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Why I didn’t sign that writers’ letter calling the Gaza war a genocide

Whatever the cause, there is something about the words ‘we the undersigned’ that makes my heart sink

June 1, 2025 17:56
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3 min read

A week or so ago, I was invited, along with hundreds of other writers, to sign a letter that was to be published in The Guardian condemning Israel’s war in Gaza. The word that kept coming up in the letter was “genocide”. That, together with “genocidal”, appears 11 times in the letter, and it is not a long letter. “This is not only about our common humanity and all human rights; this is about our moral fitness as the writers of our time,” it said at one point.

In the end I didn’t sign it. My arm was sore. I had got Repetitive Strain Injury from signing similar letters about the situations in Chad, Jordan, Sudan, Myanmar, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region in China, and a few other places where bad things were happening to innocent people. I was worried whether we writers were at risk of eroding our brand as the moral arbiters of the world. And who can forget the letter written on October 8, 2023, calling on the world to condemn Hamas and demand the return of the hostages? I imagined their exiled leaders, frowning over The Guardian in a luxury hotel suite in Qatar, and the regretful shaking of heads as the senior representative, Khalil al-Hayya, announced to the others: “I’m sorry to break it to you, lads, but we’ve lost Ian McEwan.”

I’m sorry to break it to you, lads, but we’ve lost Ian McEwan

Actually, I wasn’t invited to sign any of those other letters; possibly because they were never written. But the one about Gaza – not the one about Hamas – certainly was. I genuinely wonder why writers should care about the one atrocity rather than the others; perhaps that is a mystery we will never be able to unravel.