Paradox: The anti-Qatar protests on US campuses

Janet Levy:  In its 2014 report, the International Trade Union Confederation estimated that there were 2.4 million enslaved workers in the Gulf countries with Qatar being the worst offender.  The State Department has issued similar reports.

Why then is Qatar given the honorific of Major Non-NATO ally (MNNA)?

Why do we have our largest military installation in the Middle East – Al Udeid Air Base – in Qatar?

Why does a country in which 94% of the work force consists of slaves merit MNNA status by the United States of America, especially since race is supposed to matter so much?

Why did Trump’s Middle East envoy, court Jew Steven Witkoff, who admires Qatar and al-Thani, secure the “help” of Qatar to broker a “ceasefire” deal between Israel and Hamas, as if an Islamic terrorist group was a legitimate negotiating partner?

How could Kash Patel, Pam Bondi, Lee Zeldin, Susie Wiles and other government officials work for the Qataris?

Professor Franciso Gil-White, who I had the privilege of meeting in Los Angeles, explains the situation (May 2024) in the essay below.  You may remember that Gil-White, a Christian, is the principled individual who was fired by the University of Pennsylvania for supporting Israel.  He is a champion fighter against antisemitism and recognizes that Jew hatred hurts EVERYONE!

Against slavery in Qatar

FRANCISCO GIL-WHITE | MOR | MAY 03, 2024

Developments in Doha’s West Bay district have seen an increase in the population density of the area with the construction of several high-rises. By RajeshUnuppally at Malayalam Wikipedia, CC BY-SA 3.0

“Qatar is a transit and destination country for men and women trafficked for the purposes of involuntary servitude.”—US State Department Trafficking in Persons Report 2009.

If you inferred from my headline that I would report on the progress of anti-Qatarprotests on US campuses, that’s on you. I didn’t say that. And there are no such protests.

My headline doesn’t lie. It just says: “Paradox: the anti-Qatar protests on US campuses.” As a sentence, it is incomplete, and one may certainly close it like so: “Paradox: the anti-Qatar protests on US campuses are nonexistent.” That’s a grammatical sentence. And that’s the state of affairs that I can report: there are no anti-Qatar protests on US campuses.

One could argue that there should be such protests.

Why? Well, Qatar is fabulously rich today, thanks to some of the largest gas reserves in the entire world, and from that, and from the very modern buildings going up in Doha, Qatar’s capital, you might get the impression that Qatar must be a modern country. It is not. Qatar is a primitive country whose labor force is made up of a giant population of slaves.

But nobody on US campuses is denouncing that. Why not? It’s a question worth asking, I believe. But let me phrase it thus:

  • Why is there so much agitation ostensibly in favor of the Arab Palestinians, but not one word to defend the slaves that languish oppressed in Qatar?

These are slave slaves, not metaphorical slaves. They are owned. They have a master. They can’t leave. They are mercilessly exploited. Many are raped. Millions of people.

Lest you think I am exaggerating, consider that, in 2005, Gulf News reported this:

“International human rights groups had raised the alarm over the exploitation of children from Asian and African countries by traffickers who pay impoverished parents paltry sums or kidnap their victims to smuggle them into the Gulf.”1

“The Gulf” is a reference to the Persian Gulf, where several sharia-law States, among them Qatar, keep a giant multitude of slaves (yes, in the 21st century).

The title of the article quoted above was: ‘Qatar to combat human trafficking with six-point plan,’ which may leave the reader with a good feeling: the Emirate of Qatar, a human trafficking world capital, is taking the matter in hand and will combat this scourge. So how did that go? Well, in 2009, a full four years later, the US Department of State, the foreign ministry of Qatar’s closest and most precious ally, the United States, said this:

Qatar is [still] a transit and destination country for men and women trafficked for the purposes of involuntary servitude and, to a lesser extent, commercial sexual exploitation. Men and women from India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, the Philippines, Indonesia, Vietnam, Sri Lanka, Ethiopia, Sudan, Thailand, Egypt, Syria, Jordan, and China voluntarily travel to Qatar as laborers and domestic servants, but some subsequently face conditions indicative of involuntary servitudeThese conditions include threats of serious harm, including financial harm; job switching; withholding of pay; charging workers for benefits for which the employer is responsible; restrictions on freedom of movement, including the confiscation of passports and travel documents and the withholding of exit permits; arbitrary detention; threats of legal action and deportation; false charges; and physical, mental and sexual abuse.2

I must point out that the US State Department would prefer not to have to write that, as Qatari bosses are the most intimate allies of US bosses, and that relationship is managed by the US Department of State. So it is safe to assume that reality is far worse than any State Department report.

And this reality is no trifle: this is slavery we are talking about.

So I ask again: Why no anti-Qatar protests on US campuses?
Labourers from Nepal put up scaffolding for the launch of the World Cup logo. They start work long before sunrise to avoid the heat. Photograph: Pete Pattisson (The Guardian)
Of course, if the issue were compassion for those suffering—which is a very general category—I could have asked (as a friend of mine just pointed out): Why isn’t anybody protesting the near-total absence of food deliveries for people starving to death in SudanCampus protesters in the US seem to care nothing about them. We are talking about some 18 million people at risk of starving to death.

But I am asking about Qatar—specifically—because the explicitly ‘leftist’ protesters on US campuses claim to be very interested in freedom. “Free, Free Palestine,” they chant. Okay. Let’s say you care about freedom. But if freedom—rather than starvation—is your pet issue, then why are the Arab Palestinians, specifically, deserving of so much emotion on this question?

A lot of emotion has been poured. ‘Pro-Palestinian’ campus protesters in the US (and elsewhere) are most agitated, taking entire universities hostage—even destroying property—and making it impossible for others to study. They are turning entire cities upside down. All of it on account, they say, of the Arab Palestinians. And the question, they say, is freedom.

So what about all those slaves in Qatar? And the slaves elsewhere in the Arab Muslim world? We are talking about several million slaves. They are not free.

I understand that a Western ‘leftist’ protester needs to make some strategic economic decisions. The day has 24 hours and eight of those (or so) need to be spent sleeping in your tent in your makeshift encampment on the university campus. There just isn’t enough time in the day to protest every act of oppression. I get that. But if you are going to demand freedom for just one category of people, how about all those slaves inQatar?

They seem more sympathetic to me. They didn’t elect a terrorist organization, Hamas, to govern them. They didn’t collaborate in the creation of a terrorist State dedicated to commit genocide against another people, which then sent terrorists to kill on sight or torture to death 1,200 innocent civilians on October 7th and also took some 250 hostages to torture and rape. And, by golly, those poor folk in Qatar are slaves. Slaves!

Can’t a Western ‘leftist’ take some interest in the slaves?

What we have here is a political paradox. Consider:

So here’s the paradox: nothing is more rigorously or traditionally ‘leftist’ than the fight to abolish slavery, and yet these campus protesters, who present as ‘leftists,’ are agitating for the slave-masters against those who taught us to abolish slavery.

What explains that? How did Western leftists come to adopt a pro-slavery position?

This here is a diagnostic issue—I promise you. In other words, the explanation of this paradox reveals the structure of the entire system. Below I will do the following:

  1. Give a historical overview of slavery in Qatar.
  2. Give a proximate answer to the question: Why no leftist anti-Qatar protests?
  3. Give an ultimate answer to the question: Why no leftist anti-Qatar protests?

This process will reveal the structure of the system.

Two annotations

Before I document slavery in Qatar and other sharia-law States, I must make two annotations.

The first is that I will not be speaking here of the millions of wives and daughters of Muslim men, fully half of the population and every one of them a bona-fide slave in sharia-law States such as Qatar.

This misogynistic barbarity, this misogynistic outrage, merely criticized in the West, is a crime against humanity that should scandalize beet-red every allegedly ‘leftist’ ‘social-justice warrior.’ But this is not my present quarry. My quarry in this piece are the millions of men, women, and children from other countries who’ve been imported into sharia-law States such as Qatar and turned into slaves.

The second annotation is that Qataris are hardly alone in keeping slaves. This is happening all over the Arab Muslim world. I will keep a special focus on Qatar, and secondarily on Saudi Arabia (because they are both key US allies), but please keep in mind that this is happening all over Arab Muslim ‘civilization,’ and especially in explicit sharia-law States such as Qatar and Saudi Arabia.

Okay, here we go…

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The early 20th century

In 1907, long before the present wave of pro-Islam political correctness in the West, which has represented Islam as ‘the religion of peace,’ the French scholar of Islam Clement Huart wrote that a conquering Muslim state, when considering persons in the conquered population, would apply the following jihadi rule:

“The status of slave is presumed until the contrary is proved … Conversion to Islam does not alter that status since it is legal to own a Muslim slave.”4

Old city of Doha—the Qatari capital—by Hermann Burchardt, January 1904. Source: Wikipedia.

This never stopped. Indeed, according to the Wikipedia article ‘Slavery in Qatar,’

“The British Empire gained control of Qatar in the 1890s and signed the 1926 Slavery Convention to fight enslavement in all land under their control. However, they doubted their ability to stop Qataris from continuing slavery, so the British policy was therefore to assure the League of Nations that Qatar followed the same anti-slavery treaties signed by the British and prevent observation of the area that could disprove the claims. In the 1940s, there were several suggestions made by the British to combat the slave trade and the slavery in the region, but none was considered enforceable on the Qataris.

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April 8, 2025 | 1 Comment »

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  1. To be honest, Janet Levy’s lead-in to this article reflects my own thoughts on the Qataris.

    The next point is that I did infer that we would be informed about the Anti-Qatar protests on US Campuses since I hadn’t heard about any, but I was disappointed…!!

    As is so often the case, the British done it! They quite simply couldn’t care less about those subjects!

    The findings expose Qatar’s failure to protect its 2 million-strong migrant workforce, or even investigate the causes of the apparently high rate of death among the largely young workers.

    No wonder they don’t need the 2 million or so “Palestinians” from Gaza.

    for fifty years, high-prestige professors at our Western universities, and now also their graduates in Big Media, have taught that the key litmus test to decide who is a good, moral ‘leftist’ is just to check whether they support the Arab Palestinians against Israel: the ‘victim’ against the ‘oppressor.’

    So where did all these professors come from? Are their degrees worth the paper they are written on?

    So, as quite obviously shown in this article, those in charge of educating the next generation of US politicians are paid by the Qataris to make sure that they will lean towards the Arabs if they want the gravy train to continue.
    Unfortunately, the same story holds true in Israel regarding the protests against Netanyahu. The money may even be coming from Qatar to drive the protests (nobody with two brain cells would be out protesting without pay!). We have been surmising Soros all along but the Qataris would certainly be willing partners in this endeavor to get rid of Netanyahu – hence the ongoing court cases with regard to Qatari interference. The Al Thani family know the value of Takeya just as well as all the other Moslems, with the Saudis up front with them.