Sunday, October 29, 2023

October Seventh and the Sad History

Trying to say where the Palestine-Israeli conflict began, some start with the Bible, some with the ancient Romans, (for the Hollywood version, see the 1959 Ben Hur, though in some quarters calling the main character, Judah Ben-Hur, Jewish, is controversial. For a scholarly version of the story, see this) some with the Ottoman Empire, some with the British Mandate for Palestine and, beginning in 1917, events leading up to the 1948 establishing of the state of Israel.

Most young people haven't heard of Yitzhak Rabin. Probably not the mobs mixing up Palestine with Hamas and calling for the decolonization of Palestine.

The 1995 assassination of Yitzhak Rabin, the fifth prime minister of Israel, is where I'd begin: he and President Clinton, immersed in the Oslo Peace Accords, appeared to be close to forging peace between Israelis and Palestinians when Rabin was shot by a right-wing Israeli extremist. I sat watching his funeral, listening to his granddaughter's eulogy, hoping things wouldn't get much worse.

Israel is the size of New Jersey. The Gaza strip is about the size of Las Vegas. And yet these tiny portions of land are the crucible of world politics. Arabic and Hebrew are classed by linguists as "Semitic" languages--they are related. To hint at the notion these two peoples are related  does nothing to lessen the violence and bloodshed consuming them, but I wish what they have in common could lead to respect, if not love.

These things are true: Hamas stands for hatred and destruction, and will sacrifice its own people for anything. Israel believes in love of God and humanity. The only working democracy in the Middle East--even with Netanyahu still in power--it is an ally to Western Europe and the United States. Perfect justice is not possible now, if it ever was. 1948 was a catastrophe for the Palestinian people but it's a done deal. I still believe, even now, it is possible to find a compromise leading to peace. I'm whistling in the dark.

 

3 comments:

  1. I am stunned at the pro-Palestinian demonstrations here in the past few days. NYC is the home to a million Jews! They attacked the New York Times offices and closed Grand Central terminal last night.

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  2. Anti-semitism is ugly, intolerable, and Hamas must go--it is a terrorist organization. Securing the tunnels where the terrorists are hiding is necessary for the safety of both the state of Israel and the Palestinian people.

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  3. I think another step in the downward slide was the stroke that felled Ariel Sharon. He had come to realize that the current state of Israel wasn't working and if he hadn't sickened, I truly believe things would be different.

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