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‘Iran hates me’ — Imtiaz Sooliman opens up about Jihadism, Hamas and The Kiffness

In the last week of November, Imtiaz Sooliman, the founder of Gift of the Givers, sustained an attack on his credibility from one of South Africa’s most popular musicians, David ‘The Kiffness’ Scott. But the attack did not happen in isolation; it was the culmination of a series of attempts to cast Sooliman, whose organisation had been providing disaster relief in Gaza, as a radical Islamist in thrall to the Iranian regime. Was any of it true? Daily Maverick, after analysing the so-called ‘evidence’, put the questions to Sooliman.
‘Iran hates me’ — Imtiaz Sooliman opens up about Jihadism, Hamas and The Kiffness

Party of Satan


‘Iran hates me,” said Dr Imtiaz Sooliman. “Hezbollah hates me too.”

It was a Wednesday morning in early December 2024, less than a week after South African musician David “The Kiffness” Scott had invoked the wrath of his countrymen by dismissing Sooliman on X as a “false prophet” and “radical Islamist,” and the celebrated founder of Gift of the Givers — Africa’s largest humanitarian and disaster-relief agency — was in an exceptionally good mood. 

“Hezbollah,” he repeated, smiling, “it means ‘Party of God’. I call them Hezboshaytan, ‘Party of Satan’. It’s in my book!”

And indeed, when Daily Maverick checked later that day, it was in Sooliman’s book — if not exactly the part about Satan, then certainly the part about why Iran and its proxy Shia militias would have reason to despise him.

“Iran plays this game of the Islamic Revolution,” it stated clearly in the text, beginning at the bottom of page 166 and running into page 167, “[and yet] there’s nothing Islamic about Iran. Say it like it is… when you can cause conflict by sending arms to kill women and children, there is nothing Islamic about you!”

The chapter in which the quote appeared was titled simply “The Syrian Story”, but it had a subtitle that promised to take the reader “behind the curtain”. 

Sooliman, it turned out, had visited Syria in October 2012, after an Al Jazeera journalist had convinced him that a media blackout had been imposed for two nefarious reasons: firstly, to keep the world’s eyes away from the true scale of the conflict and, secondly, to safeguard the false narrative that sufficient humanitarian aid had been entering the country, with the Saudis and Qataris driving the supposed relief effort. 

What Sooliman found when he got there, of course, was that it was way worse than even the journalist had told him. One of the first stories he confirmed, during a trip to a bombed-out village near the Turkish border, was about a man who had gone out to source food for his family — the man had managed to procure a hunk of five-day-old bread, but on his return to the village he had discovered that Bashar al-Assad’s forces (backed by Hezbollah and the Iranian mullahs) had shelled the houses, killing 72 civilians, including all 13 members of his family.   

The text of Sooliman’s book, over the next few pages, was peppered with injunctions from the Qur’an about conduct during wartime — to not harm women and children, to not burn houses, to not damage crops, to not poison wells.         

“Yet Hezbollah and Assad do everything opposite to that,” he was quoted. “They shut the water off to Qusair when 50,000 women and children are trapped inside. In Homs, they burn and slit the throats of 275 women and children. In Tartus, they wipe out 1,000 people. Is this what Islam teaches you? Is this what the Qur’an teaches you?”

All of which was to suggest that Sooliman, contrary to the allegations of Scott and his other South African detractors, had been doing a pretty bad impression of a Tehran-aligned Islamist.

Written by Shafiq Morton and originally published in 2014, with an updated edition released in 2021, the book — titled Imtiaz Sooliman and the Gift of the Givers: A Mercy to All — could not have stated the case in plainer terms. Also, in God-forsaken warzones such as Syria, where Gift of the Givers had set up a hospital with 70 permanent staff, the facts were known to thousands and easily verifiable. 

So, what had brought on these allegations against Sooliman? In other words, if this was indeed a baseless smear campaign, what were its primary motivations? 

“I can’t answer that,” Sooliman said to Daily Maverick, still smiling. 

But that didn’t mean he was saying there wasn’t an answer. As far as Daily Maverick was concerned, it appeared that there was — and it all may have begun with Lawrence Nowosenetz, a former member of the South African Jewish Board of Deputies and a one-time acting High Court judge, who had recently made a new home for himself in Tel Aviv.

Funding, slander and innuendo


On 23 October 2024, under the title “To the Helen Suzman Foundation of South Africa”, Nowosenetz published the latest instalment in his blog series for The Times of Israel — a piece that differed from his previous blogs in that it was framed as an open letter to Naseema Fakir, Helen Suzman Foundation (HSF) executive director. According to Nowosenetz, “unpalatable information” had surfaced that required the HSF’s cancellation of its invitation to Sooliman to present the annual (and highly prestigious) memorial lecture.

Still, other than the open letter format, the substance of Nowosenetz’s blog was in keeping with most of his previous efforts. 

Back in January 2024, he had published a piece under the self-explanatory title “South Africa’s disgraceful disregard for international humanitarian law in the ICJ”. In early May, he had published a broadside against The Guardian of the UK for having the temerity to grant a platform to the anti-Zionist Jewish writer Naomi Klein, who a few weeks prior had called for a mass “exodus” from the ethno-nationalist project that “commits genocide in [the ancestral Jewish] name”. In late May, Nowosenetz had followed that up with a screed against the South African government, which in his mind had fully aligned itself with the objectives of Iran and its proxy militias, Hezbollah and Hamas.

“[Naledi] Pandor travelled to Iran to meet with the [now] late President Raisi to discuss the Israel-Hamas war,” Nowosenetz had reminded his audience, referring to South Africa’s former international relations minister. 

“Less than two months later, in December 2023, South Africa had filed the complaint against Israel in the [International Court of Justice]. In January, despite well-known crippling financial difficulties within the ANC, the party surprisingly announced that its finances had been stabilised.”

Clearly, what Nowosenetz was suggesting here — by his own admission, without any actual proof — was that Iran had paid the South African government to take the genocide case to the International Court of Justice (ICJ).

And then, in late September 2024, in a blog that attempted to savage the character and intentions of one Kelly-Jo Bluen, spokesperson for South African Jews for a Free Palestine (SAJFP), he had mentioned Sooliman for the first time.   

“The SAJFP enjoys cordial relations with Gift of the Givers,” he had written, “a disaster relief and medical assistance philanthropic fund headed by Islamist Dr Imtiaz Sooliman … [who] cannot even acknowledge the humanity of the Israeli victims of 7 October and is contemptuous of the grief and trauma of Hamas’s victims”. 

By late October, therefore, when he published his open letter to Fakir, Nowosenetz had already got away with multiple instances of slander and innuendo — breaches of journalistic best practice that, for whatever reason, had passed muster at The Times of Israel. In now choosing to allege that Sooliman and Gift of the Givers “may be directly or indirectly financially supporting Hamas”, it must have been obvious to him that he would get away with it again.       

The basis for the allegation — and the primary reason that Nowosenetz had demanded HSF’s cancellation of Sooliman’s memorial lecture — was the non-profit that Sooliman had set up just before launching Gift of the Givers, known as the Al Aqsa Foundation. 

Nowosenetz acknowledged in his blog that Sooliman had handed the Al Aqsa Foundation over to Sheikh Ebrahim Gabriels in 1992, after having spent only one year at the helm. But he went on to allege that the same foundation had later joined forces with the Union of Good, which in November of 2008 had apparently been blacklisted as a terror-supporting organisation by the United States Department of Treasury. 

“Based on the detailed and highly credible information I have received,” Nowosenetz concluded, without having once provided documentary evidence, “it appears certain that Dr Sooliman’s activities in Gaza, from 2009 to current, will be rendered increasingly visible as the fog of war diminishes. The likelihood that donor funding in Gaza was used exclusively to provide humanitarian relief for innocent civilians is remote. Far more likely is that a significant part of the resources went into supporting Hamas itself, perhaps indirectly in the Hamas-run hospitals.” 

Fakir, for her part, remained unconvinced — she affirmed in a media statement, released four days after Nowosenetz’s blog, that the HSF would “host its annual memorial lecture as planned”. 

Three days after that, on 30 October 2024, the HSF’s former executive director, Nicole Fritz, published a scathing piece in Daily Maverick, calling out Nowosenetz for his white-male presumption that Suzman herself would have been “appalled” by Sooliman’s alleged misdeeds. 

“No one can say definitively what Helen would have thought, felt, done in this situation today,” wrote Fritz. “But her record of abhorrence for bigoted and chauvinistic bullies is well documented.”

And yet not even that could stop Marika Sboros, writing for the conservative publication Daily Friend, from trotting it all out again in an inventive piece of analysis published on 9 November 2024. Republished on 24 November in BizNews, under a new title that deftly exploited its virality — “A very dark side to Sooliman’s Gift of the Givers” — the piece repeated all of the tropes from Nowosenetz’s compendium of blogs. 

Iran, Hezbollah, Hamas, South Africa’s case at the ICJ — somehow, according to Sboros and the BizNews editors, Sooliman’s “open support for lawfare against Israel” was a clue to his shadow role as a sleeper agent in the Shia world-takeover plot. 

Where, for Nowosenetz, the smoking gun was in the Al Aqsa Foundation, for Sboros it was in the Al Quds Foundation — but no matter the naming discrepancy, or for that matter Sboros’s assertion that the US had banned the organisation in 2003 (for Nowosenetz, as above, the year of banning was 2008), all you had to do was join the dots.

Also, just like for Nowosenetz, another significant factor for Sboros was Sooliman’s apparent “silence” on the Israeli hostages in Gaza. Was Sooliman an anti-Semite? The subtext, in both pieces, was that there was every indication that he was. 

Blood libels and bank guarantees


The way Sooliman dealt with this existential question, for Daily Maverick, was to acknowledge that he had been brought up to severely distrust Jews. As a young brown Muslim kid in apartheid-era South Africa, he intimated, that was just the way it was.

“But in 1991,” he said, “when I met a spiritual teacher for the first time, in that place half the people were American Jews. Disciplined, respectful, obedient, compassionate — I thought to myself, you know what, I’m learning from them. And after that, no negativity.”

In the post-7 October world, of course, things got a lot more complicated. Early in 2024, Sooliman told Daily Maverick, he attended a talk at the University of Cape Town on the conflation of anti-Zionism with anti-Semitism. There he met members of the SAJFP, with whom he had already engaged, and after the talk they wanted to ask him questions.

“I said to them, I came here for only one reason,” Sooliman recalled. “I came here to thank you, because you don’t get enough credit for what you do. You’re first in line at all of the marches. I’m sure the Zionists don’t like you, I’m sure you’ve been cut off from your families.”

The way he remembered it, some of the SAJFP members began to “tear up” — so Sooliman told them that they had a “new family” in the Muslim community. 

Still, as genuine as the sentiment appeared, these were not the words of a man who was unaware of the stakes. After that, said Sooliman, when he was invited to speak in the mosques, he would make sure to remind the congregants that “the Jews are not the enemy”. 

More to the point, he added, he had taken it upon himself to inform the SAPS, state security and the private security companies of the new dangers — because, while Sooliman knew better than anyone that there had been no real history of Muslim-on-Jew violence in South Africa, the Israeli reaction to 7/10  had drastically increased the risks. 

“If any Jew is threatened by a Muslim,” said Sooliman, “we stop him.” 

Given the ethos of Gift of the Givers — which, according to the latest statistics, had distributed a staggering R6-billion in aid across 47 countries — there was no reason to doubt his commitment to non-violence. “We don’t import disasters,” he told Daily Maverick, with reference to the situation in Gaza, “we export good.”    

And indeed, since the organisation was now delivering around 3 million litres of water per month, attending to over 15,000 patients per month and distributing 120,000 food parcels per year in some of the world’s most marginalised conflict zones, the accusations of his detractors were wearing increasingly thin.  

Had he really said nothing, ever, about the fate of the Israeli hostages in Gaza?

Sooliman laughed. “I said it clearly on TV, I said it many times,” he told us. “Human rights on both sides is sacred. Islamic law doesn’t allow you to hurt innocent people.”

Of course, what his detractors were after was a lot more than that — an assurance, for instance, that he had never funded or aided a banned terror organisation. And here, admitted Sooliman, it was true that as a young man he had established a non-profit called “Al Aqsa Foundation”. 

“But Al Aqsa is a common name, it’s like saying Mohammed or Mecca or Medina,” he told us. “We took a picture of the mosque [in Jerusalem], we set up a Palestine collection fund, we raised some money and we sent it across to the other side. End of story.” 

A year later, he continued, acting on a spiritual instruction, he parted ways with the foundation to set up Gift of the Givers — which had since been subjected, he stressed, to the constant oversight of local and international authorities. 

“We know the terrorism laws,” he said. “In 2001, the Americans tried to say, well, we are working in Afghanistan, we must be involved in terror funding. Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma [the foreign affairs minister at the time] said no, this is our organisation, we can vouch for them. Then they shut up; they didn’t come for me after that.”

Sooliman emphasised the “process” in such matters. “Your own bank applies to the Reserve Bank for clearance to send money across,” he said, adding that Standard Bank handled all of his work. “The money goes from Standard Bank into an American bank, Standard Chartered, which exchanges it into dollars and transfers it to the organisation that finally gets the money. So, there’s a foolproof system.”

The Reserve Bank, he noted, which was obliged to issue a report after every transaction, had “never had an issue”. Also, since Gift of the Givers worked closely with the South African government, it had to be extra careful. 

“When we’re not sure about something,” Sooliman explained, “we say to Standard Bank, look, our network is not big enough, can you check for us. Standard Bank will come and do a due diligence.”

Ultimately, said Sooliman, the onus was on his detractors to prove that he had been channelling funds to Hamas. “I’m telling them, charge me personally,” he said. “Go to the SAPS, go to the Hawks, go to the NPA, go to state security, and charge me. I’m giving you an open challenge.”

Then, voluntarily, Sooliman offered the following: “I have no relationship with Hamas. They don’t like me.”

As it turned out, many years prior to 7 October 2023, Sooliman had criticised Hamas while he was in Gaza — out in the streets, with the media present — for its inability to create cohesion among the people and organisations of Palestine. 

“I’m a Muslim, I’m not scared of anybody,” he said to Daily Maverick. “What is wrong is wrong and what is right is right. How do you solve a problem when you’re fighting amongst yourselves?” 

Eating the words


Sooliman had never heard of The Kiffness before the infamous tweet of 28 November, he told us. But the tweet, which garnered 1.5-million views, was unequivocal — aside from calling Sooliman a “false prophet” and “radical Islamist”, Scott alleged that Gift of the Givers was a “front for a far more sinister agenda”.

Whether Scott had been influenced by the work of Nowosenetz and Sboros was impossible to determine; his assessment, on the face of it, may have been based purely on the appended TikTok clip — sourced from the South African Zionist talk show host Howard Feldman — that purported to justify his words. 

“Strike terror into the hearts of your enemies and Allah’s enemies,” Sooliman had been recorded saying, at a Muslim event in South Africa, “don’t be afraid. One of those lawyers asked me, ‘what did you achieve by going to the ICJ?’ I said, ‘what kind of a dumb question is that?’ What did you achieve? You made 60 other countries not be afraid any more.”  

From Daily Maverick’s perspective — as informed by the perspective of this writer, a formerly indoctrinated Jew — the “enemy” in Sooliman’s speech was not the Jewish community in general.

“What’s important is to tell the Zionists,” he had said in closing, “we are not afraid of you!”

Still, it wasn’t as if Scott hadn’t misused the words of public figures to advance his own agenda before. Back in mid-September 2024, as a significant chunk of humanity was aware, he had released a track called “Eating the Cats” — the track, which would apparently drive Scott’s viewing figures on YouTube to a mind-boggling 2.2-billion, was based on the allegations of JD Vance and Donald Trump that the Haitian community in Springfield, Ohio, had been feasting on the local pets.     

By the end of September, the allegation had been analysed and dismissed as “disinformation” by The New York Times, which had also termed it “racist”. More importantly, two days before Scott released his track, law enforcement in Springfield, Ohio, had stated that they had received “no credible reports or specific claims” of Haitians harming, injuring or abusing the pets of the town.     

What Daily Maverick wanted to know from Scott, therefore, was whether he confirmed or denied that his global hit had contributed to anti-immigrant and/or racist sentiment in the United States and beyond. We also wanted to know, aside from the TikTok clip that he had reposted on X, whether there was anything — “concrete evidence, etc” — that had led him to conclude that Sooliman was a “radical Islamist” with a “sinister agenda”. 

At the time of writing, Scott had not responded to these questions (emailed on Friday, 6 December, to his management). Neither had he responded to our third question, which was about the apparent cancellation of a speaking engagement at the prize-giving ceremony of the Pridwin Preparatory School in Johannesburg, scheduled for Wednesday, 4 December.    

Sooliman, during the interview with Daily Maverick, had reached for his phone when the subject of The Kiffness came up. “That’s him, isn’t it?” he had asked, pointing to an “update” from the school to parents — forwarded to Sooliman by a friend — that stated Scott would no longer be guest speaker at the event.

Ross Grimley, the headmaster of Pridwin, would later confirm to Daily Maverick that the update was genuine. In response to the question as to why Scott had been cancelled, Grimley texted the following:

“Some of Mr Scott's views were recently the subject of debate and comment, including amongst our school community. We took the decision to change the guest speaker at prize-giving to ensure that the focus of the entire Pridwin community remained the extraordinary achievements of our senior primary boys, which were celebrated at prize-giving. We did not want anything to detract from the celebratory nature of the occasion.”

And so there it was; a path, however humble, through all of the innuendo and gaslighting. Ordinary South Africans, it appeared, could intuit the truth for themselves  — a truth that was less about words, although those were important too, than it was about deeds. 

Because Scott, for all of his crowing that “actual humanitarians” didn’t use Sooliman’s “kind of rhetoric”, had been praised in October 2024 by Israel’s most widely read daily newspaper — the pro-Netanyahu Israel Hayom, owned by Miriam Adelson, who also happened to be the largest individual donor to the Trump campaign — for “defending” the country on X. And yet regardless, after the cancellation of his speaking engagement at Pridwin, he had doubled down. 

“I’ve emailed the headmaster of my prep school to give insight into my concerns over Dr Sooliman,” he had tweeted on 5 December, also stating that he had asked Grimley to share his email with staff and parents.

By his own admission, he hadn’t heard back. 

Meanwhile, over in Gaza, where all of this had started, Sooliman’s people were still doing the best they could to deliver food, water and medical care. 

Incredibly, in the midst of the growing allegations of war crimes and genocide against the Zionist regime, Gift of the Givers was still standing — despite the murder, during the first weeks of the conflict, of its office boss in a suspected “targeted” attack; despite the consistent bombing of its tents and vehicles and medical facilities; despite the loss to its staffers, according to Sooliman, of more than 175 family members.   

“That’s why they’re mad at me,” said Sooliman, repeating his message from the TikTok clip. “Because I’m not afraid of them.”

Marika Sboros responds:

Kevin Bloom’s reporting on the curious case of Dr Imtiaz Sooliman and his global Gift of the Givers charity (Daily Maverick, December 11, 2024) devotes inordinate space to nitpicking inconsequential detail in an article I wrote in Daily Friend in November. 

Bloom also disingenuously suggests that I somehow influenced South African musician and parody artist David Scott, aka The Kiffness to criticise Sooliman. 

He says the same of retired human rights lawyer and former acting High court judge Lawrence Nowosenetz.

For the record, I don’t know Scott or Nowosenetz personally. 

Bloom also refers to BizNews republishing my article (after which it went viral). BizNews has with Daily Friend to lift content freely. 

Bloom acknowledges Gift of the Givers as Africa’s largest humanitarian and disaster-relief agency. I’ve done so as well but he ignores that. 

I’ve said that Sooliman and his charity have long enjoyed global acknowledgment and awards for their humanitarian work. 

Bloom nitpicks my concerns with Sooliman’s public statements about not following international or local law, only Koranic law, and that he and his charity “know how to move cash”. 

Bloom raises “a naming discrepancy” I made. He is correct. I misplaced a sentence in a rewrite, leaving the impression that Sooliman started a branch of the Al-Quds International Foundation in South Africa in 1991 before handing it over to start Gift of the Givers in 1992. As my next sentence refers, Sooliman started a branch of the Al-Aqsa Foundation.

Mea culpa. I’m human. I have corrected the error (as I do). I thank Bloom for pointing it out.

Bloom claims I erred again – in saying that the US first sanctioned the Al-Aqsa Foundation as a terror entity for alleged ties to terror funding of Hamas in 2003. I am right. It was 2003. 

He also accepts without question Sooliman’s dismissal of importance attached to the names, Al-Aqsa and Al-Quds, as mere generic Islamic references, like terms such as “Mecca” or “Medina”. DM

Read more by Kevin Bloom on the war in the Middle East:

High noon at the ICC: Zionism’s intractable Netanyahu problem (24 November 2024)

Open court: In dialogue with a South African Zionist leader, Benji Shulman (3 November 2024)

Fascism’s strange resurgence — a ‘bad Jew’ South African breaks bread with the German media (9 October 2024)

Conversations with Randa: How the life of a Gazan refugee maps Israel’s dilemma (17 July 2024)

Holy War revisited — ‘You want it darker, we kill the flame’ (8 May 2024)

Messianism and madness: An intimate hell ride through end times in the Holy Land (22 October 2023)

Comments

Harry Boyle Dec 12, 2024, 07:53 AM

I Wonder if Scott will retract his Statement?

Kenny Arundel Dec 12, 2024, 08:32 AM

Not a chance of that. It's once again the power given to one with just too little knowledge and an inflated ego, I mean 2.2 billion hits on his posts is certainly impressive, but he should stay out of the political arena and do what he does best.

Mark Lederman Dec 12, 2024, 08:19 AM

The GOTG Facebook page is replete with vile anti Semitic comments like calling Jews the 'synagogue of Satan' and hideous cartoons of long nosed Jews. Sooliman himself said in a speech that Zionists 'run the world with fear' and 'control the world with money'

Ed Rybicki Dec 12, 2024, 10:55 AM

I’m sorry, but I’ve just trawled their official Facebook site and found not a single anti-Jewish comment. Anti-IDF yes, in the sense of showing the devastation the latter has wreaked in Gaza, but not anti-Jewish. Sure you looked at the right site?

cdsolomon1 Dec 12, 2024, 12:26 PM

"Sooliman himself said in a speech...", no source? No validity.

Rob Alexander Dec 12, 2024, 02:27 PM

The source is in one of Bloom's links in his diatribe above. I would share the link with you for ease of reference but DM won't allow the posting of links.

Enver Klein Dec 13, 2024, 01:59 PM

Many people do not equate Jews with Zionists, YOU are the one, as per your post, alluding that they are the same.

robin wilson Dec 12, 2024, 08:34 AM

Islam, Christianity, Judaism. All these religions purport to give to others. Mr Sooliman has created avehicle to give to those less fortunate, in places around the world that are in need. No matter what religion.

Paddy Ross Dec 12, 2024, 12:26 PM

There is an unjustfied questioning with your use of the word "purport". Christian giving should be done without publicity.

Paddy Ross Dec 12, 2024, 12:26 PM

There is an unjustfied questioning with your use of the word "purport". Christian giving should be done without publicity.

Heinrich Holt Dec 12, 2024, 08:40 AM

I never heard of David Scott before. Not of him or his music. Forgive the pun, but I will rather stick with The Gift of The Givers track record.

Kanu Sukha Dec 12, 2024, 09:46 PM

Now you (& ME) have! Welcome to the 'wonders' of social (sic) media! Instant fame & infamy rolled in one ! The bringing into the messianic Zionist fold a 'high court judge' as in the US shill Dershowitz are a few examples of the lengths Zionism (not Judiasm) will go to 'attack' opposition !

Middle aged Mike Dec 12, 2024, 08:58 AM

Dr Sooliman is a seriously inspiring guy and the good he's done through GOTG is immense. He's not a saint though and like any human is very likely to have religious and cultural blind spots and biases.

Peter Geddes Dec 12, 2024, 09:03 AM

This is what I want to read in DM, a researched article attempting to balance the slanderous and hate-inducing narratives being put out.

Middle aged Mike Dec 12, 2024, 09:27 AM

I agree but it would be even better, where they aren't doing 'opinion pieces' which I assume this isn't, if they refrained from letting their slips show with gems like this "Incredibly, in the midst of the growing allegations of war crimes and genocide against the Zionist regime . . "

Luke Dec 12, 2024, 01:16 PM

How is that a slip? There are indeed growing allegations of that kind and Israel is certainly governed by a Zionist regime. Seems pretty factual, no?

Stephen Paul Dec 12, 2024, 02:51 PM

What is a "Zionist regime"? Every Israeli government of their sovereign state has been in favor of Jewish nationalism. Pretty much like African or Islamic or French national governments. Perhaps the idea is to de-legitimize the concept of a nation state only for the Jewish People. That has a name

John Brodrick Dec 12, 2024, 09:23 PM

Read Ilan Pappe's book, Ten Myths about Israel, if you do not understand the difference between being Jewish and being a Zionist. Pappe, by the way, is a Jew.

Kanu Sukha Dec 12, 2024, 09:56 PM

Obviously you have chosen to ignore the many explicit and clear explanations of the conceptual difference between Zionism and Judaism. The NAME .. could it be stupidity ?

Stephen Paul Dec 12, 2024, 11:48 PM

The two responses to my comment display a certain ignorance in conflating being a Jew only with Judaism. Judaism is the religion of the Jewish People who also have an ancestral Peoplehood identity with a nation state, accepted by the vast majority of world Jewry. They are not mutually exclusive.

Stephen Paul Dec 13, 2024, 11:00 AM

I know Pappe. Not sure why the 2 responses to my comment see it as ignorant. Being a Jew is conflated not only with the religion of Judaism. Jewish People-hood with an ancestral nation state has throughout its history has been an intrinsic part of Jewish identity. They are not mutually exclusive.

Johan Botha Dec 12, 2024, 09:04 AM

Great article about a great man, thank you. What has to be wrong with a person to have their opinions formed by something called "the kiffness"?

jackjack12 Dec 12, 2024, 09:10 AM

Hezboshaytan, catchy phrase to remember

Rob Alexander Dec 12, 2024, 09:17 AM

The good doctor Sooliman himself proclaims that he is above the law because it is Western law. He is only true to Islamic Law. Is that not radical Islamism? Bloom does not mention this. Instead, he accuses others of “breaches of journalistic best practice”. Hypocrite.

R S Dec 12, 2024, 12:25 PM

Source?

Rob Alexander Dec 12, 2024, 02:09 PM

DSTV channel 347 - an interview with the good doctor by his sister on 7 October 2024 at 22h30 - note that this was the anniversary of the Hamas massacre in Israel. I would give you a link to a recording but DM won't allow this

Em Krit Dec 12, 2024, 09:19 AM

(I'm quite sure that the kiffness' Eating the Cats song is a parody of Donald Trump)

Cally Heal Dec 12, 2024, 11:18 AM

It is. You just have to look at the video on You Tube.

Christian Pirk Dec 12, 2024, 11:59 AM

I agree, not sure how one can see it otherwise, especially in light of his other work.

Denise Smit Dec 12, 2024, 09:36 AM

Seems that all alternative comments on this article have been prevented

User Dec 12, 2024, 01:47 PM

Yes I get that sense as well. Sinister really. I thought I was reading an article about Mother Theresa. Yes he's done great work, but also stuck the old head above the parapet before the elections and called on all SA to vote ANC. So politics is not far nor too deep.

annie.conw Dec 12, 2024, 09:50 AM

One should perhaps think veeeery carefully before jumping into the quagmire that is middle eastern politics.

dov Dec 12, 2024, 10:12 AM

Desert sun ascends Jerusalem in the morning Shaitan defeated

patricia whitelock Dec 12, 2024, 10:34 AM

Thanks for this. Imtiaz Sooliman deserves and has earned our respect and support.

h_holt Dec 12, 2024, 10:53 AM

Totally agree!!

Alan Hammond Dec 12, 2024, 10:34 AM

Probably the best piece of journalism I have read this year. Well done Kevin Bloom on a very well-researched article - and thank goodness we have the DM to publish it. Scott must have made tens of millions of Dollars from his videos - does he use any of it to support those in need?

virginia crawford Dec 15, 2024, 09:21 AM

Hmmmm - probably not is my guess.

Pierre Mare Dec 12, 2024, 10:42 AM

I liked the immediate response the Cat song effected , a perceived slight on certain right wing politicians. However, this character assassination of the GOG leader, shows lack of insight and bias unbecoming of a clever creative.

dexmoodl Dec 12, 2024, 10:54 AM

The more zionist control the media and politicians to try hide their crimes ,by blaming the victim and always playing the victim , the more it gives credence to the old tropes about Jews , that may be actually not be tropes , but fact.

Rod MacLeod Dec 12, 2024, 03:16 PM

How did this racist comment make it through?

dexmoodl Dec 12, 2024, 05:58 PM

I would suggest you follow popular right wing media , podcasts and bloggers, in US, EU , UK , that is the talking point, but since they support Israel's actions . No complaints have been lodged by any Jewish Organisation , even ADL in US refused to raise objections to the content .

Stephen Paul Dec 12, 2024, 11:08 PM

Yes D M. I would also like to know. This comment is blatantly in breach of the categories you have set as standards for Acceptance

Middle aged Mike Dec 13, 2024, 08:18 AM

A quote worthy of Der Stürmer, the Reich Minister of Propaganda will be most pleased.

dexmoodl Dec 13, 2024, 10:03 AM

I do not think i could compete with " Hasbara " the Art of Deception as practiced by the Israeli State as a national priority since 1948 . Which has now been exposed to those who previously had no knowledge of this practice by Zionists.

Middle aged Mike Dec 13, 2024, 10:41 AM

Nope the patent racism in the post is world class and couldn't be obscured by any amount of dissembling . Well done! An axis of resistance bumper sticker is on its way as a token of appreciation.

Johannes Jonker Dec 12, 2024, 11:12 AM

The author rightly questions David Scott's criticism of Sooliman, and Scott will need to answer for that. It is a pity he didn't use the right of reply afforded to him by the author.

craig.bishop Dec 12, 2024, 12:45 PM

As a journo, I accompanied Imtiaz Sooliman and his team to Darfur, Sudan, in 2004, at the height of the Muslim atrocities against black Sudanese. There were no young men left in country. They had all been slaughtered. The women all had harrowing stories. It was not Kif. David Scott was not there.

Esskay Esskay Dec 12, 2024, 12:53 PM

Did Bloom ask for comment from the "zionists" before publication. Also, does anyone know the source of funding for Gift of the Givers?

Mike Lawrie Dec 12, 2024, 08:48 PM

Good point. The lack of any credible mention of the huge source of funds to which GOTG has access detracts significantly from an otherwise very interesting article.

eduardo.fernandez Dec 12, 2024, 10:16 PM

I've donated for Gift of the Givers, and I live very far away from South Africa (South America). When I tried to find an NGO to donate for the victims of the earthquake in Turkey, someone in Pretoria recommended GOG. According to him, the best run in the country. Sure, there are many like me.

Trish Parsons Dec 12, 2024, 12:55 PM

Now that's what I call journalism. A balanced, well written article, and a pleasure to read.

Dominic C Dec 12, 2024, 01:49 PM

Intimaz Sooliman has been on Carte Blanche more Sunday nights saving the day for the desperate and impoverished, than Parktown Boys has for hazing, and that is saying something! A heinouos, lazy and venal mischaracterisation from David Scott.

ann.hofmeyr Dec 12, 2024, 01:52 PM

Please let us South Africans not get into the stew of conspiracy theory. Let us nip it in the bud!! Kevin thank you for the article.

Stephen Paul Dec 12, 2024, 02:28 PM

Yes. Everyone has their own lenses through which they see their world. It is clear Mr Sooliman is against slaughter from whichever source it comes. Really? Is this to be admired? What is to be admired is Gift of the Givers. But the article is not about this is it? It is all about The evil Zionists.

virginia crawford Dec 15, 2024, 09:26 AM

Actions not words, right? Carpet bombing Gaza and Beirut, killing civilians as collective punishment is evil, is it not? Whereas GoG saves lives.

Stephen Paul Dec 15, 2024, 04:51 PM

Yes it is. And they do. I am not out to defend the destruction in Gaza but would dispute your accusations. There is no "carpet bombing" as in WW2 or collective punishment. War is hell. Hamas has chosen Hell whilst embedded within a civilian population. Perhaps your ire could be towards them.

dexmoodl Dec 15, 2024, 08:43 PM

As at June Israel dropped 70 000 tons bombs on Gaza exceeding total dropped on Dresden, Hamburg and London combined. Those cities at least had access to water , food and health care. Also access to bomb sites to dig out the dead from the rubble.

virginia crawford Dec 16, 2024, 07:46 AM

A war is between states or countries: Hamas is neither. It's the civilians suffering and being murdered.

Stephen Paul Dec 17, 2024, 05:53 PM

A flawed assumption. Read the statement of the ICC in their own words " The State of Palestine". Or is this only when it suits the agenda? Hamas is the self ruling elected Authority of Gaza Palestine. The suffering and death of one innocent is too many. If we want to stop it Free Gaza From Hamas.

alastairmgf Dec 12, 2024, 02:30 PM

For the sake of GOG, Sooliman should stay out of politics. Two points make me uneasy: 1. The targeting of their employee by the IDF in Gaza. Very suspicious. 2. His support of the government’s action against Israel at the ICJ.

jhetam Dec 12, 2024, 04:27 PM

Our government’s response to Israel’s action at the ICJ is seen by the VAST majority of South Africans and indeed the world is seen as gutsy and heroic. With the mounting evidence daily that the Zionist state is committing a genocide in Gaza will in time be vindicated by the ICJ ruling.

Middle aged Mike Dec 12, 2024, 05:40 PM

Vast majority? Really? Would you care to provide some evidence of that?

dexmoodl Dec 12, 2024, 08:09 PM

Poll by YouGov in July 2024 .Western Europe 62 -74 % believed Israel committing War Crimes in Gaza ( Germany 62(low)- Spain 74 (high ) , same period US was 49 %. But only 26 % said Israel has not committed any crimes . All other countries polled 70 to 75 said yes to war crimes by Israel.

Middle aged Mike Dec 13, 2024, 09:43 AM

Nothing whatever there to back "Our government’s response to Israel’s action at the ICJ is seen by the VAST majority of South Africans and indeed the world is seen as gutsy and heroic." Not to worry though it makes a nice stocking or perhaps jack boot filler Herr Streicher.

dexmoodl Dec 13, 2024, 12:56 PM

Among brown and black south africans the figure is 70 -75 %. , only among the white south africans is that below 50 % more in line with US and UK ( wonder why ? ). Only 7 countries at UNGA voted against the action taken by SA .

Middle aged Mike Dec 13, 2024, 01:28 PM

Those sound like 'stats' recently sucked out of a race obsessives thumb. Able provide anything to substantiate them? Care to provide any evidence to support the assertion that the vast majority of saffers are giddy with enthusiasm over splurging a R100 million plus at the Hague?

virginia crawford Dec 15, 2024, 09:27 AM

Thank you for these stats- I support the ICJ.

graemebirddurban Dec 15, 2024, 08:33 AM

haha, you against the world

Wilhelm van Rooyen Dec 13, 2024, 06:44 AM

Don't count me in

alastairmgf Dec 12, 2024, 02:51 PM

Comments even slightly critical of the GOG or Soolinan are being rejected. This is a great pity as it amounts to unnecessary censorship.

eduardo.fernandez Dec 12, 2024, 10:21 PM

Have you read this from Mike Lawry? "The lack of any credible mention of the huge source of funds to which GOTG has access detracts significantly from an otherwise very interesting article". Or this from Esskay Esskay? "Also, does anyone know the source of funding for Gift of the Givers?"

dexmoodl Dec 14, 2024, 04:52 PM

Check out their website . gives a list of corporate partner . eg Old Mutual .Capitec..Shoprite...

Denise Smit Dec 13, 2024, 06:58 AM

This is exactly what my comment was about. Somebody technical manipulating the agenda is my idea

dexmoodl Dec 16, 2024, 04:37 PM

You are right i got a few comments pending. and they use quotes by Israeli PM, Ministers or IDF Reports to refute certain comments. Hard to understand , would have assumed supporters of Israeli actions would appreciate getting facts from the source.

Rod MacLeod Dec 12, 2024, 03:15 PM

As a matter of interest, ["I call them Hezboshaytan, ‘Party of Satan’. It’s in my book!”] please may you give the page number reference?

virginia crawford Dec 15, 2024, 09:28 AM

Why, do you have the book?

Nick Griffon Dec 12, 2024, 07:06 PM

I am all for freedom of religion. The West should allow as many mosques as the Arab countries will allow Christian churches. Simple as that!!!

eduardo.fernandez Dec 12, 2024, 10:25 PM

Good point, but Christian churches in most of the so-called West are mostly empty. Angela Merkel put it clear: "Germany Doesn’t Have 'Too Much Islam' but 'Too Little Christianity'"

Enver Klein Dec 13, 2024, 02:04 PM

Interesting comment, I've spent quite a bit of time in the UK and churches are being sold due to very small or at times zero congregations. Do you propose churches be built in Arab countries to stand empty?

virginia crawford Dec 15, 2024, 09:30 AM

There were significant Christian populations in Arab countries for centuries. Bombing Iraq didn't serve Christians living there.

Stephen Paul Dec 16, 2024, 02:10 PM

Yes you are right. There were. What happened to them ? And we are not talking about dwindling Christian attendance in the West. Look at South Africa still a very strong Christian country. The same as those Christian communities in Arab countries now in the past tense.

roelf.pretorius Dec 12, 2024, 10:47 PM

I am a committed Christian; but as a proud South African, I really have to commend not only Imtiaz, but also Kevin Bloom, for their forthcomingness and for not shying away from the uncomfortable truth about the evils that are going on on social media.

Middle aged Mike Dec 13, 2024, 09:39 AM

What is it about south africa that you're proud of? i find much to be embarrassed and ashamed about our country but precious little to be proud of.

virginia crawford Dec 15, 2024, 09:32 AM

The kindness of strangers in this country is remarkable. There wasn't a civil war.

roelf.pretorius Dec 12, 2024, 10:50 PM

. . . If only more South Africans would realize how careful one must be in believing ANYTHING other than opinions on social media. I saw the accusations myself on social media and I immediately recognized it as fake. We should be less naïve about the things we read and see on social media.

feathers_mail Dec 13, 2024, 07:55 AM

Funny that he mentions Assad and Hezbollah but doesn't mention Hamas. Maybe someone could ask him directly.

John P Dec 15, 2024, 01:05 PM

What is it that you are implying? Should he always mention absolutely every group that you have a problem with in order to be acceptable?

John Plaskett Dec 13, 2024, 08:45 AM

I love most of Scott's musical parodies but it seems that in this instance an apology is due

megapode Dec 13, 2024, 03:01 PM

Scott is a very clever artist. He's also a great reminder of why we should remember that musicians good at music, as regards anything else they are not smarter or somehow more enlightened. They're entitled to speak and to opine, of course they are, but their words should not be given more weight.

fourie.theu Dec 13, 2024, 07:52 PM

Allahu akbar

mikel.kritzinger Dec 14, 2024, 12:51 PM

Quotes the Quran: "strike terror into your and Allah's enemies" ... enough said ...

M S Dec 14, 2024, 01:04 PM

Scott made those comments following Dr Sooliman's comments that Islamic law comes before national law. It had nothing to do with Hamas or Gaza. Bloom's failure to notice that the Cats song is satire, makes me question his intelligence.

mikel.kritzinger Dec 14, 2024, 02:21 PM

And he glosses over the explicit incitement to terror ... totally biased reporting. Losing respect for Daily Maverick.

graemebirddurban Dec 14, 2024, 09:41 PM

Definitely not kiff of you David Scott

virginia crawford Dec 15, 2024, 09:05 AM

Outrageous that a moral giant like Dr Sooliman is criticized by an intellectual pygmy like His K#kness and an extremist nonentity. Dr Sooliman is a wonderful person and a credit to South Africa. Notice those other two have run off - good riddance.

Roke Wood Dec 15, 2024, 10:58 AM

I find the utterances of the kifness appalling. He appears to have little or no facts in support of his personal attack on Sooliman. From what I can gather the GOG is simply a humanitarian org that assists those, from whatever country. Whether Sooliman is a muslin means nought to me.

Lil Mars Dec 15, 2024, 11:44 AM

I wish this author would take his anti-zionist blinkers off.

annwenmazet Dec 15, 2024, 06:14 PM

I'm unfollowing / no longer supporting David Scott after reading this. The "Eating the pets" song made me uncomfortable enough.

stevefelderypo Dec 16, 2024, 03:11 AM

This so-called journalist is a joke. A totally one-sided propaganda piece designed to try and exonerate Sooliman from his hateful comments. The “journalist” give it all away when he refers to Israel as “the Zionist entity”. How can Daily Maverick publish such drivel?

alexgordon1978 Dec 16, 2024, 10:28 AM

Donald Trump should appoint that little trustafarian The "Kiff"ness as his court jester

mi Dec 17, 2024, 09:34 AM

If it quacks it's a duck. Some say maybe. Some say it's not.

jackt bloek Jan 6, 2025, 02:01 PM

Did Kifnss go to Michaelhouse school? and does school has to do with him not being able to condmen apartheid , colonial state of Israel Michaelhouse tells everybdoy it is Christian school and we know that apartheid was justified on basis of Christianity . SOMEBODY NEED TO LOOK AT MICHAELHOUSE

jackt bloek Jan 6, 2025, 02:41 PM

if one did an opinion poll on Michaelhouse alumni , I wonder if 20% will be able to identify which country in the world today is an apartheid state is there somehting wrong with this so call prestigous school ?

jackt bloek Jan 7, 2025, 01:01 AM

I think Michaelhouse school should do a screening of "The Color of Friendship"

jackt bloek Jan 7, 2025, 01:04 AM

is Disney Movie , the Colour of Friendship banned at Michaelhouse?

Calvin Botha Jan 11, 2025, 11:35 AM

“Strike terror into the hearts of your enemies and Allah’s enemies,” Who are Allah's enemies exactly? Why is the leader of GOG calling to “Strike terror into the hearts of" anyone?

Francine Hattingh Mar 27, 2025, 08:34 AM

I don’t understand the allegation on Scott’s “Eating the cats” clip. “What Daily Maverick wanted to know..was whether he..denied that his global hit had contributed to anti-immigrant or racist sentiment..”. I thought it was generally accepted that Scott’s clip is a parody of Trump’s comment and not anti the Haitians, as much as Scott himself says it’s purely for animal welfare. Have I got it all wrong?