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What would Fanon say about Gaza? Kenan Malik
The Observer
|July 27, 2025
“Every brother on the rooftop can quote Fanon,” the Black Panthers’ Eldridge Cleaver once claimed.
In the 1960s, Frantz Fanon, the Caribbean-born Algerian revolutionary, was a hero of Black Power and national liberation movements, drawn as they were to his excoriation of colonialism. By the 1980s, Fanon had become an icon of postcolonial theory, lauded as a critic of the Enlightenment and a progenitor of identity politics. Today, as Gaza is laid to waste, some have seized on Fanon to justify the Hamas slaughter of 7 October 2023.
Ever since his untimely death from leukaemia in 1961, Fanon has been turned into a mythic figure, emblematic of various causes, admired and loathed in equal measure. Yet Fanon was a far more conflicted and allusive thinker than the myth suggests. This month marks the centenary of Fanon's birth, an apposite moment at which to reassess his legacy.
Born in the French colony of Martinique, Fanon joined the Free French forces in 1943 as a teenager. Believing that "freedom is indivisible", he wanted to enlist in the global fight against racism and fascism. What he discovered was a French army that itself was constructed as a racial hierarchy. As it crossed into Germany, Fanon's regiment was "whitened" by the removal of all African soldiers. He had been "deluded", he wrote angrily to his parents. Fanon, though, never abandoned his belief in the indivisibility of freedom; only, he now recognised that those who most proclaimed their fidelity to freedom often also viewed it as the privilege of a few.
This story is from the July 27, 2025 edition of The Observer.
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