Everyone is crashing out on @doctor_rahmeh, but previous thinkers also warned us against Western activists appropriating struggles to fit their own political narratives. Two come to mind.
In her book 'Can the Subaltern speak?' Gayatri Spivak argues that the colonised subject is
BREAKING: Two people have climbed to the top of the Empire State Building in New York City, holding a banner from the skyscraper's antenna reading, "When the power of love beats the love of power, the world knows peace."
As of now it's unclear how the pair reached the top of the building as police work to get them down from the spire, 1,454 feet above the ground.
Yes, Auschwitz had soccer pitches and organized matches.
Prisoners (mostly privileged functionaries, Kapos, and some political inmates) played football, often against each other or SS guards, starting around 1940-1941. Fields existed in Auschwitz I and Birkenau, including one near crematorium III and the unloading ramp. It was a restricted privilege for select prisoners, used partly for SS entertainment.