On a chilly December day in the course of the Christmas holidays, Dalia Sarig’s 80-year-old father arrived at her dwelling in Vienna after she had returned from a snowboarding journey.
He was there to select up her stepsister, who had joined Sarig’s household on trip.
She was satisfied it could be her final assembly together with her father, as their political variations have been about to return to a head.
“I stated goodbye. I hugged him,” she advised Al Jazeera. “Once I stated goodbye, I stated goodbye understanding that perhaps I can’t see him any extra.”
Tensions together with her Jewish household had been constructing for years. At 56, Sarig, a pro-Palestine activist, is at odds with most of her relations.
Her mother and father adhere to Zionism, the nationalist political ideology that known as for the creation of a Jewish state and is seen by Palestinians and their supporters because the system that underpins their struggling.
Sarig knew throughout that December assembly together with her father that she supposed to stage a pro-Palestine demonstration outdoors parliament in January that might be filmed by an area tv station. The activist group she was part of had put her ahead for a broadcast interview. Appalled by Israel’s genocide in opposition to Palestinians in Gaza and decided to talk up, she went forward with it.
“The interview was broadcast and it instantly went to my household.”
She later heard that her father, who additionally lives within the Austrian capital, had advised associates that “to him, I died”.
“However he by no means talked about it with me, he by no means reached out to me to inform me one thing like this. [He] simply reduce the relation.”
Her 77-year-old mom, who lives in Germany, messaged her every week later.
“I nonetheless have it right here in my cellphone, saying, , ‘I can’t settle for your political activism. You’re a traitor, you might be dirtying the nest … and do you have to change your political beliefs, we are able to return to regular. Keep wholesome.’”
She has not spoken together with her mother and father since.
Household divides aren’t unusual amongst Jewish households from america to Israel, however have turn into extra entrenched since October 7, 2023.
On that day, Hamas, the group that governs the Gaza Strip, led an incursion into southern Israel throughout which 1,139 individuals have been killed and greater than 200 have been taken captive. Since then, Israeli bombardments have killed greater than 61,700 individuals within the enclave.
“I believe one of the vital fascinating phenomena among the many liberal Zionists is the very fact, whereas the bulk moved to the correct due to October 7, a minority grew to become much more disenchanted with Israel and Zionism,” the creator and tutorial Ilan Pappe, a distinguished critic of Zionism, advised Al Jazeera.
Sarig’s ancestors fled Austria in 1938, the yr of annexation by Nazi Germany, for Serbia. They later settled in Palestine underneath the British Mandate in what’s now present-day Israel. However by the Fifties, most of her relations had returned to Austria, the place she was born.
As a baby, she celebrated Jewish holidays whereas studying about Zionism from elders.
She was additionally advised that Palestinians “are the enemies, they need to kill all of the Jews … that the Jews dwelling there [in Israel] needed peace, however the Arabs didn’t”.
At 18, she moved to Israel, the place, at her mother and father’ encouragement, she joined a leftist Zionist youth motion.
Over 13 years in Israel, she joined a kibbutz, served within the Israeli military in an workplace function, and married. However it was as she studied politics and Center East historical past at Haifa College that her worldview started to vary.
That’s the place she met a Palestinian professor and later grew to become an activist for Palestinian rights.
“It started on a garden in a night along with my Palestinian instructor, when he advised me the story of his household that was displaced from a small village.
“I understood that what I’ve been advised, the Zionist narrative, is flawed,” she stated. “I began to assume how he may really feel, how he’s feeling, or how I would really feel as a Palestinian dwelling in a Jewish state the place my ancestors have been expelled.”
Again in Austria, her household would argue together with her at gatherings, agree by no means to talk once more on Palestine and Israeli politics, break their guarantees, and conflict as soon as once more.
In 2015, she renounced her Israeli citizenship as a gesture in opposition to Zionism.
“It makes my activism simpler,” Sarig stated, on being disowned by a few of her household. “I misplaced my Jewish group as a result of I used to be thought-about at greatest, unusual and peculiar, and at worst, a traitor.”
However being reduce off from one’s household can take a toll on psychological well being, say consultants.
‘My outlook hasn’t considerably modified since October 7’
In response to Faissal Sharif, a neuroscientist and doctoral scholar on the College of Oxford, mind imaging research have proven that “the expertise of social isolation triggers exercise in areas that might in any other case gentle up in response to bodily ache”.
“In different phrases, social ache shouldn’t be metaphorical – it’s biologically actual,” he advised Al Jazeera.
Households, he stated, usually type “microcultures” with their very own guidelines and positions on political points.
“The betrayal felt when love and acceptance are made conditional upon silence or complicity within the genocide could be deeply wounding. Within the context of Gaza, it provides a further layer of trauma: not solely is one bearing witness to mass struggling, but in addition paying a private value for refusing to look away,” he stated. “This results in long-lasting stress and nervousness, which may attain scientific ranges.”
To protect relationships, he stated households want to guide with “curiosity, not confrontation”.
“Particularly when the subject is one thing as painful as battle or genocide, information alone received’t transfer individuals – naming the feelings beneath, like worry, guilt, or grief, usually opens more room for actual dialogue.”
Having such conversations isn’t simple.
Jonathan Ofir, a musician who was born in an Israeli kibbutz and emigrated to Denmark within the late Nineties, stated that it was in 2009 that he realised he had “truly been indoctrinated right into a propaganda that omitted a complete Palestinian viewpoint”. He learn Pappe’s e-book, The Ethnic Cleaning of Palestine, describing that have as a “turning level” for him.
Across the similar time, he learn different Jewish and Palestinian writers who “challenged the Zionist narrative”.
“[But] I didn’t share this publicly and I didn’t share it with my household both.”
In 2014, although, throughout Israel’s battle on Gaza – the third inside seven years – he stated he felt assured sufficient to precise his vital views “outwards and publicly”.
Greater than 2,000 Palestinians – together with 551 youngsters – have been killed in the course of the 50-day battle.
He took to Fb to publish a picture of Israelis gathered on a hilltop close to Sderot watching on as Gaza burned, {a photograph} that was featured in The New York Occasions.
A relative quickly wrote him an electronic mail that concluded by recommending that Ofir “cease posting on the web”.
“It grew to become this heated debate, nevertheless it very, in a short time stopped.”
Years later, he discovered that his household in Israel had determined to keep away from speaking about politics round him “in order to not legitimise my political beliefs”, he stated.
After the October 7 assault, he checked on his prolonged household who lived close to the location of the assault. However the incursion didn’t alter his place.
“My outlook hasn’t considerably modified. However one thing modified within the Israeli society. And in that sense, you would say we is perhaps extra distant politically.”
‘That is actually the one problem these days’
Netherlands-based Daniel Friedman, 44, was raised in South Africa by his father, Steven, a tutorial and vocal critic of Zionism, and his mom, who was a part of a circle of anti-Apartheid activists.
Whereas his father stays an anti-Zionist, Friedman stated that he and his mom have more and more been clashing over Israel’s genocide in Gaza since late 2023.
“That is actually the one problem these days” affecting the conversations and bonds inside some Jewish communities, he stated.
Certainly one of their earlier arguments regarded the debunked claims that Palestinian fighters raped girls in the course of the October 7 incursion. After a number of uneasy disputes, usually battled out by ping-ponging numerous newspaper hyperlinks to help their arguments on WhatsApp, they’ve agreed to cease speaking about politics.
“I really like her, however what I battle with is that I’ve misplaced plenty of belief for her,” stated Friedman.

Throughout a earlier Israeli battle on Gaza, his mom had signed a petition calling for a ceasefire, a transfer which noticed her rejected by some relations. “I believe that had fairly an enormous impact,” he stated. “She type of went to the correct.”
He stated that he understands that for some, taking a stand means risking dropping the help of a detailed group. He, nevertheless, selected to “reduce lots of people out of my life on goal” after October 7, he stated.
Again in Vienna, Sarig is busy organising a convention of Jewish anti-Zionists in June, that includes audio system equivalent to Stephen Kapos, a UK-based Holocaust survivor, the American podcaster and commentator Katie Halper and Ronnie Barkan, a Jewish Israeli activist. Pappe too is predicted to attend.
Because the killings in Gaza proceed, her focus, she stated, is on the Palestinians making an attempt to outlive Israeli hearth.
“I’m not the sufferer,” Sarig stated.