Palestinian author Mohammed El-Kurd declared “our time will come, but we must normalize massacres as the status quo” at a rally in London held to support Palestinians against Israel in the ongoing Israel-Hamas war. The conflict began when Hamas terrorists launched a raid against Israel from Gaza on October 7th, massacring approximately 1,200 men, women, and children.
El-Kurd, who addressed the Palestine Solidarity Campaign-organized rally with high-profile politicians including Labour’s Apsana Begum MP, earned loud cheers from the assembled crowds after he issued his call to “normalize massacres.” He also said “we must root [Zionism] out of the world,” branding the belief that Jews should have a state in their historic homeland “a racist ideology.”
Over the last 99 days we’ve seen unprecedented levels of anti-semitism. Extremism & hatred normalised on our streets. And central London turned into a no-go zone for Jewish people about once a week.
The plan isn’t working if this is where we are now.👇
— Suella Braverman MP (@SuellaBraverman) January 14, 2024
After an outcry on social media, London’s Metropolitan Police eventually said it was “aware” of El-Kurd’s remarks and “seeking to speak to the individual concerned.”
The Met has consistently defended anti-Israel activists calling for jihad and trampling on British war memorials, and El-Kurd initially seemed unconcerned by their statement. Responding on social media, he openly goaded the force, writing “busy today, can we do tomorrow?” and adding a kiss at the end of his snarky missive.
Hours later, the Palestinian appeared to be taking the matter more seriously, posting a statement claiming it was “clear” that “the closing of my speech was to state ‘we should NOT normalize massacres'” – despite this being the opposite of what he actually said.