We the undersigned artists, critics, scholars, and organizers are writing to express our support for the Palestinian struggle against Israeli colonial rule and its apartheid system. We feel it is urgent to highlight the connections between the ongoing violence of Israel against the Palestinian people and a leading institution of the art system, namely the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA). This letter aims to build decolonial solidarity across borders by drawing attention to MoMA’s entanglement with the mutually reinforcing projects of settler-colonialism, imperialism, and racial capitalism in Palestine, the U.S. and around the world. When we focus on the interlocking directorate of the MoMA board, the museum becomes visible as a shared site of action for our interconnected struggles. This works against the all-too-frequent isolation and exceptionalization of Palestine, and strengthens the bonds between Free Palestine, Indigenous sovereignty, Black Freedom Movements and all other movements for land, life, and liberation, from Puerto Rico to Kashmir and beyond.
Violence against Palestinians has intensified in recent weeks, first with the ongoing forcible displacement of families in Sheikh Jarrah, then with the violent incursion into the Al-Aqsa Mosque, followed by the carpet-bombing of Gaza, and a series of organized settler attacks across occupied Palestine. This has included attacks on spaces for media, culture, and art, most recently Dar Yusuf Nasri Jacir for Art and Research in Bethlehem. At the same time, these attacks have united Palestinians both on the ground and in the diaspora, with resistance proliferating in a diversity of forms: yesterday, a General Strike shut down the entirety of historic Palestine, and massive marches have taken place in cities throughout the world, with #PalestineStrike as a shared declaration of agency, dignity, and solidarity.
Cultural institutions are part and parcel of struggles against settler-colonial violence. 600+ cultural workers have announced a boycott of Zabludowicz Art Trust in London on account of that organization’s ties to the Israeli military. The Boycott Divestment Sanctions (BDS) movement is gaining momentum, including the affiliated Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel. As part of the Palestine mobilizations in New York last week, hundreds gathered at MoMA, where a young man was arrested and beaten by the NYPD. The police had been called to the scene by the museum, which on the same day announced that it would be permanently banning five organizers from stepping foot in the museum.
Why show up at MoMA? Why now? Because many members of the MoMA board are directly involved with support for Israel’s apartheid rule, artwashing not only the occupation of Palestine but also broader processes of disposession and war around the world. Consider Steven Tananbaum, CEO of GoldenTree, a hedge fund known for profiteering from the Puerto Rico debt crisis. Tananbaum’s foundation donated 1.8 million dollars to “support Israel by sending young adults to Israel” via the Art Institute of Chicago, dwarfing his $400,000 contribution to MoMA itself that year. Daniel Och, CEO of Och-Ziff Capital, also known for its plunder of Puerto Rico, is a current member and former chairman of the Birthright Foundation, which is also partly funded by the Israeli state. Birthright tours aim to recruit Jewish youth from around the world, especially American Jews, to the Zionist cause while sanitizing the occupation and erasing Palestinians. Leon Black, best known for his connections with Jeffery Epstein, has donated more than 1 million to Birthright as well. Paula Crown’s wealth comes from her husband, James Crown’s armaments company General Dynamics, whose Land Systems division works closely with Israeli military technology companies, and the Israeli Occupation Forces themselves (General Dynamics products have also been used in the bombing of Yemen by the Saudi government). The MK-84 bombs being dropped on Gaza by the Israeli air force are made by General Dynamics. The Paula and James Crown Creativity Lab on the second floor of the museum stands while homes, schools, hospitals, and media offices in Gaza are flattened.
Finally, MoMA’s Honorary Chair Ronald Lauder is president of the World Jewish Congress, which has long campaigned in defense of Zionist policies, and, most recently, has lobbied numerous heads of state including those of Britain and Germany to adopt the International Holocaust Remembrance Association’s definition of anti-Semitism. This definition is widely used to conflate criticism of Israel with Anti-Semitism, and has resulted in the proscription and criminalization of speech in support of Palestinian liberation (including but not limited to BDS) as a nefarious form of racism–a development that should concern everyone in the arts. This definition of Anti-Semitism also serves to collapse a plurality of Jewish identities into one identity indissociable from the state of Israel, tacitly condoning the violence it perpetrates in their name. This is a form of psychological warfare that defines Jewish people who speak out against the occupation as “traitors,” “self-hating Jews,” or even unworthy of having their voices considered Jewish at all. With this in mind, it is also worth mentioning the fact that Lauder is a close friend and donor to Donald Trump, and is closely connected with the pro-Israel evangelical Right. This reliance on Trumpism and the Christian Right for Zionist support has ironically fuelled the growth of real movements for white supremacy and anti-Semitism in the U.S.
With figures like Lauder, Crown, and Tananbaum on its board, MoMA cannot pretend to stand apart from the attack on Gaza or the Occupation of the West Bank and Jerusalem more broadly. Because the corporate power and wealth that sits atop the museum suffuses all of its operations, there are no clean hands. Given these entanglements, we must understand the museum for what it is: not only a multi-purpose economic asset for billionaires, but also an expanded ideological battlefield through which those who fund apartheid and profit from war polish their reputations and normalize their violence. For MoMA’s board members, the trail of their malfeasance leads in many directions, from fueling climate crisis to support for the NYPD Foundation to the extractivist violence of the Cisneros empire. But there is no denying that Palestine is one of the crime scenes of the MoMA board. We do not expect, nor do we call for, any statement of concern from MoMA. Let us remember that a year ago after the murders of Breonna Taylor, George Floyd, Ahmaud Aubery that museums issued statements of solidarity with Black Lives Matter, only to board up their windows as the rebellion unfolded.
For those who love Palestine, we have waited too long for this moment to not say what needs to be said despite the fear, the risk, the cost, of speaking out and naming things for what they are. We stand with Palestine, or we stand with silence, aiding and abetting the disaster. We unequivocally denounce the continuation of the Israeli settler colonial project, its apartheid regime, and the interlocking technologies of power and violence that enable it. We unequivocally support the right of return for all Palestinian refugees. We call upon our friends, colleagues, and communities to join the struggle for a free Palestine.
This Friday, May 21 at 4 PM Est. people will gather at MoMA. We call on the museum to respect people’s right to protest, and to refrain from involving the NYPD, which creates an unsafe environment for everyone involved. For those who are not in New York City or who otherwise cannot participate in person, an online assembly will also be held. We encourage and support autonomous parallel actions, wherever they may take place. To join the online assembly or to share information about parallel actions, write to freepalestine_strikemoma@protonmail.com.
FREE PALESTINE/STRIKE MOMA
*Initiated by IIAAF
Signatories
Zarouhie Abdalian
Jaishri Abichandani
Owolabi Aboyade
Saks Afridi
Haig Aivazian
Nora Akawi
Jananne Al-Ani
Campo Alante
Alexander Alberro
Linda Martín Alcoff
Anthony Alessandrini
Laura Arena
American Artist
Ayreen Anastas
Sinan Antoon
Tomie Arai
Laurie Arbiter
Forensic Architecture
Eddie Arroyo
Art Handlers Alliance
Artists For Workers
Art and Labor Podcast
Michael Assiff
Korakrit Arunanondchai
Colleen Asper
Alice Attie
Ariella Aisha Azoulay
Ben C. Baer
Mimi Bai
Kazembe Balagun
César Barros A.
Yto Barrada
Chloe Bass
Hatem Bazian
Gelsey Bell
Dalida Maria Benfield
Meriem Bennani
Marc Joseph Berg
Omar Berrada
Claire Bishop
Hannah Black
Blackhouse Kollective-Soweto
Caitlin Blanchfield
Lluís Alexandre Casanovas Blanco
David Borgonjon
Effie Bowen
Jaimie Branch
Chinatown Art Brigade
Natalia Brizuela
Kylie Broderick
Mahogany L. Browne
Tess Brown-Lavoie
Kevin Bruyneel
Julia Bryan-Wilson
Rosie Bsheer
Jonathan Buchsbaum
Marie Buck
Charisse Burden-Stelly
Harry Burke
Eduardo Cadava
Caitlin Cahill
Gabo Camnitzer
Kathrine Carl
Mateo Chacon-Pino
Hera Chan
Colectiva Somoslacélula
Phil Collins
Nikki Columbus
Eli Coplan
Kency Cornejo
Carlo Costa
Maxe Crandall
Lucas G. Crane
Crenshaw Dairy Mart
Lizania Cruz
Comrade Cryptobot
Jesse Darling
Jake Davidson
Angela Davis
Ashley Dawson
Mira Dayal
Joel Dean
Saim Demircan
TJ Demos
Gina Dent
Filipe de Sousa
Nitasha Dhillon
Natalie Diaz
Kerry Downey
Jennifer Doyle
Amalle Dublon
Erina Duganne
Anaïs Duplan
Arlene Dávila
Grayson Earle
Brian Eno
Bora Erden
Noura Erakat
Kareem Estefan
Gareth Evans
Ali Eyal
Frantz Fanon Foundation
Mireille Fanon Mendès-France
Sarah Farahat
Maryam Faridani
Abou Farman Farmaian
Taraneh Fazeli
C. Feiss
Mayanthi Fernando
Johanna Fernandez
Sally Frater
Layal L. Ftouni
Léopold Lambert
René Gabriel
Nicholas Galanin
Nikki Gamboa
Macarena Gómez-Barris
Gareth Evans
Saudi García
Rema Ghuloum
Craig Gilmore
Ruth Wilson Gilmore
Kyle Goen
Nan Goldin
Ariel Goldberg
Leo Goldsmith
Alyosha Goldstein
Aaron Goldstein
Thyrza Goodeve
Sandy Grande
Graphematics Collective
Maggie Gray
Jasmine Gregory
Alicia Grullon
Oscar Guardiola-Rivera
Brian Guerin
Doris Guo
Terike Haapoja
Rayya Haddad
Chelsea Haines
Lisa Hajjar
Jean Halley
Hannon Hannon
Em He
Christina Heatherton
Emma Hedditch
Carla Henry
Robert Chase Heishman
Samia Henni
Lilly Hern-Fondation
Gabrielle Hill
Curtis Ho
Josie Roland Hodson
Allan Kolski Horwitz
Vu Horwitz
Aaron Hughes
Amin Husain
The Illuminator Collective
Zack Ingram
Alex Ito
Vijay Iyer
Sanjana Iyer
Ahmed Jazbhay
Emily Johnson
Merrit Johnson
Stanya Kahn
Robin D. G. Kelley
Devin Kenny
Yazan Khalili
Lara Khaldi
Amirtha Kidambi
Christine Sun Kim
John King
Coco Kockner
Lynn Kodeih
Dana Kopel
Sam Korman
Adrian Lahoud
Wesley Larios
Yve Laris Cohen
Latipa
Carmen Lane
Pamela M. Lee
Nikki Leger
Greg Lindquist
Allie Linn
Elliot J. Liu
Jen Liu
Melissa Liu
Farzin Lotfi-Jam
Janice Lowe
Lisa Lowe
Cole Lu
Joseph Lubitz
Linda Luu
Josh Macphee
Ángeles Donoso Macaya
Sara Magenheimer
Nelson Maldonado-Torres
Jumana Manna
Jaleh Mansoor
Nicole Marroquin
Reinhold Martin
Vijay Masharani
James M. McHugh
Clara Lopez Menendez
Ara Merjian
Mikinaak Migwans
Maya Mikdashi
Karen Miller
Naeem Mohaiemen
Azikiwe Mohammed
Chandra Talpade Mohanty
Massimiliano Mollona
K.R.M. Mooney
Sheehan Moore
Saretta Morgan
Anna Moschovakis
Frederick Moten
Liz Moy
Paula Moya
Cynthia Mulcahy
Edwin Nasr
New Red Order
Dalia Neis
Rithuli Orleyn
Rupal Oza
Anna Ozbek
Amanda Pajak
David Palumbo-Liu
Julie Patton
Carla Perez-Gallardo
Andreas Petrossiants
Sandy Plácido
Laura Poitras
Esther Poppe
William Powhida
Jasbir K. Puar
Bridget Quinn
Annie Raccuglia
Zandi Radebe
Michael Rakowitz
Dina Ramadan
Elelwani Ramugondo
Jeremy Randall
Conor Tomás Reed
Sa’dia Rehman
Isabella Robbins
Bruce Robbins
Kenya Robinson
Jean Rodea Carla
Shellyne Rodríguez
Dylan Rodríguez
Sarah Rogers
Root & Branch Collective
Tracy J Rosenthal
Andrew Ross
Peter Rostovsky
Alan Ruiz
Susanne Sachsse
Saajidha Sader
Anjalika Sagar
Rijin Sahakian
Natalia Viera Salgado
Miranda Samuels
Christopher Santiago
Julia Santoli
Suneil Sanzgiri
Dean Itsuji Saranillio
Kirsten Scheid
Sarah Schulman
Claire Schwartz
Felicity Scott
Sedrick
Mohamed Seedat
Dubravka Sekulic
Colin Self
Ashkan Sepahvand
Nizan Shaked
Sydney Shavers
Ginevra Shay
Stephen Sheehi
Lara Sheehi
Bhakti Shringarpure
JS Shokrian
Tiffany Sia
Marc Siegel
Xaviera Simmons
Audra Simpson
Shori Sims
Sharon Smith
Amanda Sommer
Robyn C. Spencer
Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak
Bra Mike Stainbank
Booker Stardrum
Ann Laura Stoler
Christopher Stone
Shahnaaz Suffla
Lena Sze
Tag Harmon Campaign To Free Mumia
Leyya Mona Tawil
Virgil B/G Taylor
Vanessa Thill
Sindhu Thirumalaisamy
Aly Thomas
Miriam Ticktin
Cihan Tikay
Saadia Toor
Chloe Truong-Jones
Rachel Valinsky
Jessica Vaughn
Lori Waxman
We Will Not Be Silent
Andrew Weiner
Eyal Weizman
Lexi Welch
Laura Wexler
Elvia Wilk
Simon Will
Evan Calder Williams
Jessica Wilson
Donna Wingate
Within Our Lifetime: United for Palestine
Kasia Wlaszczyk
Agustina Woodgate
Suné Woods
Ian Wooldridge
Matvei Yankelevich
Ali Yass
Benjamin Young
Betty Yu
Alex Zandi
Rayya Zein El
Mary Zerkel