We’re Ready and Willing to Break the Israeli Blockade of Gaza

As I stood with hundreds of other activists from thirty-two countries in Istanbul, Türkiye, our trainers briefed us on what we might expect during the trip to Gaza. “We have to be ready for every possibility,” they said, as we started an intense non-violence training program required to join the Freedom Flotilla Coalition

The best scenario, they added, is that our three ships—one carrying 5,500 tons of humanitarian aid and two carrying passengers—will reach Gaza and accomplish our mission. Another scenario would be that the Turkish government might cave to pressure from Israel, the United States, and Germany, and prevent the boats from even leaving Istanbul. This happened in 2011, when the Greek government buckled under pressure and ten boats were stalled in Greece.

With our boats currently still docked in Istanbul, we fear that Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, whose party recently suffered a crushing blow in local elections, is vulnerable to any economic blackmail that Western powers might be threatening.

A third possibility is that the ships take off but the Israelis illegally hijack us in international waters, confiscate our boats and supplies, arrest and imprison us and, eventually, deport us. 

This happened on several other voyages to Gaza, one of them with deadly consequences. In 2010, a flotilla of six boats was stopped by the Israeli military in international waters. They boarded the biggest boat, the Mavi Marmara. According to a United Nations report, the Israelis opened fire with live rounds from a helicopter hovering above the ship and from commando boats along the side of the ship. In a horrific display of force, nine passengers were killed, and one more later succumbed to his wounds. 

To try to prevent another nightmare like that, potential passengers on this flotilla must now undergo rigorous training. We watched a video of what we might face—from extremely potent tear gas to ear-splitting concussion grenades—and they told us that the Israeli commandos would be armed with weapons with live rounds. Then we divided up into small groups to discuss how best to react, non-violently, to such an attack. Do we sit, stand, or lie down? Do we link arms? Do we put our hands up in the air to show we are unarmed? 

The most frightening part of the training was a simulation replete with deafening booms of gunfire and exploding concussion grenades and masked soldiers screaming at us, hitting us with mock rifles, dragging us across the floor, and arresting us. It was indeed sobering to get a glimpse of what might await us. Equally sobering are Israeli media reports indicating that the Israeli military has begun “security preparations,” including preparations for taking over the flotilla.


Everyone embarking on this mission deserves tremendous credit. The largest group of passengers are from Türkiye, and many are affiliated with the humanitarian group The Foundation for Human Rights and Freedoms and Humanitarian Relief (known as IHH), an enormous Turkish NGO with eighty-two offices throughout the country. It has consultative status at the United Nations and does charity work in 115 countries. Through IHH, millions of supporters donated money to buy and stock the ships. Israel, however, has designated this widely respected charity as a terrorist group. 

The next largest group comes from Malaysia. Some of the participants are affiliated with another large humanitarian group called MyCARE. The organization, known for helping out in emergency situations such as floods and other natural disasters, has contributed millions of dollars in emergency aid to Gaza over the years.

There are about thirty-five participants from the United States. Leading the group, and key to the international coalition, is seventy-seven-year-old retired U.S. Army colonel and State Department diplomat Ann Wright. After quitting the State Department in protest over the U.S. invasion of Iraq, Wright has put her diplomatic skills to good use in helping to pull together a motley group of internationals. Her co-organizer from the United States is Huwaida Arraf, a Palestinian-American attorney who is a co-founder of the International Solidarity Movement and ran for Congress in 2022. Arraf was key to organizing the very first flotillas that began in 2008. So far, there have been about fifteen attempts to get to Gaza by boat, only five of them successful. 

What brings us together is our outrage that the world is allowing this genocide in Gaza to continue, and a burning desire to do more than we have been doing to stop people from being murdered, maimed, and starved.

The incredible breadth of participants is evident in our nightly meetings, where you can hear clusters of groups chatting away in Arabic, Spanish, Portuguese, Malay, French, Italian, and English in diverse accents from Australian to Welsh. The ages range from students in their twenties to an eighty-six-year-old Argentine medical doctor.

What brings us together is our outrage that the world is allowing this genocide in Gaza to continue, and a burning desire to do more than we have been doing to stop people from being murdered, maimed, and starved. The aid we are bringing is enormous—it is the equivalent of more than 100 trucks—but that is not the only purpose of this trip. “This is an aid mission to bring food to hungry people,” says Arraf, “but Palestinians do not want to live on charity. So we are also challenging Israeli policies that make them dependent on aid. We are trying to break the siege.”


Israel’s vicious attacks on the people of Gaza, its blocking of aid deliveries, and its targeting of relief organizations have fueled a massive humanitarian crisis. The killing of seven World Central Kitchen workers by Israeli forces on April 1 highlighted the dangerous environment in which relief agencies operate, which has forced many of them to shut down their operations. 

The U.S. government is building a temporary port for aid that is supposed to be finished in early May, but this is the same government that provides weapons and diplomatic cover for the Israelis. And while President Joe Biden expresses concern for the suffering Palestinians, he has suspended funding to UNRWA, the main United Nations agency responsible for distributing aid in Palestine, after Israel made unsubstantiated claims that twelve of its 13,000 employees in Gaza had participated in the October 7 attacks. 

Given the urgency and danger this moment presents, the Freedom Flotilla Coalition is entering rough and uncharted waters. We are calling on countries around the world to pressure Israel to allow us “free and safe passage” to Gaza. In the United States, we are asking for help from our Congress, but having just approved another $26 billion to Israel, it is doubtful that we can count on their support. 

But, even if our governments do put pressure on Israel, will it pay attention? The country’s defiance of international law and world opinion during the past seven months indicates otherwise. 

But still, we will push forward. The people of Gaza are the wind in our sails. Freedom for Palestine is our North Star. We are determined to reach Gaza with food, medicines, and, most of all, our solidarity and love.