A group of pro-Palestine Fremont County, Wyoming, residents have been gathering at least weekly to protest Israelâs counterattack on Hamas-controlled Gaza and to urge for an instant ceasefire. Â
They gathered with âDemand Justiceâ signs Wednesday morning near Landerâs Centennial Park.
From his home in Jerusalem, longtime Wyoming attorney and Israeli citizen Mike Krampner â who holds a Ph.D. in Jewish history â laughed at the protesters, saying they donât understand whatâs happening half a world away from them.
âYou donât understand this neighborhood. This is not like Fremont County,â he said Thursday via a video call. Â
Krampner unfolded a history of the connection between Jewish people and the land of Israel and the struggles that plague the region now, then took on the protestorsâ claims one by one. Â
And Those Are âŚÂ
Fremont County Ceasefire Now protest groups range from about seven people to 30, Sam Dahnert, lead co-organizer of the group, told Cowboy State Daily on Wednesday. Â
Some Landerites are receptive or respectful. Some have responded harshly, Dahnert said.
The groupâs ideal outcome is an instant ceasefire, according to a statement on the groupâs website. Â
But underpinning that are bold claims about Israelâs history and philosophy, and the protestorsâ refusal to condemn the Hamas terrorist attacks of Oct. 7 that sparked the war.
âWe understand that Zionism is a colonial project that co-opts a carefully fabricated Indigenous Jewish identity to justify the mass killings and displacement of Indigenous Palestinians,â reads the statement, which Dahnert wrote along with other group members.
The group condemns âZionist violence,â but says its call to end violence in Palestine âis not about condemning Hamas, but instead condemning the violent colonial forces that created the organization in the first place.â Â
Hamas is the elected and long-ruling government of Gaza. Both the U.S. and Israel classify it as a terrorist group. Â

A Rocky Marriage With This LandÂ
âOh boy,â said Krampner after reading the groupâs statement. Â
Zionism isnât a 20th century colonial project, he said. Scattered and displaced Jews prayed for 1,800 years to return to their land after the Roman government kicked most of them out of it starting in about 135 A.D. as punishment for Israelitesâ revolts against Roman oppression. Â
The Jewsâ history is a long story of fighting to reach, possess and retain Israel starting in about 1400 B.C. Â
âThereâs a long tradition between Israel and the Jews. As a matter of fact, in about 10 days the world â the Christian world â is going to celebrate the birth of a Jewish guy, in Bethlehem. Which is in Israel,â said Krampner. âAnd yet the people who hate us say there were no Jews here until 1948. Do you understand how stupid that is?âÂ
Dahnert, however, said heâs a Jewish American. He told Cowboy State Daily he is not ashamed of his faith, but is âashamed of the things people do in the name of my faith.â Â
He also specified repeatedly that his opinions are not the same as the groupâs as a whole. For the purposes of this story, Dahnertâs quotes reflect his opinion and the ceasefire groupâs statement reflects the group. Â
Krampner said if Dahnert is Jewish, that makes his groupâs attacks on âZionismâ appear incongruous. Â
âIf he ever picked up a Jewish prayer book â I donât know what he reads â but the ones in Hebrew constantly call for a return to Zion,â said Krampner. âFor 1,800 years they prayed for return to Jerusalem along with other things like a little bit of rain in the summer and food to eat, and not being murdered, things like that.âÂ
Violence Fueled By War LordsÂ
Fremont County Ceasefire Now (FCCN) asserts that the Israeli state is a product of violent colonial forces from the 20th century, a British land grab, and animosity against âIndigenous Palestinians.âÂ
âWe cannot be complicit in the genocide of Palestinian people, just as we cannot be complacent in the racist and colonial war against Black, Indigenous and migrant populations occurring right here on North American lands â violence that is fueled by the intermixing of the United States and Israeli military industrial complexes,â says the groupâs statement. Â
The Ottoman Empire ruled much of the Middle East for Centuries, until the Allied Powers of World War I broke the land up starting in 1918. Â
Speaking for himself, Dahnert was reluctant to say what he would have done differently from the Allied Powers, but that, âThe British and Colonial powers that divided up the land following the fall of the Ottoman Empire probably didnât have the peopleâs best interests in mind.âÂ
Buckle Up
Krampnerâs retort came as a history lesson.Â
Even before the empireâs fall, well-to-do European Jews started buying up lands in the region of Israel in the late 1800s, Krampner said, adding that many landowners in the region were wealthy Syrians and Turks who had land there to sell, but lived elsewhere. Â
In the 1920s and â30s, Jews flooded into the then-British-controlled region. Â
On the heels of the booming economy the Jews caused with their influx, Arabs also came from Syria, Lebanon, Jordan and Egypt to find work. Â
âA lot of people say, âIâm a Palestinian,â (yet) their people came here the same time Jews came here from Europe,â said Krampner. Â
The U.S. took up the Israelitesâ cause after the Holocaust. Britain, harrowed from World War II and from conflict that followed it, referred the problem of the Palestine region to the United Nations, which voted in 1947 to partition the area. Â
The UN gave the Jews Israel, and it carved out Jordan as an Arab state.Â
When the British Army withdrew May 14, 1948, it did so to the rumbling of gunfire from immediate fighting between Jews and Arabs. Â
âWhat did the Arabs say? âYouâre out of your mind, we donât want these stinking Jews in the Middle East,ââ Krampner said.
So, Egypt, Syria, Jordan and Iraq invaded. âTo the surprise of the whole world, Israel fought them off,â he said. Â
Many Arabs fled Israel following its victory, he said: âThey refused to be ruled by Jews. To them that was like, the height of degradation.â Â
When Egypt rejected them, the fleeing Arabs settled in Gaza, Krampner added. Â
Krampner said Israelis want to live in peace with their neighbors, but they want to be recognized, reckoned with, and respected as a people who have a right to occupy their state, and to survive. Â

âGenocideâÂ
FCCN is calling Israelâs severe response to Hamasâ Oct. 7 attack âgenocide.âÂ
Reuters reports that at least 17,487 Palestinians have been killed since Oct. 7, while Hamasâ invaders into Israel killed 1,200 people initially. Â
âA humanitarian disaster in Gaza is worsening by the hour with most of its 2.3 million people homeless and trapped in a tiny, embattled coastal enclave, with little food, water, medical care, fuel or secure shelter,â says the Dec. 9 Reuters report.Â
These statistics are not about valuing certain lives over others, says FCCNâs statement, adding: âInstead, it is about critically naming that a colonial, war-based society breeds this violence for everyone; and Israel embodies this colonial violence in mentality and practice.âÂ
The HatredÂ
Krampner said the retaliation campaign and the effort to rescue 140 hostages trapped in Gazaâs underground tunnels, including a 10-month-old baby, are not genocide attempts, but an unfortunate reality of war and of shattered trust between neighboring states. Â
He also said most Americans cannot comprehend the hatred that Hamas, the more radically antisemitic of the two main Gazan political parties, has for Jews.Â
He said that rather than use its foreign aid to cultivate infrastructure and care for its people, Hamas has diverted much of it into fighting Jews. Hamas launches a couple thousand missiles into Israel each year, he said. Â
âItâs funny how some people want a complete ceasefire just as Hamas leadership is being surrounded and about to be killed,â said Krampner. âIf thereâs a ceasefire now, that allows Hamas to rebuild, doesnât it?Â
âWe cannot live with Hamas on our borders. If Hamas would all pick up and go to Algeria or something, maybe (ceasefire would be possible).âÂ
Krampner pointed to a sentence in FCCNâs statement that reads: âWe demand an end to the Israeli occupation of Indigenous Lands.âÂ
That means ejecting Jews from the Middle East, he said, which means âget those stinking Jews out of Israel.â Â
âRacistâÂ
A key tenet of FCCNâs statement is linking Israeli conflict with Palestinians with American racism and the American Indian reservation system, which the statement likens to a âcolonial war.â Â
Being complicit in âthe genocide of Palestinian peopleâ is unconscionable, as is being complacent âin the racist and colonial war against Black, Indigenous and migrant populations occurring right here on North American lands,â says the statement. It attributes violence in both arenas to dishonoring of some groupsâ sovereignty, and specifically references the American Indian tribal members in Fremont County, which include the Northern Arapaho and Eastern Shoshone Tribes of the Wind River Indian Reservation. Â
Zionism thrives upon âblatant racism and Islamophobia against Palestinian people,â the statement says. Â
His Beautiful EnglishÂ
Israel is a liberal democracy with freedom of speech and religion and no official discriminations against Arabs who are Israeli citizens, Krampner said. Â
Arabs who are not citizens and seek entry (which thousands did daily for work before Oct. 7) are subject to strict border control measures, he said, adding thatâs because Jihadi suicide bombers kept coming into Israel in the early 2000s. Â
âBut Israel is the least racist country in the Middle East,â he said. âIf youâre Black in Lebanon or Jordan or Syria, youâre going to have a tough time.â Â
Krampner went with a friend to pay a municipal court parking ticket in Jerusalem the other day. The judge was Black, an Ethiopian Jew. Â
His favorite teller at his bank is an Arab who speaks âbeautiful English.â Krampner speaks Hebrew but, a Brooklyn-raised Jew, prefers English for complicated transactions, he said. Â
The war, he reiterated, is not due to race, but to perpetual tensions and Hamasâ jihad. Â
LGBTQ2SÂ
Some FCCN members are âLGBTQ2S,â the groupâs statement says, arguing that Indigenous and LGBTQ2S people endure violence daily in Fremont County. Â
While LGBTQ-related violence is rarely reported in the county, the Wind River Indian Reservation does have a high violent crime rate. Â
The â2Sâ in the initialism stands for two-spirited, a term some American Indian tribes have used to describe gay and gender nonconforming people. Â
Again, Krampner pointed to Israelâs law compared to those of the military states and dictatorships around it. Â
âThereâs only one country in the Middle East where itâs not a crime to engage in gay sex,â he said. âAnd that country is Israel.â Â
Iran sentenced two LGBTQ activists to death last year. CBS news gave a rare firsthand account in 2015 of the Syrian government throwing two gay men â blindfolded, bound, weeping and repentant â off a hotel building. Egyptian investigators hunted down and arrested homosexuals this year via fake social media accounts, DW reported. Â
Movements like Queers For Palestine and other pro-LGBTQ, pro-Palestinian groups have inspired a dark wartime joke in Israel. It hinges on reports of Hamas throwing spies or homosexuals from tall buildings.Â
âSome Israelis joke ⌠weâve done the gay people a favor with the disruption of Gaza, because now thereâs not enough high buildings left to throw them off of,â Krampner said. Â
âOpen-Air PrisonâÂ
FCCNâs rise is simultaneous with numerous pro-Palestinian groups all over the Western world. Â
Thirty-three Harvard student organizations dispatched a statement Oct. 10 â just three days after Hamasâ attacks, blaming Israel for the violence. The events âdid not occur in a vacuum,â the statement said, adding that they came from Palestinians in Gaza having to live in an âopen-air prison.âÂ
Israelâs strict border control may give people the impression that Gazans, wedged between Israel, the sea, and Egypt, are confined, Krampner said. But he called it âa deliberately told lie.â Â
Rather, the lack of services to people in Gaza before the war were due to Hamasâ war-hungry and irresponsible governance style, Krampner added. Â
Gazaâs population swelled from about 200,000 in 1948 to 2.1 million this year. Hamas has a military of 35,000. It runs its own schools and hospitals and receives foreign aid. Â
âIf weâre committing genocide, weâre doing a very bad job of it,â Krampner said. Â
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.





