Épisodes

  • Guy Christensen: The Cost of Speaking Out | Sumud Podcast
    Jan 23 2026
    🎙️ This episode of the Sumud Podcast features a wide ranging conversation with Guy Christensen on finding political clarity through Palestine and the cost of speaking out against power. Dr. Ed Hasan and Guy trace his path from conservative Mormon culture and the alt right pipeline to learning about the Nakba, Gaza as an open air prison, and the role of human rights reporting in challenging dominant narratives. The episode examines paid propaganda, harassment, and his expulsion from Ohio State later overturned by a federal court and closes with a call to speak up, build community, and resist systems rooted in oppression. 🌍 Guy Christensen is a student activist, organizer, and influencer whose educational work has reached over 1 billion people since the start of Israel's genocide. Last year, he spearheaded the viral Fast For Gaza challenge which has so far distributed over half a million dollars in aid to Gaza. Guy’s storytelling and advocacy work across social media, grassroots organizing, and national media platforms have earned him a reputation for mobilizing young people and turning outrage into tangible impact. 🔑 In this conversation, we explore: -Growing up in conservative Mormon culture and leaving the alt right pipeline -Personal experiences that shaped empathy and political direction -Learning about the Nakba, Gaza, and human rights reporting -Paid propaganda and influencer recruitment efforts -Harassment, doxxing, and coordinated smear campaigns -Expulsion from Ohio State and the legal fight that followed -Independent media, journalism, and digital resistance -Why speaking up matters even when it is risky ⏱ Chapters 00:00 Introduction and opening message 04:30 From Mormon upbringing to political awakening 10:20 Discovering Palestine Nakba Gaza and human rights reports 18:45 Paid propaganda harassment and online targeting 28:30 High school confrontation and early public backlash 36:50 Ohio State censorship and expulsion 50:10 Legal fight ACLU support and court victory 1:03:40 Independent media student activism and speaking anyway 🎬 Full episode on https://sumudpod.com 📲 Follow @dredhasan | @sumudpod Social Media for Guy: -TikTok @yourfavoriteguy -Instagram Banned again -YouTube @yourfavoriteguy0 -Substack @yourfavoriteguy -UpScrolled @guy -X @guychristensen_ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    1 h et 12 min
  • Mother Agapia: Faith Under Occupation | Sumud Podcast
    Jan 16 2026
    🎙️ This episode of the Sumud Podcast features a wide ranging conversation with Mother Agapia on what she witnessed living and working in Palestine from the late 1990s through the Second Intifada and beyond. Dr. Ed Hasan and Mother Agapia trace how the promise of Oslo collapsed into deeper control, how settlements expanded while Palestinian life narrowed, and how walls, checkpoints, curfews, and violence reshaped daily existence. Through firsthand stories from Jerusalem and the West Bank, she challenges the framing of the crisis, rejects Christian Zionism as a distortion of Christianity, and describes the shared community life of Palestinian Muslims and Christians. The episode closes with reflections on Sumud as lived resilience and the moral responsibility of people in the United States to act. 🌍 Mother Agapia Stephanopoulos is a Greek American Orthodox nun in the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia. She moved to Jerusalem in 1996 and later helped lead and administer a girls’ school in the West Bank, where she witnessed the realities of occupation firsthand. Now based in New York, she continues her work through prayer, education, pilgrimages, and public advocacy for Palestinians, Christian and Muslim alike. 🔑 In this conversation, we explore ➡ What brought Mother Agapia to Jerusalem and the West Bank ➡ Life inside the convent and beyond the walls ➡ The girls’ school and daily life under occupation ➡ Oslo, settlements, the wall, and the collapse of the “peace process” ➡ Eyewitness accounts of violence and confinement ➡ Christian Zionism and American political theology ➡ Sumud, dignity, and why Palestinians remain rooted ⏱ Chapters 00:00 Introduction and setting the context 05:10 Faith, Jerusalem, and life inside the convent 13:40 From the convent to the West Bank school 24:30 Oslo, settlements, and the architecture of occupation 36:50 Violence, checkpoints, and daily survival 48:20 Christian Zionism and U.S. political power 1:02:10 Sumud, dignity, and paths forward Sponsored by The Karate Attorney (@karateattorney) fighting for justice inside and outside the courtroom. Visit KarateAttorney.com Sponsored by The School of Radical Imagination (@school.of.radical.imagination), a community based learning space turning knowledge into action. Sumud listeners receive 10% off with code SUMUD10 at checkout. Enroll at RadicalImagination.school You can find the courses here: https://www.radicalimagination.school/explore-courses 🎬 Full episode on https://sumudpod.com 📲 Follow @dredhasan | @sumudpod | @motheragapia Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    1 h et 1 min
  • Gaza Soup Kitchen: Mutual Aid Under Siege | Sumud Podcast
    Dec 18 2025
    🎙️ This special episode of the Sumud Podcast centers the Gaza Soup Kitchen and the people sustaining it under siege. Dr. Ed Hasan is joined by Hani Almadhoun to reflect on how a grassroots mutual aid effort became a lifeline amid blocked aid, collapsed infrastructure, and constant bombardment. The episode honors the legacy of Chef Mahmoud Almadhoun and features real footage filmed by Gaza Soup Kitchen videographers and photographers Omar Almadhoun, Leena Almadhoun, Khaled Qadas, and Mai Almadhoun, offering a direct window into life, labor, and survival in Gaza. 🌍 Hani Almadhoun is a Palestinian American humanitarian and the Senior Director of Philanthropy at UNRWA USA. He is also the co founder of the Gaza Soup Kitchen, a grassroots initiative launched in early 2024 to provide hot meals, food parcels, and water to families across Gaza amid siege and famine. Based in the United States, Hani coordinates fundraising, advocacy, and media engagement while supporting operations on the ground. 🔑 In this conversation, we explore ➡ How the Gaza Soup Kitchen began ➡ Operating under siege with cut telecom, closed banks, and constant displacement ➡ The photographers and volunteers working on the ground in Gaza ➡ Chefs, kitchens, and survival logistics including hot meals, food parcels, and water trucks ➡ UNRWA, aid access, and competing aid models in Gaza ➡ Chef Mahmoud’s legacy, his killing, and why the work continues ➡ What people outside Gaza can do to show up and sustain support ⏱ Chapters 00:00 Introduction 02:00 How the Gaza Soup Kitchen started 05:00 Operating under siege with money, telecom, and logistics 08:00 Identity and documentation 13:00 The photographers and storytellers 23:00 Courage and exhaustion 28:00 Hopes and dreams under siege 31:00 The chefs and the kitchens 38:00 Chef Mahmoud’s story and legacy 45:00 What the diaspora can do Sponsored by The Karate Attorney (@karateattorney) fighting for justice inside and outside the courtroom. Visit KarateAttorney.com Sponsored by The School of Radical Imagination (@school.of.radical.imagination), a community based learning space turning knowledge into action. Sumud listeners receive 10% off with code SUMUD10 at checkout. Enroll at RadicalImagination.school https://www.radicalimagination.school/explore-courses This video is for educational purposes only. It offers personal testimony and political analysis meant to inform and document. 🎬 Full episode on https://sumudpod.com 📲 Follow @dredhasan | @sumudpod | @myhanitizer | @gazasoupkitchen Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    50 min
  • Anthony Aguilar: GHF Exposed Within | Sumud Podcast
    Dec 4 2025
    🎙️ This week on the Sumud Podcast, we sit down with retired US Army Special Forces Lieutenant Colonel Anthony Aguilar for one of the most difficult and urgent conversations we have ever hosted. What he believed was a humanitarian mission quickly revealed the truth of Gaza under siege. Anthony describes arriving to find Rafah destroyed, witnessing American contractors and Israeli forces firing on starving civilians, and meeting a young boy he calls Amir whose death changed everything. He reflects on complicity, conscience, and why he ultimately resigned, returned home, and began briefing US lawmakers on the atrocities he witnessed. This is a raw and necessary conversation about genocide, impunity, and the moral cost of silence. 🌍 Anthony Aguilar is a retired US Army Special Forces Lieutenant Colonel and former Green Beret who served for 25 years across Iraq, Afghanistan, and other conflict zones. In 2025 he worked with the newly formed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation through its subcontractor, UG Solutions, on what was presented as a neutral humanitarian mission. Once on the ground, he says he witnessed a coordinated system of forced displacement, engineered famine, and violent “aid” operations carried out in close coordination with Israeli authorities and supported by US contractors. His testimony has since informed media reporting, human rights investigations, and congressional briefings on US involvement in Gaza. 🔑 In this conversation, we explore ➡ How a supposed aid mission became a mechanism of displacement and control ➡ The destruction of Rafah and the true scale of civilian death ➡ Daily violence against starving families by American contractors and the IDF ➡ The ideology driving many US contractors ➡ The story of Amir and the smear campaign that followed ➡ Boston Consulting Group and the architecture of Gaza’s erasure ➡ Why Anthony chose to resign and speak publicly ➡ What the world must understand about the ongoing genocide in Gaza ⏱ Chapters 00:00 Introduction 01:35 Who Is Anthony Aguilar? 03:28 The Recruitment Call and the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation 12:35 Early Red Flags and Hasbara Tours 23:02 Entering Gaza 26:31 What the Sites Really Were 32:55 Violence by Contractors and the IDF 42:42 Boston Consulting Group and the Gaza Plans 55:15 The Story of Amir 1:08:40 The Smear Campaign 1:13:21 Speaking Out to Lawmakers 1:18:11 Do States Have a Right to Exist 1:22:12 Final Reflections Sponsored by: The Karate Attorney (@karateattorney) fighting for justice inside and outside the courtroom. Visit www.KarateAttorney.com. Sponsored by: The School of Radical Imagination (@school.of.radical.imagination), a new learning space turning knowledge into action through live, community-based courses on justice, liberation, and creativity. Enroll at www.RadicalImagination.school. 🎬 Full episode on: https://sumudpod.com 📲 Follow: @dredhasan | @sumudpod Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    1 h et 23 min
  • Wafa Ghnaim: Tatreez, Ancient Fashion & Cultural Heritage | Sumud Podcast
    Nov 20 2025
    🎙️ This week on the Sumud Podcast, we sit down with dress historian and fashion researcher Wafa Ghnaim for a profound exploration of how Palestinian material culture carries memory, identity, and truth across generations. Through the dresses, headdresses, and stitched motifs that define our heritage, Wafa reveals how every thread holds stories far deeper than the colonial timeline. She reflects on exile, reclaiming beauty through a non-Western lens, growing up Palestinian in the United States, the emotional weight of Syria, the urgency of documenting elders’ knowledge, and the dangers of cultural appropriation. This conversation is an intimate look at the power of dress as resistance, continuity, and home, and the sacred responsibility of preserving what our ancestors left for us. 🌍 Wafa Ghnaim is a dress historian, researcher, author, archivist, curator, educator and embroiderer who learned from her mother, award-winning artist Feryal Abbasi-Ghnaim. Wafa specializes in Palestinian, Syrian, Jordanian, and Lebanese dress history, focusing on traditional embroidery techniques, historic reconstruction and oral history. Her publications include “Tatreez & Tea,” THOBNA (2023), Tatreez Companion (2024), and Tatreez Beauty (2024). She continues her mother’s legacy through the Tatreez Institute, founded in 2016, which stewards a collection of over 180 dresses and headdresses from Palestine, Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon for preservation, education, and research. She was the first Palestinian and Syrian embroidery instructor for the Smithsonian Museum, earned a senior interdisciplinary research fellowship at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and was named by Vogue, alongside her mother, as “the world’s leading guardians of tatreez.” Wafa is now a Mellon Foundation Fellow at the Museum of the Palestinian People. 🔑 In this conversation, we explore ➡ The deep history and symbolism of Palestinian dress ➡ Why material culture carries memory across generations ➡ Cultural appropriation and the ethics of teaching tatreez ➡ The social life of objects and what dresses remember ➡ Syria, exile, grief and generational trauma ➡ Beauty, identity and decolonizing aesthetics ➡ The Tatreez Institute and the future of dress research ⏱ Chapters 00:00 Introduction 01:57 Who Is Wafa Ghnaim? 06:54 Beauty, Arab Glamour & Decolonizing Aesthetics 13:49 Preserving Elders’ Knowledge Through Oral History 24:25 Cultural Appropriation & Teaching Boundaries 29:44 Syria, Exile & Emotional Collapse 38:12 The Tatreez Institute & The 184-Dress Collection 56:05 Dresses as Memory, Material Witness & Legacy 1:15:11 Final Reflections Sponsored by: The Karate Attorney (@karateattorney) fighting for justice inside and outside the courtroom. Visit www.KarateAttorney.com. Sponsored by: The School of Radical Imagination (@school.of.radical.imagination), a new learning space turning knowledge into action through live, community-based courses on justice, liberation, and creativity. Enroll at www.RadicalImagination.school. 📚 Explore Tatreez Institute publications at https://www.tatreezandtea.com/publications 🎬 Full episode on: https://sumudpod.com 📲 Follow on Instagram: @tatreezandtea | @thetatreezinstitute | @dredhasan | @sumudpod Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    1 h et 17 min
  • Hazami Barmada: Radical Love, Faith & Resistance | Sumud Podcast
    Nov 13 2025
    🎙️ This week on the Sumud Podcast, we’re joined by Hazami Barmada, humanitarian, activist, and founder of the Humanity Lab Foundation, whose fierce empathy and faith have redefined what activism can look like. From her early work at the United Nations to the frontlines of D.C. protests, Hazami reveals what it means to live authentically, love fiercely, and refuse to be silent in the face of injustice. She reflects on the courage it takes to confront power, the role of faith and motherhood in her activism, and how radical love has become both her philosophy and her weapon. 🌍 Hazami Barmada is an award-winning public affairs & social impact strategist, social innovator and humanitarian. She is the Executive Producer and Host of the Webby-Award and Anthem-Award winning international affairs and human rights podcast, Finding Humanity. For 20+ years, Hazami has consulted and worked with leading global institutions including the United Nations, United Nations Foundation, Harvard, The Elders, B Lab, and the Royal Court of the Sultanate of Oman, to name a few. Most recently she worked at the Aspen Institute where she spearheaded the design and launch of the Digital Equity Accelerator, a joint initiative between HP Inc. and the HP Foundation, which under her leadership invested over $4 million into 17 organizations addressing social and economic inequalities around the world. Hazami has previously held several high-level consulting positions at the UN, including Coordinator for the United Nations Secretary General’s World Humanitarian Summit, Advisor to the UN Secretary-General’s Envoy on Youth, liaison to the UN SDG Strategy Hub for the launch of the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda, and Innovation Advisor to UN Human Settlements Programme. Her campaigns, leadership coaching, and advocacy initiatives have reached tens of millions of people in 182+ countries, receiving recognition from the United Nations “SDG Action Awards” in 2020. Hazami is a graduate of Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government where she was also an Edward S. Mason Fellow in Public Policy and Management and earned a certificate in Management, Leadership & Decision Sciences. 🔑 In this conversation, we explore: ➡ The story behind the Blinken encampment ➡ Balancing motherhood and frontline activism ➡ Radical love as a philosophy of resistance ➡ Islam, faith, and courage in the face of fear ➡ Doxxing, lawsuits, and the price of truth-telling ➡ Building communities of care beyond politics ⏱ Chapters: 00:00 Introduction & Radical Humanity 02:28 Who is Hazami Barmada? 07:31 Faith, Fear & the Blinken Encampment 16:40 Motherhood & Resistance 24:11 The Cost of Speaking Truth 34:29 Radical Love as Activism 41:27 Community Beyond Politics 54:38 From the UN to the Streets 1:02:42 Faith, Freedom & Legacy Sponsored by: The Karate Attorney (Instagram @karateattorney) fighting for justice inside and outside the courtroom. Visit KarateAttorney.com Sponsored by: The School of Radical Imagination, a new learning space turning knowledge into action through live, community-based courses on justice, liberation, and creativity. Enroll at www.RadicalImagination.school 🎬 Full episode on: https://sumudpod.com 📲 Follow: Hazami Barmada: Instagram @hazami | X @hazamibarmada Dr. Ed Hasan: Instagram @dredhasan Sumud Podcast: Instagram @sumudpod Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    1 h et 31 min
  • Sami Tamimi: Food, Memory & Culinary Identity | Sumud Podcast
    Nov 6 2025
    This week on the Sumud Podcast, we sit down with Sami Tamimi, award-winning chef, author, and co-founder of Ottolenghi, to explore how heritage, hard work, and heart have shaped his life from Jerusalem to London’s kitchens. Sami Tamimi is a British-Palestinian chef and author whose cooking is deeply rooted in the flavors of his homeland. In his first solo cookbook, Boustany: A Celebration of Vegetables from My Palestine, he embarks on a vibrant journey through Palestinian culinary traditions, celebrating simple, colorful dishes centered around vegetables and grains. This exploration builds on his earlier work as co-founder of the Ottolenghi restaurants and co-author of bestselling cookbooks: "Falastin" and "Jerusalem: A Cookbook". "Boustany" is Sami’s homage to the food and culture of Palestine. In this deeply personal conversation, he reflects on his early life under occupation, his rebellious path from a truck company to the kitchen, and the struggle of navigating Israeli kitchens as a Palestinian chef. Sami opens up about cultural appropriation in “Israeli cuisine,” the politics of food, and the creation of his newest book, "Boustany", a love letter to Palestinian memory, land, and flavor. With humor and grace, Sami reminds us that every dish carries a story of land, family, and survival. 🔑 In this conversation, we explore: ➡ Growing up in Jerusalem under occupation ➡ Becoming a chef against all odds ➡ Culinary appropriation and “Israeli cuisine” ➡ Food as political resistance and storytelling ➡ Writing Boustany: memory, land, and resilience ➡ Reclaiming Palestinian cuisine for future generations Sponsored by: The Karate Attorney (@karateattorney) fighting for justice inside and outside the courtroom. Visit ⁠KarateAttorney.com⁠ Sponsored by: The School of Radical Imagination, a new learning space turning knowledge into action through live, community-based courses on justice, liberation, and creativity. Enroll at ⁠RadicalImagination.school⁠. 📌 Chapters: 00:00 – Introduction & Opening Reflections 01:15 – Early Life in JerusaleQm 05:29 –  Rebellion, Art, and the Birth of a Chef 07:36 –  Navigating Israeli Kitchens as a Palestinian 11:41 –  What is ‘Israeli Food’? 13:36 – The Politics of Cooking & Food as Protest 18:13 – Founding Ottolenghi & Collaboration in ExileQ 21:11 – Boustany: Memory, Land & Palestinian Resilience 28:23 – October 7th, Speaking Out & Finding Voice 32:55 – Health, Balance & Using His Platform for Good 38:42 – Closing Reflections: Work hard, Follow the Heart 🎥 Full episode: ⁠www.sumudpod.com⁠ 📚 Check out Sami's website: ⁠www.sami-tamimi.com⁠ 📲 Follow: @sami_tamimi | @dredhasan Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    41 min
  • Ahmad Ibsais: Law & the Power of Words | Sumud Podcast
    Oct 30 2025
    🎙️ This week on the Sumud Podcast, we’re joined by Ahmad Ibsais, a law student, writer, and poet whose work captures life, loss, and defiance under siege. Through his acclaimed newsletter State of Siege, Ahmad documents a generation’s struggle for justice, blending legal insight, faith, and art to reclaim narrative power in a world determined to erase it. In this episode, Ahmad speaks about courage on campus, finding strength through community, and how words can challenge systems of fear and censorship. He also shares his poem “Living in Memories,” a haunting reflection on endurance and remembrance amid unimaginable suffering. Reflecting on his journey from Nablus to the University of Michigan, he navigated a law school environment steeped in Zionist influence while remaining steadfast in his convictions. He shares how speaking out for Palestine has come with professional risks, yet also profound purpose, and how faith and community have anchored him through moments of isolation and doubt. Ahmad discusses the limits of the American legal system, its complicity in silencing pro-Palestine voices, and how young lawyers can still use the law as a site of resistance. From the courtroom to the classroom, he exposes the ways repression is disguised as “neutrality,” and why Palestinians must continue to name genocide even when institutions refuse to. In this conversation, we explore: ➡ The making of State of Siege and documenting lived experience ➡ Speaking truth to power in academia and law ➡ Faith, memory, and the psychology of steadfastness (sumud) ➡ The role of poetry and storytelling in collective healing ➡ How young advocates are redefining resistance through word and action Sponsored by: The Karate Attorney (@karateattorney) fighting for justice inside and outside the courtroom. Visit KarateAttorney.com This video is for educational purposes only. It provides historical and political analysis to inform and educate viewers. 📌 Chapters: 00:00 – Introduction 02:00 – Introducing Ahmad Ibsais 04:00 – Palestine & the Power of Community 06:00 – Speaking Out in the Legal Field 10:00 – Censorship, Courage & Campus Activism 17:00 – The Birth of State of Siege 19:00 – The Role of Poets & Journalists in Gaza 21:00 – The Duty Not to Look Away 24:00 – Law, Power & the Limits of Justice 31:00 – Imagining Liberation: One State, One People 34:00 – “Living in Memories” – Poem Reading 36:00 – Closing Reflections: Free Palestine 🎬 Full episode on Sumud Podcast: https://sumudpod.com 📲 Follow: @ahmad.ibsais 📲 Follow our host: @dredhasan 📝 Read State of Siege: https://substack.com/@ahmadibsais https://ahmadibsais.substack.com/?utm_campaign=profile_chips #Palestine #SumudPod #Resistance #EndGenocide #FreePalestine #StandWithPalestine #Steadfastness #BoycottIsrael Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    36 min