From their Substack: “I’m Becca, and I educate on the Israeli occupation and do strategy work to advocate for its end. I am Israeli-American living in Israel and working with Israelis, global Jewish communities and the international community to educate on how the system of occupation functions. In a moment in which biased and inaccurate information is easily spread online and in person, my goal is to bring clear, well-sourced information, as well as providing a space for the emotional barriers some of us Jewish Israelis and internationals face so that we can work towards a just and equal future for Palestinians and Israelis.”
She is the U.N. Special Rapporteur on the occupied Palestinian territories. She is a lawyer and fights for human rights. She’s held her current position since 2022, with her current position up for re-appointment in 2028. Her consistent message is on how the Palestinians must have the right of self-determination.
Morgan Cooper is an American who has been living in Ramallah of Occupied Palestine for over twenty years. She is married to a Palestinian Christian, raising two small kids. She runs Mashjar Juthor, a nonprofit that teaches about the land and culture of the Palestinians, but has become more outspoken on this account, speaking about what life is like living under an occupation, sharing the struggles and reality of the apartheid that Palestinians are subjected to. Morgan also runs a nonprofit called Handmade Palestine which sells fairly traded and handcrafted items which supports the local artists and manufacturers.
Nearly every post from The History Wizard starts with, “Hey. Hi. Hello. And welcome back to class. I’m The History Wizard, and I have a master’s degree in Holocaust and Genocide Studies.” The History Wizard shares a tremendous amount of information, not only about genocide, but about human rights in general. He will often cite similarities between what has happened in the past to what we see today. He occasionally speaks about Palestine, but does not hesitate to refer to the many other genocides occurring elsewhere, such as in Sudan, Myanmar, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.