logo
Will Israelis Repent for Gaza Genocide Re-Humanization Takes Courage

Will Israelis Repent for Gaza Genocide Re-Humanization Takes Courage

Canada Standard3 days ago

The genocide in Gaza continues unabated as I write these lines. Belatedly, a few Israelis have begun decrying the starvation and mass murder that their armya peoples armyhas perpetrated since October 2023. These acts, supported by the majority of the countrys Jews, exceed in cruelty and brutality the violence that the IDF routinely used against Palestinians since before the unilateral declaration of independence in 1948. Dispossession, deportation, and death have been their tragic fate.
The difference this time is not only in the degree of violence. Israeli leaders no longer hide behind diplomatic discourse and euphemisms. Their plan is clear: make Greater Israel *goyimrein*, cleansed of non-Jews. Residents of Gaza and the West Bank are being forced to leave their land and move elsewhere. This plan has long been discreetly envisaged by successive Israeli governments, but the fear of international sanctions prevented them from acting it out. Today, 82% of Israelis support the definitive expulsion of the Palestinians. However, consistent American and Israeli efforts to bribe countries to accept the exiled Palestinians have so far not borne fruit.
One cant help recalling the Evian international conference of 1938, convened in order to resettle European Jews being expelled by the Nazis. Western delegates expressed sympathy for the Jews, but only the Dominican Republic agreed to accept 100,000 people (in practice, no more than a few hundred could actually reach the distant island in the Caribbean). With no country willing to take in Jews, Nazi authorities devised plans for the final solution of the Jewish problem. Millions of European Jews, alongside other inferior people, were systematically murdered between 1941 and 1945.
The enthusiastic adherents of National Judaism (dati-leumi in Hebrew) and their allies in other strata of Israeli citizenry believe they can impose their will on the Palestinians. This relatively small segment of the Israeli population, whose core consists of settlers in the West Bank, has become the most dynamic and unswerving actor in the making of Israels Palestinian policy. Quite a few of these wearers of knitted kippahs occupy key positions in the Israeli state. The tail is successfully wagging the dog.
Most Israelis continue to enjoy life, go to the gym, attend meetings of Weight Watchers, and otherwise take care of themselves. The starvation and massacre of tens of thousands of civiliansmostly women and childrenin Gaza, and of hundreds of people in the West Bank, all of which their spouses, fathers and siblings do in their name, leave most of them indifferent. Israel has dehumanized and demonized the Palestinians for decades, and this dehumanization has become brazen in the wake of the Hamas raid in October 2023.
Max Blumenthal recently characterized Israeli society as satanic. But Israelis may one day wake up from their moral slumber and realize that Palestinians are human. Since the utter destruction of Gaza by Israel makes it impossible to house the two million survivors in their former homes turned in a demolition site, Israelisin an act of collective repentanceshould take them in. They should treat them as fellow humans and help them cure the terrible traumas caused by the IDF. They should compensate Palestinians for lost property, allowing them to stand on their own feet rather than depend on charity. This long-overdue act of repentance should create a society where everyonefrom the river to the seawill enjoy equal rights.
This re-humanization is a challenge, but it is the only scenario that would free both the oppressed and the oppressors from the burden of incessant brutality. Quite a few people will qualify the proposed act of repentance as suicidal. Peter Beinart, in his recent book Being Jewish after the Destruction of Gaza, points to other historical examplesIreland, the American South, and, of course, South Africaand acknowledges that the rulers often perceive equality as an existential threat: White South Africans were just as afraid of being thrown into the sea as Israeli Jews are now. Yet, he argues, according to numerous studies, oppression fuels violence, whereas equal rights and the possibility of political change mitigate it.
Since the late 19th century, Jewish intellectuals saw that the hubris and chutzpah of the Zionist settlers would create a death trap for the colonizers and the colonized alike. Ahad Ha-Am was an icon of cultural Zionism, as opposed to its political variety that has replaced all others. He published the following warning in 1891:
I recently came to the Land of Israel and saw with my own eyes that we did not find an empty land here, but a nation full of life, dwelling in it, and loving the Land of Israel no less than we do. We are accustomed to thinking that the Arab is a wild Ishmaelite and we fail to notice that the Arab, too, is a human being, with feelings, and he senses very well that his land is being taken from him by force.
Critical voices both inside and outside of Israel portray the Zionist experiment as a tragic mistake. The sooner it is ended, the better for all humanity. In practice, this would mean guaranteeing equality for all inhabitants and transforming the existing discriminatory regime into a state of all its citizens. But Israeli society is conditioned to see such projects as an existential threat and a rejection of Israels right to exist. The sacrifice of tens of thousands of civilian lives to ensure this right has not shaken this ideological mantra. Beinart observes that In most of the Jewish world today, rejecting Jewish statehood is a greater heresy than rejecting Judaism itself. We have built an altar and thrown an entire [Palestinian] society on the flames.
True, Beinart in New York and the author of these lines in Montreal can afford to indulge in dreams of equality. We are not the ones to face the consequences. But there are more and more people in Israel who see the moral and practical dead end of continuing the oppression and dispossession.
Jewish tradition teaches that it is never too late to change course, to repent, and to make amends. Of course, to make such a sharp turn requires courage. A well-known Jewish insight is quite clear about it: Who is the greatest of all heroes? He who turns an enemy into a friend. Most people in Israel vehemently reject as exilic this traditional Jewish wisdom that upholds peace as the supreme value. They see in it only comfort of the weak. But, in fact, this is what real strength is all about.
Yakov M. Rabkin

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Man charged with hate crime in Boulder attack on ‘Zionist people' appears in federal court
Man charged with hate crime in Boulder attack on ‘Zionist people' appears in federal court

Toronto Star

time8 hours ago

  • Toronto Star

Man charged with hate crime in Boulder attack on ‘Zionist people' appears in federal court

DENVER (AP) — A man who told investigators he was driven by a desire 'to kill all Zionist people' when he threw Molotov cocktails at demonstrators raising awareness of Israeli hostages appeared briefly in federal court for the first time Friday to face a hate crime charge. Mohamed Sabry Soliman, 45, sat in the jury box in a Denver courtroom dressed in a green jail uniform and his wrists handcuffed, a U.S. Marshal sitting in the row behind him. Listening to the proceedings in Arabic through an interpreter, he answered 'yes' and 'I understand' in Arabic as the magistrate judge explained his rights.

Israel 'operated clans' in Gaza, Netanyahu says, after being accused of arming Palestinian militias
Israel 'operated clans' in Gaza, Netanyahu says, after being accused of arming Palestinian militias

CBC

time8 hours ago

  • CBC

Israel 'operated clans' in Gaza, Netanyahu says, after being accused of arming Palestinian militias

Social Sharing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel has "operated clans" in Gaza in a video published on social media Thursday after an opposition leader accused him of arming Palestinian militias in order to bolster opposition to Hamas. When asked about the allegations made by Avigdor Lieberman, leader of one of the opposition parties in the Knesset and a former defence minister, and whether he made them for political gain, Netanyahu said:. "What did Lieberman leak? ... That with the advice of security forces, we have operated clans in Gaza who oppose Hamas. What's wrong with that? It is only good. It only saves IDF soldiers' lives." In the video posted on his Facebook and X accounts, Netanyahu said releasing details of Israel's actions is "benefiting only Hamas," according to a translation of the original Hebrew from Reuters. In the wake of Lieberman's comments, The Times of Israel reported that Israel had transferred weapons to Yasser Abu Shabab, a leader of a large clan in the Rafah area that is among those accused of looting humanitarian aid. Rafah is now under full Israeli army control. The reported cited a defence source. The New York Times reported similar details citing two Israeli officials close to the matter who told the paper that Israeli authorities had provided "support, including weapons, to Yasser Abu Shabab." Abu Shabab denies receiving arms from Israel A few hours after Netanyahu's video was posted on social media, Abu Shabab posted a statement on Facebook in which he claimed Israeli media reports were false and denied that he received weapons from Israel. "We categorically reject these accusations and consider them a blatant attempt to distort the image of a grassroots force born from suffering—one that stood up to injustice, looting, and corruption," the statement read. It went on to say that the weapons his group does use are from the "support of our own people." Abu Shabab said his clan would never be "a tool of the occupation" and called on Israel to present evidence to Palestinian people and the media. Abu Shabab previously said that he was building up a force to secure aid deliveries into some parts of Gaza. Aid sites shuttered on Friday Meanwhile, aid distribution in Gaza was halted on Friday after the U.S. and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) said overcrowding had made it unsafe to continue operations in the latest disruption to its troubled relief effort. With severe food shortages plaguing the coastal enclave, fighting continued in many areas of the Gaza Strip. Local health authorities said 16 Palestinians were killed in Israeli strikes, mostly in northern Gaza, while the Israeli army said four of its soldiers were killed and five were wounded by an explosion in a building in Khan Younis to the south. WATCH | GHF aid sites close due to 'safety concerns': Gaza aid group closes distribution centres over safety concerns 8 hours ago Duration 3:33 Ten Palestinians were killed by Israeli tank fire in Gaza on Friday, local health authorities said, as a U.S.- and Israeli-backed group handing out aid in the enclave said all its distribution sites were closed until further notice. In a day of confusing messaging, the GHF first announced its distribution sites in southern Gaza were closed then it revealed that it had actually handed out food, before saying that it had had to close its gates as a precautionary measure. "The distribution was conducted peacefully and without incident; however, it was paused due to excessive crowding that made it unsafe to proceed," it said in a statement. As Palestinians across the war-ravaged Gaza Strip marked the start of one of Islam's most important holidays, Eid al-Adha, Israeli forces continued military operations that they say are needed to root out and destroy Hamas militants. The Israeli military said four soldiers were killed in a booby-trapped building, which brought the army death toll to eight since the start of June. Eid prayers held amid rubble The army earlier issued new evacuation orders for areas in and around Gaza City, warning of an imminent attack. With many residential areas of Gaza reduced to rubble by months of fighting, locals held Eid al-Adha prayer services in the open, next to bombed-out mosques and homes. "As you can see, we are holding Eid prayers, while the bombing, shelling and planes are ongoing," said Umm Mahmoud in Khan Younis. The United Nations has warned that most of Gaza's 2.3 million population is at risk of famine after an 11-week Israeli blockade of the enclave, with the rate of young children suffering from acute malnutrition nearly tripling. The GHF began distributing food packages in Gaza at the end of May, overseeing a new model of aid distribution that the United Nations says is neither impartial nor neutral. It suspended operations on Wednesday and asked the Israeli military to review security protocols after hospital officials said more than 80 people had been shot dead and hundreds wounded near distribution points between June 1 and 3. After the two-month ceasefire broke down in March, Israel blockaded aid supplies into Gaza for 11 weeks, prompting a famine warning from a global hunger monitor. Israel, which has only partially lifted the blockade since, vets all aid into Gaza and accuses Hamas of stealing some of it, something the militant group denies. WATCH l Friend of Weinstein, Haggai relieved family gets 'peace of mind': Israel has re-intensified an offensive against Gaza's dominant Hamas militant group since breaking a two-month-old ceasefire in March in a war triggered by the cross-border attack on Oct. 7, 2023, led by Hamas, considered a terrorist organization by several countries including Canada. The initial attacks killed 1,200 people in Israel, including several Canadian citizens. Some 251 hostages were also taken, with around a couple dozen believed still alive, according to the Israeli government. While many of the remaining were freed in periodic prisoner exchanges, the bodies of other hostages have been repatriated, including Canadian citizen Judih Weinstein and her husband just this week. Israel's military campaign in response to those attacks has killed over 54,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza health authorities.

Man charged with hate crime in Boulder attack on ‘Zionist people' to appear in federal court
Man charged with hate crime in Boulder attack on ‘Zionist people' to appear in federal court

Toronto Star

time11 hours ago

  • Toronto Star

Man charged with hate crime in Boulder attack on ‘Zionist people' to appear in federal court

DENVER (AP) — A man who told investigators he was driven by a desire 'to kill all Zionist people' when he threw Molotov cocktails at demonstrators raising awareness of Israeli hostages is set to make his first appearance in federal court on Friday to face a hate crime charge. Mohamed Sabry Soliman, 45, is accused in Sunday's attack on the weekly event in Boulder, which investigators say he planned for a year. The federal case is being adjudicated in Denver, but Soliman was also charged in state court in Boulder Thursday with attempted murder and assault counts as well as counts related to the 18 Molotov cocktails police say he carried to the demonstration.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store