Tributes are pouring in for prominent Palestinian academic and poet Refaat Alareer, who was killed in an Israeli air strike this week.
Alareer was an activist, writer, translator and literature professor at the Islamic University of Gaza who inspired a generation of Palestinian writers in Gaza.
His family said he was killed in his brother’s home in Gaza City, along with his brother, sister and four of her children.
Jehad Abusalim, an author and former student of Alareer, said he was “more than a teacher”.
“He taught me my first English writing course,” Abusalim said on X. “He was a mentor, a friend, and he truly cared about his students beyond the classroom.
“His passion was the English language, but he didn’t teach it as a means of disassociating from society, as is common among many English-speaking upper- and middle classes in the third world. For Refaat, English was a tool of liberation, a way to break free from Gaza’s prolonged siege, a teleportation device that defied Israel’s fences and the intellectual, academic, and cultural blockade of Gaza.”
Alareer was the editor of Gaza Writes Back, a collection of short stories from young writers in Gaza published in 2014. He also co-edited Gaza Unsilenced (2015) and contributed to the 2022 collection Light in Gaza: Writings Born of Fire.
He was one of the founders of “We Are Not Numbers”, a platform that mentors young Palestinian writers to “tell the stories behind the numbers of Palestinians in the news”.
Since Israel launched a relentless bombing campaign in Gaza on 7 October, Alareer was one of many active voices from Gaza regularly writing updates on social media, appearing in interviews and publishing poetry.
His home was bombed early on in the war, forcing him and his family to take shelter elsewhere, but he refused to leave Gaza City.
In a poignant poem published on 1 November, Alareer spoke about the foreboding future he could see was inevitably coming.
“If I must die, you must live, to tell my story, to sell my things,” the start of the poem reads. “If I must die, let it bring hope, let it be a tale.”
Teacher, mentor, friend
Many Palestinian writers and former students of Alareer took to social media to mourn Alareer and celebrate his life.
Abusalim, who was taught his first English class by Alareer, said the professor always insisted that his students read the work of Malcolm X, among other writers.
“He emphasised that learning a language requires understanding its culture and being critical and mindful that language is not free from questions of power and representation,” Abusalim said.
Muhammad Shehada, a writer from Gaza, said Alareer always “fought to not be reduced to a number”.
“He was full of energy, life and humour. He loved Chicago pizza, cats, history, classic music, theatre, poetry and Harry Potter,” he wrote.