The surprise attacks on Israel by Hamas last week are heart wrenching – civilian massacres, innocents taken hostage and random missile attacks meant to harm indiscriminately. Hamas is a hard-liner extremist organization that will only ever contribute to the cycle of violence in the region.
But in our justifiable rush to condemn the actions of Hamas, we must not neglect to tell the other side of the story – the years of brutal repression of the Palestinians, the ever-increasing illegal settlement of formerly Palestinian lands in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, the inhumane air, land and sea blockade of Gaza since 2007.
Any efforts to create a just peace between Israel and Palestine ceased with the advent of the Netanyahu era. The increasingly fundamentalist Jewish government that has flourished under his rule has no intention of ever ceding an acre of land or making any effort to negotiate a lasting peace.
Many in the USA are aghast at how the Gaza attacks were celebrated throughout the Arab peninsula and in many other countries. The knee-jerk reaction is to attribute this to antisemitism. To be sure, there is still plenty of antisemitism in the world. But the line between antisemitism and anti-Israel/Zionist policies is a difficult one to draw. Israel has done itself no favors in the last 30 years with its policies of occupation, settlement and disproportionate responses to Palestinian violence. A simple tally of Israeli dead vs Palestinian dead is clear evidence that Israel has expanded the biblical eye for an eye to 100 eyes for an eye.
One can argue that Israel has done what it had to do to survive. But there were more visionary Israelis in the past who had a much different approach to finding a lasting peace. The most remarkable of them was murdered by an ultra-religious Jewish assassin.
The attitudes in the USA reflect our typical jingoistic response to any violent act. ‘Murder them all’! The same people who weep as they view murdered Israeli families will punch the air when they see air strikes that murder ten times as many Palestinian civilians. By the end of this war, there will certainly be 10 or 100 dead Palestinians for every Israeli lost.
There is no ‘justification’ for what Hamas did. But refusing to recognize the historically ironic (the formerly oppressed become the oppressors) brutality of the Netanyahu regime against the Palestinian people will just lead to more heartache and tragedy down the road.
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