All posts by Bob Goonin

Speakers Portfolio

Our Speakers Portfolio

Our speakers are all experienced presenters that provide a variety of perspectives including Palestinian and Anti-Zionist Jewish narratives.

All of our speakers have a thorough understanding of the Palestinian led Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement and can lead presentations and discussion of BDS.

We can also speak from a legal perspective about the Minnesota antiboycott laws and provide updates on the state-wide campaign to repeal those laws.

The descriptions below provide some insight as to the particular experiences and knowledge each brings when they present to groups.

Mohammed Mayaleh

Palestinian American attorney and activist in the Twin Cities who has lived in East Jerusalem and the West Bank.  His last visit to Palestine was in September of 2024.

Mohammed is a BA in political science and philosophy from Minnesota State University – Mankato and a JD (‘Juris Doctor’, a graduate law degree) and MBA from University of St. Thomas.

Ruben Slomianski

Ruben is a Jewish American whose family members include people who died as a result of the pograms of the early 20th Century and the Holocaust, and also now includes family members who suffer under occupation in the West Bank.

He is an artist and advocate for human rights and justice for Palestinians and has been active with Jewish Voice for Peace – Twin Cities Chapter and the MN BDS Community for several years.

Ashraf Ashkur

Ashraf is a Palestinian native who discusses growing up under occupation in the West Bank.  Through personal stories and deep experience, Ashraf discusses how power relations and the total lack of Palestinian rights under apartheid led him to student organizing, civil disobedience, and working on water management in the West Bank.

Ashraf has worked with the UN on water rights, and he can speak firsthand about how control of water is a central pillar of environmental injustice in Palestine.

Deah Kinion

Deah is the co-founder of the Rochester Solidarity with Palestine.  She is retired, an activist and passionate about public education, street protests, encouraging conversations and action in Rochester, MN.

Deah is a member of the MN BDS Community.  She was introduced to occupied Palestine injustice during the 1st Intifada, while living in Chicago.

Deah is also part of the Rochester Repair Community and makes connections with Native American land theft, genocide and injustice and Israeli apartheid.  She links fascism here and abroad and advocates for 1st Amendment Rights and exposing hasbara/colonial propaganda.

Bob Goonin

Bob shares his journey from being raised in a Jewish family not long after the holocaust, when Israel was viewed as a ‘safe refuse’ to coming to terms with the ethnic cleansing and violence upon which the state of Israel was based.  He tells the history of Israel as a Zionist, settler colonial project from its origins up through today.

Bob is a member of the MN BDS Community and Jewish Voice for Peace.  He visited Palestine in 2019 as part of an environmental justice delegation.

 

Free Speech Coalition Campaign to Repeal the Anti-Boycott Laws

The Free Speech Coalition is a group of organizations and individuals committed to the international, Palestinian-led Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement.

At present, we are working with over 35 organizations aiming to repeal laws in Minnesota that are specifically meant to squelch boycotts of Israel and Israeli companies. These anti-boycott laws are a template for future laws to restrict boycotts of big agriculture, mining and lumber interests. Bills in both the MN House and Senate have been introduced to REPEAL these anti-boycott laws in the 2026 legislative session. BOYCOTT IS FREE SPEECH!

We are organizing constituents across the state to contact their legislators to insist they vote YES on the repeal bills and protect our constitutionally protected right to boycott.

If you are part of an organization that would consider joining this coalition, let us know!  

Organizations in the Free Speech Coalition and their shared statement

Repeal the Anti-Boycott Laws – A Day on the Hill

Last spring 30 organizations joined to urge the repeal of MN Statutes 3.226 and 16C.053, which prohibit boycotts of Israel by those contracting to do business with the State of Minnesota. This resulted in the introduction of two repeal bills: in the Senate SF 3356 and in the House HF 3258.

At present, we are working in a coalition of 35+ organizations.  What we need now is a concerted effort to show up and demand REPEAL. We are asking all coalition partners to mobilize their memberships to do the following:

SAVE THE DATE: THURSDAY MARCH 5th for a Rotunda rally and citizen lobbying at the Capitol. Co-hosted by the MN BDS Community, JVP Twin Cities and RISE (Reviving Islamic Sisterhood for Empowerment). ALL DAY, come when you can. Rotunda rally 10am to 12noon.

Designate a representative (or two) from your organization for immediate and close contact, if needed. This will probably be the person(s) engaging your membership’s participation.

Questions? Set up a zoom meeting with us for more explanation and details.  Very simple and quick! A couple of meetings, instructions to your members (includes talking points!) leading up to a day on the Capitol with your fellow activists exercising free speech rights.

Let us know asap your capacity. We appreciate everyone’s intense schedules and hard work; we have built this campaign so your group can slide in easily.

If you are part of an organization that would consider joining this coalition, let us know!

Organizations in the coalition and their shared statement

Victory! SBI Divests from most Israel Bonds

In a major victory for state employees, pensioners and activists for justice in Palestine who have pressured the SBI to divest from Israel Bonds for more than a decade, the SBI has partially conceded to that demand by divesting from almost all of its Israel Bond holdings.

Israel Bonds are a direct loan to an Israeli state with a history of ethnic cleansing, occupation, and apartheid. State employees have been very clear – they do not want their pensions used to support these violations of international law and human rights. 

Abir Ismail, a Math teacher and member of the Minneapolis Federation of Teachers:

‘From Gaza to Jenin, from Hebron to Jerusalem, Palestinians live under constant occupation. Families are forcibly removed from their homes. Children are systematically deprived of food and water. Schools, hospitals, and neighborhoods are demolished. Our pensions are currently supporting the state responsible for this cruelty.  As an educator I refuse to be complicit. Public money must reflect our values, our humanity, and our care for children everywhere.’

Reflecting a massive change in popular opinion, 76% of Democrats support a ban on extending credit to Israel through the purchase of Israel Bonds

Against this backdrop, a member of the MN BDS Community submitted a data practices request in early 2025 requiring the SBI to provide the history of its trades in Israel Bonds.  Forced to do so, the SBI finally released all of its Israel Bond transactions dating back to 2009.  

That history is revealing:

  • At its peak in December of 2020, the SBI held at minimum $13.3 million of Israel bonds.
  • Since then, the SBI has sold all the Israel Bonds except one for $470,000.
  • In July 2025 a $10 million bond matured.  The SBI chose not to reinvest.
  • All other bonds purchased between 2021 and 2023 were sold at a loss totaling more than $830,000.

Community opposition — notably including public workers with pensions managed by the SBI — demanded divestment in private meetings, at public events, in testimony before the SBI, at large rallies and in civil disobedience.

In response to community demands that it divest from Israel Bonds, SBI members repeatedly defended their inaction by stating they could not do so because they must uphold their fiduciary responsibilities. 

Yet, during this same period Moody’s rating service had downgraded the Israeli government’s credit worthiness twice, the second time to a level one grade above speculative investments. In addition, Moody’s characterized Israel’s future outlook as negative.  

Speaking for the MN BDS Community, Karen Schraufnagel, a financial analyst by trade with a degree in economics, summed it up this way,  ‘While the SBI was losing money on these investments, they continued to argue publicly that fiduciary responsibility required them to make and hold these investments. The revelation of substantial and repeated losses seems to indicate that buying and holding these bonds was never about fiduciary responsibility!’

Since the protests at the quarterly SBI meeting in August 2024, the SBI has rescheduled its required quarterly meetings multiple times and moved to a hybrid format that shielded members of the board from hearing testimony directly from pensioners and community members.  

The testimonies they chose not to hear included urgent calls by the people whose savings the SBI manages and community members to end its complicity with Israel’s violations of international law and human rights.  Some of those same people spoke at Monday’s press conference.

Lucia Smith, who receives a pension through Teachers Retirement Association:

“I don’t think I’ve ever met an educator pensioner who thinks it’s okay for Israel – or any other country – to isolate and persecute a people and to traumatize and kill children.  People who work  on a daily basis with young children and teenagers treasure those precious human lives.  We don’t want our pension income tied to immoral activity.’

This unwillingness to meet in person with people advocating for divestment and to listen to their demands extended beyond the quarterly SBI meetings:

Sana Wazwaz, a member of  American Muslims for Palestine, and a member of the Palestinian families delegation expressed her outrage:

Governor Walz’ outright refusal to meet with Palestinian families in MN–while securing multiple meetings with Jewish constituents, signals blatant hypocrisy and cowardice. We ask that Walz makes his support for Palestinian human rights and divestment public, and that he takes steps to listen to his Palestinian constituents.”

Faced with both intense pressure from the community, and the reality that Israel bonds were a poor and risky investment, the SBI began, behind the scenes, steadily divesting from Israel Bonds.  This was a huge victory for all those who have taken part in the divestment campaign and a source of hope for others in the broader divestment movement.

But Israel Bonds are just the start.   According to one analysis of the SBI’s portfolio, it still holds about $5.6 billion of assets in companies identified by many, including the UN Special Rapporteur on the occupied Palestiniain territories, to be directly aiding and profiting from Israel’s genocide in Gaza. 

Fresh from this Israel Bond divestment victory, grassroots organizers are gearing up for the next struggle:

Michael Yost, a member of the Minnesota Association of Professional Employees union (MAPE) captured the upcoming stage of this struggle, “I welcome the news that the SBI has sold many of its Israel bonds, but it’s not enough. The Board must adopt a comprehensive human rights standard for its investments, and get our pension dollars out of the business of war and genocide for good.”

Additional quotes from speakers:

Barry Kleider, a member of Jewish Voice for Peace – Twin Cities:

The people of Minnesota are telling the world we do not condone Israel’s genocidal conduct in Gaza. That we will not use collective execution or land theft to grow our retirement fund. That our money will not be used to drop bombs on sleeping children. And we will not earn dividends from mass starvation.

⁨Sima Shakhsari⁩, an associate professor in the department of Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies at UMN said, ‘As a faculty member and a member of UMN Educators for Justice in Palestine, I am disgusted that our pensions are invested in the genocidal state of Israel. However, the activists who have succeeded in pushing the SBI to divest from Israeli bonds at the state level give us hope that we too can make the University of Minnesota divest from Israel.’

Chelsea Sondeland, speaking for the Anti-War Committee, ‘We at the Anti-War Committee feel victorious about this win but the fight is not over. We call on the Palestine solidarity movement to seize this moment, sharpen our demands and fight for complete divestment from apartheid Israel – just like Minnesota did with apartheid South Africa.’