International law is fraying at the seams. Or more like a paper bag trying to hold water, slowly disintegrating. Universal human rights have been unmasked, exposing the principles they were actually created upon, by white Western communities to serve white Western communities. 

It makes me rather nervous. The United States and Israel have only crossed, but blown through so many red lines, understood to be internationally agreed upon moral standards. The question I continue to ask myself then is, who’s next? And how will we protect humanity?

It’s clear the current standards only benefit the bullies. It’s time for new rules.

Years ago at peace camp, I participated in an activity that I continue to think about to this day. Your group sits down to a dinner, hamburgers work well because they have a lot of components to them. There are two rules. You cannot put anything on your own plate, and you cannot ask for anything to be given to you. It forces the group to attend to the needs of your neighbour. You must actively attend to other’s needs, engage in conversation with the people at your table and learn what they prefer to put on their hamburger. And you must practice patience to allow others to respond to your needs. It embodies collective rights, community care, mutual aid. 

These are the types of values we need to structure international law on, the individual focus has got to go. 

Not only is the occupation of Palestine making our world less safe for Jewish, Palestinian, and Arab communities and diasporas, it is also having an immense impact on the climate crisis, which affects every single one of us. 

We exist together. And we will not find peace together until we reckon with our interdependence and build an international community that supports one another, actively attending to our neighbour’s needs so the whole table can be fed.

Picture of Hannah Redekop

Hannah Redekop

CPT Communications Associate

Send Ryan a note: peacemakers@cpt.org

Subscribe to the Friday Bulletin

Get Ryan’s thoughts and the entire bulletin every Friday in your inbox, and don’t miss out on news from the teams, a list of what we’re reading and information on ways to take action.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Previous Bulletins

Facebook
Twitter
Email
WhatsApp
Print

Read More Stories

Administrative error

On Monday, Trump and his cabinet met El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele in the Oval Office. Bukele claims to have “liberated millions” through his mass

A black and white illustration shows several teenage boys being escorted through the court gates by police, all are wearing masks and the boys are handcuffed.

Where we make our monsters

Part of my job is to try to inform the CPT community about the context in which we work. I’m often the bearer of bad

What’s behind a mask?

Last week, masked agents snatched Rumeysa Ozturk from the street outside her Massachusetts home and disappeared her into one of the US South’s notorious immigration

Skip to content