logo
Harry and Meghan's charity cuts ties with Muslim group over pro-Palestine comments

Harry and Meghan's charity cuts ties with Muslim group over pro-Palestine comments

Middle East Eye16-04-2025

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's charity has cut ties with a US-based Muslim organisation after pro-Palestinian statements made by its founder came to light.
The Archewell Foundation, which was set up by the couple in 2020, has given two grants totalling nearly £42,000 (roughly $55,700) to the Milwaukee Muslim Women's Coalition (MMWC) since 2023.
US broadcaster NewsNation recently wrote to the Archewell Foundation notifying it of pro-Palestinian statements made by the MMWC's Palestinian-American founder, Janan Najeeb.
The foundation announced it would cease donating to the organisation late last week after being informed of the comments.
NewsNation told the Archewell Foundation earlier this month that Najeeb had called Israel an "apartheid state" - a designation given by the International Court of Justice in a 2024 advisory opinion and by several major human rights groups, including Amnesty International.
New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch
Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters
NewsNation further revealed that Najeeb called for an arms embargo on Israel and the "liberation of Palestine".
She also repeated the slogan "From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free", which many interpret as an anti-Zionist statement.
'Against the values of the foundation'
"Israel's 75-year occupation of Palestine and the genocide in Gaza are a grave injustice," Najeeb wrote in a blog post last year.
"From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free. From the sea to the river, Palestine will live forever!"
In a letter to Najeeb, the Archewell Foundation said: "Janan, we've recently been notified of a blog post you wrote that goes against the values of the foundation.
Charles III: How the new king became the most pro-Islam monarch in British history Read More »
"As a foundation, we celebrate different perspectives and backgrounds, but we have zero tolerance for hateful words, actions or propaganda."
The letter added that the grant was intended to help Afghan women integrate into Milwaukee.
In 2023, Najeeb had thanked the foundation for its support, saying: "We took swift and impactful action in response to the war on Gaza.
"Our efforts, alongside other Wisconsin-based organisations, aimed to raise awareness and demand human rights for Palestinians."
Prince Harry has previously declared his commitment to social justice and said it is "going to take every single person on the planet right now" to end racism.
He and Markle have also levelled heavily contested claims of racism against the royal family itself.
The latest row comes as Prince Harry has been widely criticised in the British press for flying to war-torn Ukraine while arguing in a High Court case that he needs taxpayer-funded security in Britain.
No member of the royal family visited Israel in an official capacity until 2018, when Prince William, Prince Harry's older brother, travelled there to mark the 70th anniversary of Israel's independence.
Queen Elizabeth 'refused to allow Israeli officials inside Buckingham Palace' Read More »
Some have speculated that Queen Elizabeth had a negative attitude towards Israel due to the violent insurgency waged against the British mandate in Palestine by Zionist armed groups in the 1940s, before Israel's declaration of independence.
The late queen reportedly believed every Israeli was "either a terrorist or a son of a terrorist" and refused to allow Israeli officials into Buckingham Palace, according to former Israeli President Reuven Rivlin.
Visiting Jordan in 1984, she was reportedly shown a map depicting the locations of illegal Israeli settlements in the West Bank and said: "What a depressing map."
King Charles has also previously drawn controversy for his views on Israel.
In 2017, a letter surfaced that he had written to a friend in 1986 after a trip to the Middle East.
Writing that he had read a bit of the Quran and admired "some aspects of Islam", the then-prince said he had begun to understand the Arab "point of view about Israel".
"Never realised they see it as a US colony," he wrote.
"I now appreciate that Arabs and Jews were all a Semitic people originally... it is the influx of foreign, European Jews (especially from Poland, they say) which has helped to cause great problems."
Most controversially, King Charles asked: "Surely some US president has to have the courage to stand up and take on the Jewish lobby in the US?"

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Palestinian rights organisation condemns Israel's interception of Madleen flotilla
Palestinian rights organisation condemns Israel's interception of Madleen flotilla

Middle East Eye

time3 hours ago

  • Middle East Eye

Palestinian rights organisation condemns Israel's interception of Madleen flotilla

Palestinian rights organisation Al-Haq has strongly condemned Israel's 'unlawful interception' of the Madleen in international waters, calling for the 'immediate release of all those detained'. 'Israel has no legal authority to restrict access to Palestine, since such is within the exclusive right of the Palestinian people,' the Ramallah-based rights organisation said in a statement. "As people of conscience seek to demonstrate solidarity with and to provide vital support for the Palestinians of Gaza, third states must urgently ensure both that they are protected from the illegal violence of the Israeli state." Al-Haq urges states & intl orgs to ensure safe passage for the Madleen crew. Detained activists must be released & protected now. Let the #Madleen sail to Gaza. #FreePalestine #LetMadleenSail #MadleenToGazahttps://

Israeli navy seizes Gaza-bound aid ship Madleen, detains crew
Israeli navy seizes Gaza-bound aid ship Madleen, detains crew

Middle East Eye

time3 hours ago

  • Middle East Eye

Israeli navy seizes Gaza-bound aid ship Madleen, detains crew

Israeli forces have taken command of a charity vessel that had tried to break a naval blockade of the Gaza Strip and the boat with its crew of 12 including activist Greta Thunberg is now heading to a port in Israel, officials said on Sunday. The British-flagged yacht Madleen, which is operated by the pro-Palestinian Freedom Flotilla Coalition (FFC), was aiming to deliver a symbolic amount of humanitarian aid, including rice and baby formula, to Gaza later on Monday and raise international awareness of the humanitarian crisis there. However, the boat was boarded during the night before it could reach shore, the FFC said on its Telegram account. The Israeli Foreign Ministry later confirmed that it was under Israeli control, saying the activists are expected to return to their home countries. The FFC says that quadcopters have surrounded the Madleen and sprayed the flotilla with a white paint-like substance before it was seized. Among the 12-strong crew are Swedish climate campaigner Thunberg and Rima Hassan, a French member of the European Parliament. "The crew of the Freedom Flotilla was arrested by the Israeli military in international waters around 2 am," Hassan posted on X. A photograph showed the crew seated on the boat, all wearing life jackets, with their hands in the air.

Russia advances to Ukraine's Dnipropetrovsk region amid row over dead soldiers
Russia advances to Ukraine's Dnipropetrovsk region amid row over dead soldiers

Dubai Eye

time9 hours ago

  • Dubai Eye

Russia advances to Ukraine's Dnipropetrovsk region amid row over dead soldiers

Russia said on Sunday its forces had advanced to the edge of the east-central Ukrainian region of Dnipropetrovsk amid a public row between Moscow and Kyiv over peace negotiations and the return of thousands of bodies of soldiers who fell in the war. Amid talk of peace, the war is stepping up with Russian forces grabbing more territory in Ukraine and Kyiv unfurling high-profile drone and sabotage attacks on Russia's nuclear-capable bomber fleet and, according to Moscow, on railways. Russia, which controls a little under one-fifth of Ukrainian territory, has taken more than 190 square km (73 square miles) of the Sumy region of eastern Ukraine in less than a month, according to pro-Ukrainian open source maps. Now, according to the Russian defence ministry, units of the 90th Tank Division of the Central Grouping of Russian forces have reached the western frontier of Ukraine's Donetsk region and are attacking the adjacent Dnipropetrovsk region. "The enemy does not abandon its intentions to enter the Dnipropetrovsk region," Ukraine's Southern Defence Forces said on Telegram. "Our soldiers are courageously and professionally holding their section of the front, disrupting the occupier's plans. This work does not stop for a minute." Dmitry Medvedev, the deputy chairman of Russia's Security Council, said the Dnipropetrovsk offensive showed that if Ukraine did not want to accept the reality of Russia's territorial gains in peace talks then Moscow's forces would advance further. The pro-Ukrainian Deep State map showed Russian forces very close to the Dnipropetrovsk region, which had a population of more than 3 million before the war, and advancing on the city of Kostyantynivka in the Donetsk region from several directions. A Ukrainian military spokesman, Dmytro Zaporozhets, said that Russian forces were trying to "build a bridgehead for an attack" on Kostyantynivka, an important logistical hub for the Ukrainian army. Russia on Saturday accused Ukraine of delaying the swap of prisoners of war and return of the bodies of 12,000 dead soldiers, though Ukraine denied those claims. Russia said on Sunday it was moving bodies towards the border and television showed refrigerated trucks containing the bodies of Ukrainian soldiers on the road in the Bryansk region. Ukraine accused Russia of playing propaganda games and said that the exchange of prisoners of war and the bodies of fallen soldiers was scheduled for next week. Russia said Ukraine was playing politics with the dead. US President Donald Trump, who says he wants an end to the deadliest conflict in Europe since World War Two, on Thursday likened it to a fight between young children and indicated that he might have to simply let the conflict play out. Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Wednesday that he did not think Ukraine's leaders wanted peace, after accusing them of ordering a bombing in Bryansk, western Russia, that killed seven people and injured 115 a day before talks in Turkey. Ukraine, which has not commented on the attack on a Bryansk bridge, has similarly accused Moscow of not seriously seeking peace, citing as evidence Russian resistance to an immediate ceasefire. Russia is demanding international recognition of Crimea, a peninsula annexed from Ukraine by Russia in 2014, and four other regions of Ukraine that Moscow has claimed as its own territory. Ukraine would have to withdraw its forces from all of them. Russia controlled 113,273 square km, or 18.8 per cent of Ukrainian territory as of June 7, according to the Deep State map. That is an area bigger than the US state of Virginia. The areas under Russian control include Crimea, more than 99 per cent of the Luhansk region, over 70 per cent of the Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions, all in the east or southeast, and fragments of the Kharkiv and Sumy regions in the northeast. Putin told Trump on Wednesday that he would have to respond to Ukrainian drone attacks on Russia's bomber fleet and the bombings of the railways. Russia also hit the northeastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv on Friday evening and overnight with drones, missiles and guided bombs, killing at least four people and injuring more than 60, including a baby, local officials said on Saturday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store