My Name is Mahmoud Khalil and I am a Political Prisoner

Protests in Thomas Paine Park against the detention of Palestinian activist and Columbia student Mahmoud Khalil. Photo:
My name is Mahmoud Khalil and I am a political prisoner. I am writing to you from a detention facility in Louisiana where I wake to cold mornings and spend long days bearing witness to the quiet injustices underway against a great many people precluded from the protections of the law.
Who has the right to have rights? It is certainly not the humans crowded into the cells here. It isn’t the Senegalese man I met who has been deprived of his liberty for a year, his legal situation in limbo and his family an ocean away. It isn’t the 21-year-old detainee I met, who stepped foot in this country at age nine, only to be deported without so much as a hearing.
Justice escapes the contours of this nation’s immigration facilities.
On March 8, I was taken by DHS agents who refused to provide a warrant, and accosted my wife and me as we returned from dinner. By now, the footage of that night has been made public. Before I knew what was happening, agents handcuffed and forced me into an unmarked car. At that moment, my only concern was for Noor’s safety. I had no idea if she would be taken too, since the agents had threatened to arrest her for not leaving my side. DHS would not tell me anything for hours — I did not know the cause of my arrest or if I was facing immediate deportation. At 26 Federal Plaza, I slept on the cold floor. In the early morning hours, agents transported me to another facility in Elizabeth, New Jersey. There, I slept on the ground and was refused a blanket despite my request.
My arrest was a direct consequence of exercising my right to free speech as I advocated for a free Palestine and an end to the genocide in Gaza, which resumed in full force Monday night. With January’s ceasefire now broken, parents in Gaza are once again cradling too-small shrouds, and families are forced to weigh starvation and displacement against bombs. It is our moral imperative to persist in the struggle for their complete freedom.
I was born in a Palestinian refugee camp in Syria to a family which has been displaced from their land since the 1948 Nakba. I spent my youth in proximity to yet distant from my homeland. But being Palestinian is an experience that transcends borders. I see in my circumstances similarities to Israel’s use of administrative detention — imprisonment without trial or charge — to strip Palestinians of their rights. I think of our friend Omar Khatib, who was incarcerated without charge or trial by Israel as he returned home from travel. I think of Gaza hospital director and pediatrician Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya, who was taken captive by the Israeli military on December 27 and remains in an Israeli torture camp today. For Palestinians, imprisonment without due process is commonplace.
I have always believed that my duty is not only to liberate myself from the oppressor, but also to liberate my oppressors from their hatred and fear. My unjust detention is indicative of the anti-Palestinian racism that both the Biden and Trump administrations have demonstrated over the past 16 months as the U.S. has continued to supply Israel with weapons to kill Palestinians and prevented international intervention. For decades, anti-Palestinian racism has driven efforts to expand U.S. laws and practices that are used to violently repress Palestinians, Arab Americans, and other communities. That is precisely why I am being targeted.
While I await legal decisions that hold the futures of my wife and child in the balance, those who enabled my targeting remain comfortably at Columbia University. Presidents Shafik, Armstrong, and Dean Yarhi-Milo laid the groundwork for the U.S. government to target me by arbitrarily disciplining pro-Palestinian students and allowing viral doxing — based on racism and disinformation—to go unchecked.
Columbia targeted me for my activism, creating a new authoritarian disciplinary office to bypass due process and silence students criticizing Israel. Columbia surrendered to federal pressure by disclosing student records to Congress and yielding to the Trump administration’s latest threats. My arrest, the expulsion or suspension of at least 22Columbia students — some stripped of their B.A. degrees just weeks before graduation — and the expulsion of SWC President Grant Miner on the eve of contract negotiations, are clear examples.
If anything, my detention is a testament to the strength of the student movement in shifting public opinion toward Palestinian liberation. Students have long been at the forefront of change — leading the charge against the Vietnam War, standing on the frontlines of the Civil Rights Movement, and driving the struggle against apartheid in South Africa. Today, too, even if the public has yet to fully grasp it, it is students who steer us toward truth and justice.
The Trump administration is targeting me as part of a broader strategy to suppress dissent. Visa-holders, green-card carriers, and citizens alike will all be targeted for their political beliefs. In the weeks ahead, students, advocates, and elected officials must unite to defend the right to protest for Palestine. At stake are not just our voices, but the fundamental civil liberties of all.
Knowing fully that this moment transcends my individual circumstances, I hope nonetheless to be free to witness the birth of my first-born child.
Friends,
I would like to tell you a little story about a young woman. Her parents were from Syria and, like so many others before them and from all over the world, they came to America to start a family and to give their children a better life. This is the American story, the immigrant story. The parents settled in the U.S. in a Syrian-American community, just as the Irish and the Italians and the Germans and the Polish immigrants before them had gravitated to their own communities, a safe harbor to set down roots and to grow as new Americans. But this Syrian-American community was not in a random place, it was in my hometown of Flint, Michigan. Thousands of miles from Syria, they made a new home and gave birth to a baby girl, an American citizen, there in Flint. She grew up in the shadows of the bombed-out factories of General Motors, and right around the time she graduated high school and started college, the Governor of Michigan, in an act of political terrorism, diverted the city’s water, poisoning the city’s residents. This killed people in Flint and it left the children of Flint poisoned for life. And for this crime, the governor faced no consequences, no arrest, no charges of homicide. He was guilty of nothing other than “running government like a business.” A true patriot, a good ol’ fashioned American white guy showing his indifference toward a majority-Black city.
But despite it all, this little girl who grew up here did not leave — even when she had the chance. After high school, she enrolled at the University of Michigan-Flint campus. There, this child of immigrants excelled in science and biology — she conducted research on the Zika virus, child labor in India, and lead poisoning in Flint due to the poisoned water.
When she graduated with honors in the spring of 2018, she was not just one graduation cap in a sea of students in the crowd that day. Instead, she was chosen as the commencement speaker for her graduating class. As the school’s administrators said in bestowing this honor upon her, she epitomized the tradition of “Leaders & Best at the University of Michigan.”
With her Syrian parents looking proudly on, Noor Abdalla addressed her fellow students. She told the assembled students about her upbringing, and then she described the horrors of the civil war in Syria which at the time was entering its 8th bloody year. And then… and then she said this:
“We are all so privileged to be living in a country such as this one and to be receiving an education that is safe and accessible… I go to class and I know that I’m safe in so many ways. Not only safe from an air strike but I am safe to speak my mind whenever I feel it necessary. I’m safe to converse with my professors and have passionate talks about things that I love. And I’m safe to dream big.
“We must embrace our privilege and channel it into something greater, channel it to help those that may not have access to an education, those that have to travel miles and miles to get to school, those that are prohibited to learn and those that cannot read or write.
“Class of 2018, what a world we live in. You turn on the TV to see one devastating tragedy after the next — whether it’s gun violence in high schools all over the country, mass shootings, discrimination based on the color of your skin, and even right here in our city with our very own Flint water crisis.”
It is a beautiful and powerful speech — and it ends with her quoting Nelson Mandela:
“Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world.”
Well…
Seven years later, and Noor Abdalla is not safe.
She is not safe to speak her mind on college campuses — and neither is anyone else. If education is the most powerful weapon you can use to change the world, then it makes sense that the Trump administration is targeting students on college campuses, attacking and dismantling the Department of Education, banning books, and scaring people into silence.
One week ago this past Saturday, this same Noor Adballa — who is now 8 months pregnant — and her husband, Mahmoud, returned to their apartment in a graduate student housing building and were confronted by a gang of white men who refused to identify themselves. The leader of these men was a middle aged caucasian with a beer belly who was dressed in cargo pants and a Marvel comic book t-shirt. He says to Mahmoud, “We have you!” And as these goons drag Noor’s husband away, she asks them who they are, what department of the government do they represent, and she asks for their names.
“We don’t give our name,” says one of the men as Mahmoud is stuffed into a van and driven off into the dark of night.
All of this would seem insane — outlandish, impossible, fictional — except for the inconvenient fact that we live in a world of non-fiction film and this was all caught on video by Noor Abdalla herself, a young woman from Flint, Michigan, commencement speaker of the 2018 U of M-Flint graduating class. A young woman armed with an education and a camera.
Here is the video that Noor Abdalla made of her husband being illegally taken away. She filmed this while in absolute terror, her husband seemingly being kidnapped by a group of white thugs, not knowing if she would ever see him again. Everyone should watch this:
Mahmoud Khalil — Noor’s husband — was a leading voice for Gazans in the anti-genocide campus protests at Columbia University last year. Mahmoud’s parents are Palestinian, and he grew up in a refugee camp in Syria. When the war in Syria spread, Mahmoud became a refugee of both Palestine and Syria, his family relocating to a refugee camp in Lebanon. From this impossible childhood, Mahmoud Khalil rose to one of the highest institutions of education in the world, Columbia University, where he was a graduate student — and a legal permanent resident of the United States of America with his government-issued Green Card. The holder of a Green Card has virtually all the same rights as an actual citizen other than the right to vote.
The United States government has no legal standing to detain him, nor to deport him. When asked why the Trump Administration is seeking to revoke Mahmoud’s Green Card and illegally kick him out of the country, the Deputy Secretary of Homeland Security said that Mahmoud had “put himself in the middle of the process of basically pro-Palestinian activity.”
Wow. “Pro-Palestinian activity!” Scary stuff. UnAmerican Activities! Real Americans support Genocide, dammit!
“KILL THEM ALL! KILL THEM ALL! KILL THEM ALL! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A!”
To be clear, campus protests are NOT a threat to the United States of America! In fact, “pro-Palestinian activity” is not a threat to ANY ONE. The only people who could conceivably be threatened by “pro-Palestinian activity” would be someone who wants to kill or harm Palestinian people. And those are the people we should be deporting. Let’s start with the guy in the Marvel comic book t-shirt who handcuffed Mahmoud — and let’s toss in the immigrant South African billionaire in the White House who has sieg heil-ed his way into the Republican Party’s soul.
Three weeks ago today, I sent a letter just like this to my mailing list and my Substack subscribers. It was called “Our Muslim Boy Wonder” and it was about a Syrian student who came to America, met a young woman in Wisconsin, and together they had a child. That child grew up to be Steve Jobs, the co-founder of Apple. In that letter, I wrote about how this administration’s policy to round up and imprison and deport and separate immigrant families will rob this country of the future leaders and scientists and doctors and inventors who will guide and re-shape America. We deport them at our own peril.
Three days after I sent my letter, I was shocked to learn that I had hurt Donald Trump’s snowflake feelings, and that he had ordered the Trump White House to publicly rebuke me, calling me a “disgraced ‘filmmaker’” (“disgraced” I don’t know what that means, I’m an Eagle Scout and the nuns gave me all A’s, but putting those extra quote marks around ‘filmmaker’ — that’s a low blow and will lead to numerous Republican defeats in next year’s Midterms).
Ten days later, the Trump Administration sent their Marvel comic book hero to arrest Mahmoud Khalil.
In the week since Mahmoud was taken away, Universities across the country have, instead of standing up for their students and for the constitutional right to freedom of speech and freedom of assembly, empaneled administrators to root out activists and protestors on their own campuses. Under threat from the Trump Administration — and with the Department of Justice announcing plans to investigate universities across the country using “anti-terrorism” laws — the nation’s institutes of higher learning have turned on their students and have, as they have many times before, put on full display the intellectual weakness of the intellectual “thinking” class.
What is happening is not isolated. It is widespread and it is relentless. Each attack by this administration is a test to see how the public and the University administrators and the press react. So far, it’s working. UCLA has created a panel to investigate its students, so has Columbia. At Columbia’s vaunted school of journalism — which has been and should still be a temple to the 1st Amendment — students last week were told by their administrators to remove “commentary on the Middle East” from their social media. “Nobody can protect you,” the school’s dean told the students. “These are dangerous times.”
Just days after rounding up Mahmoud Khalil, Trump’s DHS also targeted an architect who attended Harvard and Columbia. Her crime — aside from being a Woman, an Indian national, and a Fulbright Scholar — was “liking tweets” that highlighted “human rights violations in the war in Gaza.” She has fled to Canada.
In yet another case, Dr. Rasha Alawieh, was denied entry to the United States this past Thursday. She holds an H1-B visa for people with expertise in their fields. Her crime — aside from being a Woman and a Muslim — was visiting her family in Lebanon. Her job? Well, her boss at the Brown University Health’s organ transplant division says that Dr. Alawieh is a “crucial” part of the team that “works on getting people in Rhode Island onto the list for kidney transplants.” The U.S. government believes she is a threat to the American public — and yet she is the one trying to save American lives.
Last week, as protests spread across the nation, on campuses and in city squares and in front of court houses, demanding the release of Mahmoud Khalil, Democratic members of Congress circulated a letter calling on the Trump Administration to “Free Mahmoud” — and in the end, only an embarrassingly paltry 14 Democrats out of 262 Dems in the House and Senate signed the letter. Fourteen.
Those brave fourteen are Representatives Rashida Tlaib of Michigan, Mark Pocan and Gwen Moore of Wisconsin, Nydia Velázquez of New York, Delia Ramirez of Illinois, Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, Jasmine Crockett and Al Green of Texas, Summer Lee of Pennsylvania, Ayanna Pressley and James McGovern of Massachusetts, Lateefah Simon of California, André Carson of Indiana, and Nikema Williams of Georgia. A fifteenth member, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, wrote a separate letter the day before, co-signed with three members of New York’s city council.
The rest of the Party? Silent.
But perhaps that’s nothing new.
Fifty-five years ago this spring, students at Kent State University protested the Vietnam War. Four students were killed by the National Guard and 9 others were injured. Their crime? “Pro-Palestinian activity.” Oh, wait — I think maybe it was “Pro-Vietnamese activity.” I can’t remember exactly. The tune has changed, but the song stays the same. And so does the inaction of those who let it happen.
Noor, please know, we, your fellow neighbors from Flint, stand with you and your husband against this immoral act. Silence is not an option.
(RNS) — The letter declared that its signers will not voluntarily collaborate with federal immigration enforcement or the Anti-Defamation League, which supported the arrest of Columbia University protester Mahmoud Khalil.

Protesters rally in support of detained Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalil outside Columbia University in New York on March 14, 2025. (AP Photo/Jason DeCrow)
March 19, 2025
(RNS) — More than 2,400 Jewish scholars from universities across the United States have signed a letter denouncing Trump administration efforts to harass, expel, arrest or deport students or staff from colleges and universities across the country on the pretext of combating antisemitism.
The letter comes a week after the arrest of Mahmoud Khalil, a Palestinian graduate student at Columbia University and a permanent U.S. resident whom the administration has sought to deport for promoting literature associated with Hamas terrorists though he has not been charged with any crime.
The academics said in the letter that they will not voluntarily collaborate with federal immigration enforcement or Jewish organizations such as the Anti-Defamation League, which supported Khalil’s arrest.
The signers declared, “ … we are united in denouncing, without equivocation, anyone who invokes our name – and cynical claims of antisemitism – to harass, expel, arrest, or deport members of our campus communities. We specifically reject rhetoric that caricatures our students and colleagues as ‘antisemitic terrorists’ because they advocate for Palestinian human rights and freedom.”
The letter was written by a loose-knit group of scholars calling themselves Concerned Jewish Faculty & Staff-Boston Area, some of whom originally met as participants in conferences sponsored by Boston University’s Institute on Culture, Religion & World Affairs in past years.
They include leading Jewish intellectuals in fields of religion, history, law, political science, public policy and comparative literature, among them Omer Bartov, Marianne Hirsch, Wendy Brown, Hasia Diner, Daniel Boyarin, Marjorie Feld, Atalia Omer, Deborah Dash Moore, Samuel Moyn and Jason Stanley.
Jonathan Feingold, a law professor at Boston University and a signer of the letter, said: “They don’t all share the same perspective on conflict in the Middle East, but are deeply concerned about the way in which Jewish identity and antisemitism continues to be instrumentalized by bad faith, anti-democratic forces that now are either themselves part of the Trump administration or being platformed by it.”
Feingold said the letter will be sent to the leaders of 60 universities that the Trump administration warned earlier this month could face penalties from pending investigations into antisemitism. On March 7, the administration canceled $400 million in federal funding for Columbia University for what it said was “inaction in the face of persistent harassment of Jewish students.”
“We want to remind those university leaders that these investigations are not being made on behalf of Jews, and that their acquiescence to the Trump administration threats makes no one safer, Jews, or anyone else,” said Feingold.
Khalil’s arrest has sparked sharp divisions within the American Jewish community. It was welcomed by some Jewish establishment organizations and denounced by many on the left.
The letter includes several specific action items, calling on university leaders to defend community members targeted by the Trump administration, including Khalil; to democratize university governance in its response to the Trump administration’s attacks; to quit voluntary collaboration with federal immigration enforcement; and to terminate all collaboration with the Anti-Defamation League.
More broadly, the letter rejects the implication that pro-Palestinian advocacy is anti-Jewish.
“I signed this letter because I refuse to accept the supposition of too many that supporting the cause of Palestinian freedom, not to mention the core democratic principle of free expression, is somehow antithetical to Jewish interests or well-being,” said David Myers, a professor of history at the University of California, Los Angeles.
This is the second letter issued by the group. The first came last year after the U.S. House of Representatives passed the Anti-Semitism Awareness Act, which would have codified the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s definition of antisemitism. Critics of that definition, known as the IHRA, say it has the effect of silencing criticism of Israel by suggesting, for example, that any statement that Israel’s existence is a “racist endeavor” is antisemitic. The act was reintroduced in the U.S. Senate last month.
The IHRA definition was adopted by Harvard University in January as part of the settlement of two lawsuits with Jewish groups that claimed the school had not taken appropriate steps to keep its campus from becoming a hostile environment for Jews.
Both letters followed Boston University’s “Conference on the Jewish Left” sponsored by the Pardee School of Global Studies Institute on Culture, Religion & World Affairs.
Mahmoud Khalil, David Bohm and the Fight

Still from a video of ICE agents arresting Mahmoud Khalil.
David Bohm was a brilliant physicist. In the latter part of World War II, when he was just a graduate student, his PhD supervisor, J. Robert Oppenheimer hired him to help build America’s first atomic (nuclear) bomb. Bohm was so brilliant and his contributions to the bomb project so valuable that his work was immediately classified.
Bohm was prohibited from using his own insights to write his PhD dissertation. Oppenheimer was his Chair and was able to get Bohm his PhD by vouching for the caliber of Bohm’s work without a paper. One would think that Bohm, with this pedigree, would have some degree of what today is called “privilege” as opposed to what the law provides as “rights” protecting Bohm. No such luck.
In 1950 Bohm worked with Einstein at Princeton. Being intellectually curious as well as in search not only of the laws of nature but principles for existence, Bohm had earlier joined a “trade union” and briefly some communist groups. Bohm’s bomb work, and his earlier communist associations though now over, brought Bohm to the attention of Senator Joe McCarthy’s witch hunting for so-called “unAmerican activities.”
Called to testify, Bohm asserted his constitutional “Bill of Rights” supreme law protections and refused to name anyone McCarthy could investigate. In other words, Bohm refused to “fink.” Despite those supposed rights, to remain silent, to be presumed innocent, or under the first amendment to have “freedom of speech” or “to associate,” Bohm was arrested.
As a result of mere suspicion arising from exercise of rights under the so-called “supreme law,” Bohm was suspended from his job at Princeton, became unemployable in the United States under McCarthy’s MAGA-like neo-fascism, and took a job in Brazil.
Like MAGA proposes and is doing, Bohm’s passport was confiscated and he was forced to apply for Brazilian citizenship, after which he went to England and had a long career there as a professor of physics. In 1986, McCarthyism having passed into the garbage dump of history, Bohm was able to win back his American citizenship following a long legal battle with the US government.
Bohm’s story is instructive as we experience MAGA McCarthy-like attacks on rights, such as in the case of Mahmoud Khalil, the attack on “birthright citizenship” under the 14th Amendment, and the unrelenting assaults on the Constitution and the rights it supposedly “guarantees” not only American citizens, but all people dealing with the US government. As Bohm learned, such rights are ephemeral at best when witch hunting insanity strikes.
If a renowned scientist who helped America build the bomb can be stripped of his rights, his passport, his citizenship, what makes you think you are immune? George W. Bush in his assault on international law, called the Geneva Conventions “quaint,” enabling Don Trump to treat domestic law, even the Constitution, as similarly nugatory. The War on Terrorism, like the War on Drugs, was always a War on the Bill of Rights and thus a War on the Rule of Law and a war against, not for, America. Never doubt it: many of those temporarily granted government power by election detest your rights; those rights limit their power and they lust for more power, a lust only quieted by turning them out of office.
Joe Biden quipped that if “you wanted to fight the US government, you needed a nuclear weapon.” In theory David Bohm could have had a nuclear weapon, but he lost his fight before he won it. As the fever of witch hunting burned out in America, McCarthy’s terror trials faded, and Americans rose in the 1960s. We challenged America’s illegal wars, demanded civil rights and the right to vote, boycotted businesses that profited from destruction of the nation’s principles, marched in the streets, surrounded the White House, and expressed “people power.” We significantly restored the rule of law, much hated by would-be kings and McCarthy-like petty tyrants.
You may not want to acknowledge it, but your rights are dependent on the rights of Mahmoud Khalil, a green card-holding man lawfully in America with a pregnant American citizen wife, shorn from his family and disappeared into a for-profit Louisiana prison. This is because no one has rights unless everyone has rights.
America failed to defend David Bohm’s rights and the nation embarrassed itself before the world while Bohm proceeded to endure, to contribute to science and to ultimately beat the United States itself, all without a nuclear bomb, armed solely with his rights. Bohm was able to do this in part because the people rose in the 1960s and refused to bend the knee to the elites and the rulers who disdained the law and the rights of the people as “quaint.”
The law does not come down from the sky and protect you: the law is the hearts and minds of the people rising up from the streets in righteous demand against all enemies foreign and domestic. It is the age-old cry, “Let my people go!” For we are the people.
Should Mahmoud Khalil not prevail, that is precedent for you, your kids, and grandkids to be stripped of the rights many Americans suffered, bled, and even died to win.
Trump calls those heroes “suckers” and “losers.” That is an insult that is beyond redemption. Should he get on his knees and crawl for miles through broken glass proclaiming “mea culpa, mea culpa,” Mr. Trump can never be forgiven for his grotesque sacrilege — his slander against the very principles of the nation and the heroes who gave all to win them. And you, if you do not stand tall resisting every assault on the rights of anyone, you, too are blackened by association with Mr. Trump’s obscenity and abomination.
I write this on March 14, 2025, while many US Veterans march on Washington DC in defense of their oaths, in defense of their honor and that of their comrades, in defense of America.
Presidents come and presidents go; Joe McCarthys rise and fall. “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all humans are created equal and endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights…..” That is what defines an American patriot or hero, in war or peace, like Desmond Doss in war or David Bohm in peace. Fidelity to the principles of the nation, and refusal to bend the knee to any trumped up, jacked up, bloviating liar who seeks to destroy those principles is the mark of the American patriot.
For without those principles America itself will fade into the dustbin of history. Your fathers and mothers, your long-gone ancestors, fought and won against monstrous evil in the past to win your rights; surely you can stand now against the trembling bone-spur weakling purporting to be authorized to chainsaw away the nation’s principles. Rise, join the innumerable ranks of the ghosts of patriots and brothers and sisters in arms, and those who march today, who refuse Kings and Empires and march together, invincible in their right, to succor “freedom and justice for all.”
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