When the World Sleeps; Stories, Words and Wounds of Palestine: Francesca 
Albanese’s Courageous Witness Against Genocide and Silence - CounterPunch.org


Francesca Albanese’s When the World Sleeps (originally published in Italian as 
Quando il Mondo Dorme) is not just another book on Palestine. It is a profound 
moral and intellectual intervention at a time when much of the world has chosen 
to look away from one of the most documented genocides in modern history. As 
the UN Special Rapporteur on the Occupied Palestinian Territories, Albanese has 
consistently refused to soften her language or dilute her analysis. This book 
stands as the culmination of that courage — a work that combines rigorous legal 
scholarship with deeply personal testimony, forcing readers to confront the 
human reality behind the statistics.

Structured around ten intimate and political portraits, each chapter revolves 
around a different individual whose life has shaped Albanese’s understanding of 
Palestine. These are not abstract case studies. They are windows into the human 
cost of a decades-long colonial project.

The book opens with the heartbreaking story of six-year-old Hind Rajab, killed 
by Israeli forces in January 2024 along with her family in Gaza. Albanese uses 
Hind’s tragedy as a devastating entry point into the reality faced by 
Palestinian children under occupation. She writes poignantly: “Hind was not 
collateral damage. She was the target. A six-year-old girl, trapped in a car, 
begging for help while the world watched and did nothing.” Through Hind, 
Albanese forces us to confront the moral weight of a system that treats 
Palestinian children as collateral damage — a generation born into violence, 
denied childhood, and too often denied life itself.

Subsequent chapters introduce readers to ordinary Palestinians whose resilience 
shines through unimaginable suffering. One powerful portrait follows Abu 
Hassan, a tour guide in Jerusalem, revealing the daily humiliations of life 
under occupation in East Jerusalem — the checkpoints, the constant 
surveillance, the bureaucratic cruelty designed to make life unbearable. 
Albanese captures the suffocating reality: “Every day is a negotiation with 
power — a checkpoint, a permit, a soldier’s whim. This is not life. This is 
managed existence.”

Another chapter centers on George, a bookstore owner, juxtaposing the vibrant 
but besieged Palestinian cultural life in East Jerusalem with the false 
normalcy of West Jerusalem. Albanese reflects: “Culture is resistance. Books 
are weapons when words are the only things they cannot fully take from you.” 
These stories humanize the statistics, showing how occupation infiltrates every 
aspect of daily existence — from movement to memory to simple acts of living.

Albanese also turns her lens toward remarkable Jewish voices who have 
influenced her thinking. She pays tribute to Eyal Weizman, the forensic 
architect whose work with Forensic Architecture has exposed Israeli state 
violence through spatial analysis, revealing how architecture itself becomes a 
tool of domination. Gabor Maté, the renowned trauma expert, helps Albanese 
understand the intergenerational wounds of both Palestinians and Israelis, 
offering profound insights into how trauma is transmitted across generations 
and how it shapes political behavior. And Alon Confino, the late Holocaust 
historian, challenges simplistic narratives and insists that the Palestinian 
case must be treated as a political issue to be resolved through international 
law, not reduced to a humanitarian crisis.

The book also features Palestinian artists and activists, such as Malak Mattar, 
whose artwork graces the cover and whose story illustrates the power of 
creative resistance under siege. Mattar’s journey from a child survivor of 
multiple wars to an internationally recognized artist becomes a testament to 
the indomitable Palestinian spirit. Albanese writes of her: “Art is how we 
refuse to disappear.”

What makes When the World Sleeps particularly devastating is Albanese’s refusal 
to let the international community off the hook. She documents not only Israeli 
violations — the apartheid system, the collective punishment, the deliberate 
destruction of life-sustaining infrastructure — but also the active and passive 
complicity of Western governments and institutions that have enabled this 
horror. Her critique of the United Nations itself, the very body she serves, is 
unflinching. She reveals an institution too often paralyzed by power politics, 
where the protection of the powerful consistently outweighs the defense of the 
oppressed. Albanese writes: “The UN was built to prevent the repetition of 
horrors like the Holocaust. Today, it stands by as another horror unfolds, 
paralyzed by the very powers that created it.”

Albanese writes with clarity, compassion, and intellectual precision. She does 
not shy away from the emotional weight of what she has witnessed — the pain of 
Palestinian mothers, the resilience of children in rubble, the quiet defiance 
of those who continue to resist. Yet she never allows emotion to replace 
rigorous legal reasoning. The book is both a personal journey and a political 
indictment. It forces the reader to confront a simple but devastating question: 
how long will the world continue to sleep while a genocide unfolds in real time?

In an era when speaking plainly about Israeli crimes can cost careers, 
reputations, and personal safety, Albanese’s steadfastness is remarkable. She 
has faced relentless smears, character assassinations, and even U.S. sanctions 
for simply doing her job. The fact that she continues — undeterred, precise, 
and morally grounded — makes her work all the more powerful. When the World 
Sleeps stands as both testimony and warning: silence in the face of genocide is 
not neutrality — it is complicity.

This is essential reading for anyone seeking to understand not only what is 
happening in Gaza, but why it has been allowed to happen for so long. Albanese 
strips away the propaganda, the legal sophistry, and the false equivalences. 
What remains is the naked face of settler-colonial violence and the moral 
failure of the international system that enables it.

In a time of carefully calibrated statements and performative concern, 
Francesca Albanese has chosen clarity over comfort. When the World Sleeps is a 
powerful reminder that the world may try to sleep, but books like this ensure 
that the truth refuses to stay buried. It deserves the widest possible 
readership — not only for what it reveals about Palestine, but for what it 
demands of all of us.

Read it. Share it. Let it disturb your sleep — because the world has slept for 
far too long.

This Book Review was originally published in Thinking Palestine, a project of 
Palestine Chronicle 



Michael Leonardi lives in Italy and can be reached at [email protected]

  


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