I was sitting in my office in Karachi during a quiet lunch break, scrolling through Facebook while nursing a cup of overly sweet bank canteen tea. A video from Norway appeared on my screen. A Norwegian speaker compared Palestinian resistance to Norway's armed struggle against Nazi occupation during the Second World War. I expected the usual angry exchanges beneath it.
Then I opened the comments.
An Irishman wrote that he completely agreed. A Pole compared Palestinian resistance with his country's long struggle against foreign domination. A Norwegian invoked his nation's wartime heroes. Several commenters rejected the analogy outright and defended Israel. Yet something had clearly shifted. Ordinary Europeans were no longer waiting for politicians, editors, or television panels to explain the conflict to them. They were reaching into their own national memories and drawing conclusions for themselves.
I have spent years writing about geopolitics from my desk in Karachi. Few developments strike me as more consequential than this one. Western governments spent decades shaping public understanding of the Israel Palestine conflict. Most major European states aligned diplomatically with Israel after 1967, although the degree varied from country to country. Political elites and mainstream media organizations constructed a language framework that separated legitimate states from illegitimate violence.
Israel largely occupied the category of democracy under threat. Palestinian armed groups, by contrast, occupied the rigid category of terrorism within official Western discourse.
Language matters because language decides legitimacy.
Governments understand this perfectly. During the Algerian war, French authorities called the National Liberation Front terrorists. Britain described many Irish republican militants in similar terms during the Troubles. South Africa's apartheid government branded Nelson Mandela and the African National Congress terrorists for years. History later revised many of those judgments. Political memory rarely remains obedient.
Norway occupies a special place in European historical consciousness. German forces invaded the country in April 1940. Norwegian resistance fighters actively sabotaged Nazi infrastructure and executed domestic collaborators while supporting sprawling, clandestine networks. Modern Norway celebrates those men and women as patriots. Schoolchildren learn their stories. Streets carry their names.
No Norwegian government would ever describe those fighters as terrorists.
A problem emerges when Norwegians themselves begin applying the same historical template to Palestine.
Social media accelerated this process. Twenty years ago, a Norwegian citizen mostly encountered information filtered through national broadcasters and major corporate newspapers. Algorithms now expose people to raw images from Gaza within minutes. Casual users watch destroyed apartment blocks on their phones while commuting home from Oslo or Bergen. Later, they remember stories their grandparents told about occupation.
Official narratives lose their monopoly under those conditions.
I think many Western policymakers still underestimate the scale of this transformation. They continue to behave as though public opinion functions as it did in the 1990s. Press conferences and carefully crafted statements no longer settle arguments. A schoolteacher in Cork, a dockworker in Rotterdam, or a retired engineer in Trondheim can publicly challenge official language before thousands of people online.
Governments cannot easily recapture that authority.
Critics of the Norwegian speaker raised familiar objections in the comments. Some argued that Palestinians rejected peace offers. Others insisted that Palestine never existed as a sovereign state. Several pointed to attacks against civilians and rejected any comparison with European resistance movements. Those disagreements matter. They will continue.
Yet I think many observers are looking in the wrong direction.
The truly explosive development is not that Europeans disagree about Palestine. Europeans have disagreed for decades. The explosive development is that growing numbers of Europeans now frame the conflict through their own historical experience, completely bypassing the language supplied by their governments.
Political scientists call this collective memory. Nations construct stories about themselves. Those stories shape foreign policy preferences for generations. Ireland remembers colonial rule. Poland remembers partition and occupation. Norway remembers resistance. Serbia remembers Kosovo. Historical memory rarely stays confined within national borders.
Memory travels.
From Karachi, I find Western reactions oddly familiar because Pakistanis routinely interpret international events through the direct inherited experience of colonialism and partition. Few people here wait for Washington, London, or Brussels to define justice. Europeans increasingly appear to be doing something similar. Many are beginning to view Palestine through inherited memories of occupation instead of government press releases.
Many have stopped outsourcing moral judgment to political elites. Frankly, I suspect Western governments are deeply frightened by this shift. Political authority rests partly on controlling national stories.
Once citizens begin independently comparing Gaza to anti Nazi resistance, or colonial struggles, governments face a dilemma. They can condemn those comparisons, but condemnation risks appearing censorious. They can ignore them, yet silence allows the comparisons to spread.
Neither option looks particularly attractive.
Facebook comment sections are usually chaotic places. Most days they contain little more than insults mixed with bizarre conspiracy theories, where people argue with strangers while waiting for buses. Yet sometimes, amid the noise, something larger becomes visible. A Norwegian invokes wartime resistance. An Irishman agrees. A Pole joins in. Someone else fiercely objects.
History leaves the classroom and enters the feed.
European governments still possess military power alongside deep diplomatic influence, but institutional authority no longer guarantees control over memory. Citizens now carry entire archives of historical images in their pockets. They compare and connect, reinterpreting geopolitical realities at astonishing speed. Political leaders may discover that recovering control over those memories proves harder than shaping them in the first place.
I finished my tea and immediately returned to my desk. Payment messages were piling up in my inbox. Branches do not stop sending SWIFT queries because Europeans are arguing about history on Facebook. The argument continued without me. Thousands of Europeans were still debating occupation and legitimacy long after the video ended.
Something had escaped into the public sphere. I doubt anyone can put it back.