about the widespread bombings by Israel, the sealing off of the Gaza Strip, the targeted deprivation of water, food, and electricity, and the destruction of medical infrastructure and supplies. The ongoing genocide is ignored by the aforementioned media outlets—while its survivors in Germany are labeled a threat.

        Not a single article asks: What does it mean to have to watch the destruction of one’s own homeland from afar? What does trauma, displacement, and loss mean? Instead, their names and faces serve the aforementioned newspapers as vehicles for a smear campaign that fuels racist domestic politics.

        The journalistic goal is not information, but dehumanization

        Journalists and editorial offices produce a narrative in which Palestinians do not appear as people with legitimate political positions, but as a potential danger that should be ‘neutralised’.

        Deportations as an Instrument of Anti-Palestinian Repression

        The media attack on Palestinian families like the Barbakhs does not happen in a vacuum. It goes hand in hand with an increasingly brutal deportation policy that specifically targets Palestinians – including survivors of an ongoing genocide.

        Berlin is now deporting Palestinian refugees, although German administrative courts have regularly deemed deportations to Greece inadmissible for years because conditions of reception there violate basic human rights standards. The German government has been trying to ignore this case law for around a year. In addition, since November 2023, the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees has imposed a decision halting asylum applications from Gazans on the absurd grounds that the situation in the Gaza Strip is ‘extremely dynamic, confusing and difficult to assess’.

        The German deportation policy is therefore not only an expression of racist migration policy, but also an active means of political intimidation.

        Whether the Barbakh family, children and young people at demonstrations or politically active Palestinians – they are all portrayed in the German media not as people with political awareness and legitimate concerns, but as security risks.

        This reporting is not enlightenment—it is an attack on fundamental rights.

        Children and young people are being doxed. Families are stigmatised. Human rights are violated. Meanwhile, Israel’s crimes are accepted. The newspapers in question act as an ideological instrument of a state that shows solidarity with a settler colonial power – and not with the victims.

        We Demand:

        • The retraction of all named articles that incite anti-Palestinian racism
        • Publication of a correction
        • Public apology to those affected by the racist media coverage
        • Immediate protection of underage Palestinians from media doxxing
        • An end to the racist criminalisation of Palestinian families
        • An independent review of reporting by BILD, WELT, FOCUS, B, and Berliner Zeitung
        • Consequences for media professionals who violate the Press Code
        • A public debate on anti-Palestinian racism in German editorial offices
        • Recognition of Palestinian voices as part of the democratic public sphere

        Contact: palestiniansandallies@proton.me

        📧 berlin@palaestinaspricht.de

        📧 arrestunits-berlin@proton.me

        Signed by:

        • Pallies
        • Palästina Spricht Berlin
        • Arrest Press Unit
        • as well as the lawyers of various affected members of the family
          • Lawyer Nevin Duran
          • Lawyer Nadija Samour
          • Lawyer Viktor Riad
          • Lawyer Benjamin Düsberg

        The key to normalising fascism: selective solidarity

        The Cancelling of Pride is the consequence of the Hungarian Left’s failure to oppose Orban’s crackdown on Palestine protests


        06/04/2025

        The recent outlawing of Pride has suddenly made it clear to many that the right of assembly is being actively restricted in Hungary. Those who had not previously been concerned about authoritarian tendencies have now sounded the alarm: social media are abuzz with profile photo-swaps and posts defending democratic rights, huge crowds are demonstrating in the streets, and more and more people are using a word they had not used before: ‘fascism’. And rightfully so.

        Over the past decade, the Hungarian government has gradually dismantled democratic checks and balances, centralising power while introducing a series of disenfranchising measures through countless constitutional amendments and legislative packages that have made it impossible for critical NGOs and universities to operate. Direct and indirect state terror has taken many forms, from criminal intimidation of protests and strikes to inhumane treatment of refugees and criminalisation of homelessness, while deliberately dividing society – for example, by pitting the working class against the middle class, and Roma and queer communities against mainstream society. Oppressed groups struggle to survive in isolation from each other, with no real prospect of coming together to challenge the increasingly powerful state tyranny.

        This internal discord and lack of social solidarity not only allows the government to openly ally with external oppressive regimes, but also reinforces the ideological construct that holds society together: the impression of being under seige by both internal and external enemies.

        The general apathy has now had not only domestic but also serious foreign policy consequences: while the majority of the world’s countries condemn Israel’s war crimes, the Hungarian government received Netanyahu on 3 April 2025 and announced its withdrawal from the ICC – thus openly opposing the institution of international criminal law.

        Nationalist propaganda – with its scapegoating and populist promises, exacerbated in times of economic and political crisis, follows a familiar historical path. It creates the appearance of ‘liberating’ fascism, claiming that only the government can effectively protect society, including capital owners, from internal and external enemies.

        It is of no surprise, that many people at home and abroad openly refer to Orbán’s regime as a “fascist” or “Nazi” regime: the late Republican Senator John McCain, for example, called Orbán a “neo-fascist dictator” as early as 2014, and Martin Schirdewan (Die Linke) noted that “every year, Europe’s largest neo-Nazi demonstration takes place in Budapest”, while a former Orbán adviser called the prime minister’s “we don’t want to become mixed races” statement “a pure Nazi speech worthy of Goebbels”. New Statesman author John Ganz compared the current Hungarian prime minister to former fascist and Nazi leaders such as Joseph Goebbels and Miklós Horthy.

        However, this ban of Pride is not the first restriction on the right of assembly or political repression. The government had been gradually restricting the possibility of organised protest for years through various legislative amendments and police licensing practices.

        The crackdown on pro-Palestinian protests became particularly spectacular because the authorities were able to use open repression without any serious social opposition, thus opening the way for an even stricter dismantling of the right to assembly. Ever since Israel began its genocide in Gaza, pro-Palestinian demonstrations have been regularly obstructed or banned in Hungary.

        The Supreme Court – which itself is also under severe political pressure, and is unable to act as an independent body – has issued a separate decision classifying a pro-Palestinian rally as advocacating terrorism and dismissing it as an unauthorised assembly.

        This means that in police practice the organisation of and participation in such demonstrations is now criminalised. Organisers of demonstrations are threatened, harassed and some activists – many of whom are refugees or students from the Middle East and North Africa – are even threatened with deportation.

        These violations have, however, not triggered widespread solidarity actions in the Hungarian political community and society. The result is the complete silencing of the anti-Zionist movement and the total silencing of public discourse, not only on the streets, but also in the media and in social space.

        The liberal and pseudo-leftist circles who are now outraged by the ban on Pride has so far remained silent when the freedom of assembly of others has been restricted. Protests against restrictions on the right of assembly are therefore not a general reflex to defend rights, but a selective, politically targeted indignation.

        The saviour who never stood up for queer rights

        Paradoxically, the discourse around the ban on Pride is emerging as a consensus around an oppositional bloc that does not actually represent the interests of the queer community.

        The opposition political bloc is currently presenting Péter Magyar as Viktor Orbán’s only significant challenger, even though he has not previously thematised queer rights in any way. Péter Magyar’s political character is based on a nationalist, populist and Trump-style anti-elitist redemptive narrative, devoid of any critique of the system – not a radical alternative to Fidesz’s policies, but a variant of them.

        Péter Magyar does not talk about the structural causes of social inequalities, does not take a stand for minority rights, and his political communication completely lacks a decolonisation approach, a thematic approach to the situation of the Roma community, a defence of the rights of queer people or the vulnerability of workers. On the contrary, it supports the maintenance of the southern border fence, which is a clear sign that it is planning an anti-migration policy. Although the opposition crowd sees him as a depository of democratic resistance, his current political programme is not a comprehensive social alternative but a personal power project.

        As many have already recognised – but fewer taken seriously – Peter Magyar is a blank slate on which desperate opposition voters can project whatever they want. As the opposition has burnt out in recent years and has been unable to create a new political alternative, Magyar has become the “saviour” who has come out of nowhere to give hope to those who don’t really want radical change, only Orbán’s replacement.

        The movement of Péter Magyar is particularly dangerous because it does not offer a real political programme, it does not represent a clear ideological position and it does not reckon with its own NER1 past [NER (Nemzeti Együttműködés Rendszere) – The System of National Cooperation, is the self-proclaimed name of the Fidesz system based on its political declaration from 2010]. Not a single proposal for systemic change can be linked to it, which suggests that its primary goal is not social justice or the rebuilding of democratic structures, but merely the seizure of power.

        This dynamic is particularly familiar to those who study populist political strategies: Magyar is a populist political actor who understands exactly how Hungarian society works and manipulates emotions accordingly. He positions himself as neither a classical right-wing nor a left-wing politician, but as a “saviour” on whom everyone can impose their own hopes and political expectations. This is not a new phenomenon – it is a characteristic of neoliberalism and authoritarian regimes that, in the absence of any meaningful alternative, a ‘saviour’ (see Donald Trump, Boris Johnson, Javier Milei) always appears, whose policies consist of empty promises and rhetorical tools to fight the elite.

        Not much more encouraging is the Momentum Movement, whose politicians are now spectacularly in favour of Pride, while they have clearly sided with Israel on the genocide in Gaza and have never raised their voices against the suffering of the Palestinian people. This behaviour fits in well with the selective sensibility that characterises the liberal-conservative opposition: defending democratic rights is a core value only as long as it does not conflict with their own political interests or the expectations of their Western partners. The mainstream political consensus that is now forming in Hungary is not a genuine democratic resistance movement, but a power-oriented coalition based on selective principles that ignores systemic social oppressions.

        How did the elite of the opposition contribute to the development of fascism?

        In the context of the Pride ban, many say that it is “a prelude to fascism” or that we are witnessing “the further hardening of an authoritarian regime”. But this is wrong and misleading. What we are witnessing in Hungary today is not the beginning of fascism, but its full unfolding.

        Fascism does not appear overnight, but gradually takes hold, becoming the norm through small concessions. And perhaps most importantly, it was not only Viktor Orbán and his political circle who built this system, but a social milieu that allowed it to mature, normalised it and even actively supported certain aspects of it.

        There are plenty of examples of tacit consensus between the government and the opposition elite on pro-fascism issues in recent years. For example, when the Black Lives Matter movement led to a worldwide upsurge in discourse on the structural analysis of racism, the dominant Hungarian opposition intelligentsia and press reacted dismissively, disparagingly or ironically, with one of our leading opposition intellectuals comparing BLM to the Islamic State. The so-called DEI (Diversity, Equity, Inclusion) policies and social justice measures have been denounced as “positive discrimination” by both the government and the opposition.

        The opposition has denigrated and demonised the words “woke”, “cancel culture” and “PC-terror” even more than the government. The dominant part of the Hungarian opposition press and intelligentsia, like the government, has created a moral panic about Western progressive movements, often making ironic or dismissive statements about them.

        Both sides also marginalise the transgender community: when Fidesz institutionally restricted the rights of transgender people, the opposition intelligentsia and press did not show any real solidarity with them. The topic in fact was often met with mockery or moral panic, especially during the Paris Olympics, when they united in their denigration of boxer Iman Helif.

        And there is more: while the government utilises targeted ethnic oppression policies (e.g. segregation, legal discrimination), the opposition has regularly failed to address the structural oppression of the Roma community.

        More importantly, there is an absolute lack of critique of capitalism. A critical approach to economic injustices is still a taboo subject for the Hungarian opposition, and leftist discourses on the structural problems of capitalism are consistently dismissed or silenced, demonised, and even quite incomprehensibly conflated with Trumpian and Orbánist policies, being called “communist”, while government officials call the anti-communist opposition Bolshevik.

        The repression in Hungary is not an isolated case

        I want to make one more point: many people still believe that the Hungarian political process is isolated, that the decisions of the authorities are independent of international trends, and that this regime exists in a bubble, different from other authoritarian regimes in Europe. This is a serious mistake.

        The fascism that has unfolded in Hungary is part of a global trend and is closely linked to developments in the Western world. When, for example, anti-Zionist demonstrations are banned in Hungary, this is not an isolated phenomenon, but part of an international wave of repression that has swept across Europe and the United States over the last year and a half. In France and Germany, pro-Palestinian demonstrations are being dispersed in a series of crackdowns, and in American universities, police are brutally cracking down on students demanding the withdrawal of Israeli investments. These are all manifestations of the same phenomenon.

        These events follow a common logic: neoliberal democracies and fascist states alike are defending Zionism while criminalising those who speak out against the Palestinian genocide. The geopolitical-economic reason for this lies primarily in the fact that Israel is a key player in the global power structure: a strategic military ally, a high-tech and arms exporter, and a servant of Western economic and security interests in the Middle East.

        Since a critique of Zionism would indirectly challenge security and military regimes closely intertwined with transnational corporate interests and Euro-Atlantic hegemony, it is in the common interest of the political elite, whether neoliberal or far-right, to suppress movements that challenge this structure. Hungary is no exception and the Hungarian liberal opposition refuses to see the danger of this – which is a huge mistake. In fact, the opposition itself is involved in defending and normalising genocide, and it would be hard to find a more fascist characteristic than that.

        The politics of small concessions

        It is not solely Viktor Orbán’s fault that we have come to this. Hungarian society, including the masses critical of the government, has for years been helping to ensure that criticism of Zionism disappears from public discourse. When Fidesz and the opposition alike normalised unconditional support for Israel, when they condoned the branding of all pro-Palestinian speech as antisemitism and rationalised genocide in their own media products, just as the government did, they were in fact embedding the principle that they could “get away with a bit of fascism”.

        This cannot be without consequences. Because there is no such thing as letting in a little fascism while preserving other freedoms. Society’s passivity in the face of the crimes of Zionism has contributed greatly to the re-emergence of fascism in Hungary.

        If a regime can be made to restrict freedom of expression and assembly in the interests of an oppressive ideology or power, it will do the same to any other oppressed group. Criminalising pro-Palestinian protests was the first step. The measures against the queer community did not come out of nowhere, but are the logical consequences of a system that Hungarian society has allowed to mature over the years.

        If Orbán were to be replaced tomorrow, but the system that allowed him to remain in power was left intact, the country would be back in the same cycle – just with different faces and rhetoric. Péter Magyar or any of the other opposition politicians currently seen as the odds-on candidates do not represent a structural change, but just another leader at the head of an unchanged system.

        The politics of ‘less bad’ options is not a solution, but a means of maintaining the status quo. Such a strategy implies that no profound social and economic changes are needed, but that it is enough to change the composition of power.

        In the long run, however, this will only create new problems, while society will again become disillusioned and drift towards another authoritarian leader.

        But it doesn’t merely have domestic political consequences that society and the opposition routinely condone the sins of the authoritarian regime. In the long run, such concessions can also lead to a foreign policy tragedy – especially if the regime becomes an active supporter of global human rights violations. In doing so, it puts not only its own regime but the future of the entire country at serious risk.

        The price of complicity

        The active complicity of the Hungarian government in the genocide in Gaza is no longer just a moral issue: it could have serious foreign policy and legal consequences. The fact that Netanyahu was received in Budapest in his official capacity, while several countries are already demanding arrest warrants for him, is a clear violation of international law. Mr Orbán’s announcement that Hungary is withdrawing from the ICC is not just a symbolic gesture, but an obstruction of justice.

        International law works slowly, but it works – especially once the global political tide turns. If a criminal trial is indeed launched in the Gaza genocide, the court will not only investigate the perpetrators, but also the supporting, complicit states, as happened in Rwanda or the former Yugoslavia. For complicity to exist, a state must deliberately obstruct justice – for example, by not extraditing wanted war criminals.

        And Hungary is not merely a silent accomplice. For years, the government has consistently vetoed EU statements condemning Israel’s violations against Palestinians. The Pegasus affair, the Jerusalem embassy relocation plan, and the trail of bombings in Lebanon and Syria in the autumn of 2024 – which led to Israeli intelligence through a Hungarian company – all point to a complex, deep political nexus.

        These moves by the government have gone unchallenged by the opposition – presumably because of the risk of stigmatisation associated with criticism of Zionism, as well as political and economic calculations. The only way to end the system of fascism and complicity is to create an opposition movement that does not react selectively to oppression but consistently and systematically opposes it in all its forms – socially, politically and globally.

        Real resistance: who are the alternatives?

        The real question, then, is not when Orban will be replaced, but whether Hungarian society can recognise its own responsibility for getting us to this point. And as things stand, there is little evidence of this, since in Hungary in recent decades there has been no broad social movement that has consistently and systematically confronted the various forms of oppression.

        The rejection remains selective: there are political issues to which the opposition masses are sensitive, and there are those that are ignored or rejected not only by the right but also by the liberal masses. The replacement of a single political actor or the recovery of certain rights will not bring about a profound transformation unless there is a radical change in mindset, priorities and understanding of solidarity.

        Real solidarity begins where all forms of oppression are rejected. Organizations and communities that not only fight for the rights of queer people, but also consistently stand up against all oppression, including victims of capitalism and fascism, are the only hope for human rights advocacy in Hungary today. These include the Crow Collective, Queers for Liberation, the Anarchist Student Movement, the Ecofeminist Collective and Feminist Action. If real change is to be achieved, it is not necessary to look for ‘less bad’ leaders, but to strengthen those communities that do not selectively stand up for justice.

        Because the real question is not whether there will be a Pride parade in Budapest, but whether there can be a movement in Hungary that is not selective in its solidarity, that truly stands up for all the oppressed, and can bring about real change. Let there be a Pride, but let it also be open to anti-Zionist, anti-capitalist, anti-fascist initiatives – otherwise there is little point.

        The Hungarian version of this article was pitched to opposition media outlets but has yet to be published.

        Location Change for Monday’s Protest

        Across the road from Stresemannstr. 115, 10963 Berlin


        05/04/2025

        We, the organisers of Monday’s YOU CAN’T DEPORT A MOVEMENT – STOP ALL DEPORTATIONS! DEFEND THE #BERLIN4! protest, have received orders from the police on behalf of the president of the Abgeordnetenhaus (Berlin House of Representatives), Cornelia Seibeld, to move our protest away from its planned location in front of the Abgeordnetenhaus – to ensure business as usual. They proposed a different location that is far away from the building’s entrance, defeating the purpose of protesting while politicians enter and exit—the very politicians who issued the deportation orders.

        As we were informed of this with too little time to appeal the decision – a strategy all too familiar from the last year and a half of eroding our right to protest – we have decided to hold the rally as close to the Abgeordnetenhaus as possible: at the corner of Niederkircherstraße and Stresemannstraße.

        We expect further questionable restrictions (Auflagen) regarding other aspects of the protest and will keep you updated. Make no mistake, what is happening here is the state attempting to silence those who protest against its repression and violence. Every day, Germany’s descent into fascism is further crystallised, and we must resist!

        Your solidarity is needed this Monday: be there and be loud to end ALL deportations. JUSTICE WILL PREVAIL!

        Join our protest: same time, same fury, slightly different place. And don’t forget your pots and pans!

        Across the road from Stresemannstr. 115, 10963 Berlin