The Queensland government has been the first government in Australia to ban the phrase:
'From the river to the sea’ is being outlawed in Queensland. How will the slogan’s ban work, and will it be challenged? – see: https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2026/mar/05/queensland-pro-palestinian-phrase-ban-river-to-sea-laws-ntwnfb?CMP=Share_AndroidApp_Other
One might wonder why the clumsy name of this bill - Fighting Antisemitism and Keeping Guns Out of the Hands of Terrorists and Criminals Amendment Bill 2026 - might not have alerted the politicians to its inherent unfortunate awkwardness both in its expression and implementation. Were all participants involved in passing this law blinded by their enthusiasm to be seen to do something to stop the madness of extremists, a strategy that only appears to stimulate ever more crazy extremes that bring the banned statement to the attention of a greater public?
When first heard - or was it read? - the ‘From the river to the sea’ phrase meant nothing unusual. One originally thought that it might be a community fun run, for such events do have similar titles:
City to Bay, in Adelaide
Bridge to Brisbane, in Brisbane;
Jetty to Jetty, at Clontarf, Queensland;
City to Surf, in Sydney;
Beach to Beach, in Sydney;
Sutherland to Surf, in Sydney;
Pub to Pub, in Lancefield, Victoria;
(see runguides.com).
Why not River to Sea?
Now, with the passing of this bill, one lives under the threat of being challenged, if not incarcerated, by being heard to utter the phrase that could naively suggest fun times, if someone interprets the words as being offensive. It seems that dealing with the extremities of antisocial action keeps everyone on edge, literally and metaphorically. Making new laws is one way to manage these matters, to try to change actions; the other more subtle approach is for societies to memorialize these awful times, to preserve the memory of the horror for recognition, respect, and deterrence.
designboom.com has recently published details of a new Jewish museum in Lithuania.
https://www.designboom.com/architecture/lithuanias-lost-shtetl-jewish-museum-takes-shape-as-a-gleaming-clustered-village/. The text explains:
The museum has been realized in honor of a village and its Jewish community that vanished in August 1941. It draws its meaning from the execution of 664 residents in nearby forests and from the disappearance of a culture that had shaped the town for generations.
The project has been conceived as a memorial park. . . . where the architects have assembled a cluster of abstract houses with hip roofs. Each volume approximates the scale of a single family dwelling. Together they form a compact settlement that suggests a village, or ‘shtetl’.
The horrors of these terrible acts are on display for all to see, remember, and learn from in this interesting project.
It was on the visit to Edinburgh’s Palestinian Museum - PME, (see: https://www.paih.org/europes-first-and-only-palestinian-museum-opens-in-edinburgh), that one was first confronted with a large map of Palestine placed on the floor that illustrated the villages that have vanished; more than 600 were identified. The symbolism of trampling over this country was not missed as one respectfully attempted not to step on the graphic presentation. When seeking out this map online on a later occasion, one discovered some differences in the number of villages that were destroyed, with figures of 400, 540, and the like, with the AI summary safely suggesting that the figure was ‘400 to 600.’ One map in Wikipedia came with an itemised schedule of ‘around 400’ named villages, so one could conservatively say that at least 400 villages were razed, along with the disappearance of a culture – see:
A very IMPORTANT MAP showing the massive destruction of Palestinian villages and cities (English) - Palestine Remembered
https://share.google/e5T0KFQVNiwYMphxQ
Comprehensive Map of Depopulated Palestinian Villages from al-Nakba : r/MapPorn
https://share.google/0poTJKb7Z5aMc4UL0
Muslim Players. - Historical map of Palestine before 1948
https://share.google/iqMbqMsy30NypPN8D
A map of Palestine from 1926, published in Germany. The orange spots are Jewish settlements. : r/MapPorn
https://share.google/TBzESshTF0mTHQxvk.
List of towns and villages depopulated during the 1947–1949 Palestine war
There seems to be a great discrepancy in the remembrance of loss. One Lithuanian village generates a new museum; 400 villages get forgotten, with very few special museums being built to record and remember these clearances. International remembrance seems to concentrate of other events, with the proliferation of Jewish museums and laws that place a ban on speech that would remind the world of these terrible times in Palestine. Might any reference to the number 400 soon be banned?
One does have to wonder why atrocities experienced by one group are remembered in numerous major museums across the world - lest we forget - while this group perpetuates similar horrors on others, with the world only wanting to legislate against honest protest about this situation which is labelled 'hate speech,’ as though one has to 'love' the horror exposed by all the museums that is now being repeated. It is a position enforced by laws identifying such action as antisemitism, etc., when a reasonable person might see things differently, otherwise, and understand why ‘the river to the sea’ can be a meaningful, heartfelt cry, a lament remembering horrid, shocking suffering and loss that lingers as a yearning for home – see: Peter Read, Returning to nothing: the meaning of lost places, Cambridge University press, 1996.
When the world can recognise the terrible trauma of one village, why can it not see the same horrors in the loss of at least 400, and the awful events that continue today? Surely we build museums to remind us never to repeat these atrocities, not to act as text books to help train others to accomplish future similar events – lest we forget how best to achieve these shocking outcomes? Will we ever learn?

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