As a (half) Jewish American, I can’t help but feel
Israel is slaughtering Palestinians in my name. So I wail at the Facebook wall,
inveighing against Israel’s war crimes. Invariably, someone responds by
pointing out how terrible Hamas is. Yes, and?
Israel may have declared war on Hamas, but it
is civilians Israel is murdering and maiming by the tens of
thousands. With Israel’s atrocities on daily display, the impulse to blame
Hamas for them is just knee-jerk tribalism.
Even staunch Israeli apologists are disquieted by
the Palestinian body count. Yet it takes strong forces of experience, and even
stronger forces of reason, to realign one’s allegiances and transgress against
the tribe.
So these apologists sublimate their discomfiture by
lamenting, vaguely, the terrible suffering in Gaza–stopping short of blaming
Israel for its own heinous acts.
Hamas’ depravity notwithstanding, it should not pain
decent people to condemn Israel’s own barbarism. This is a no-brainer for
myriad experts on human rights law, including at the U.N. and the U.S. State
Department. Anyone who has difficulty acknowledging Israel’s war crimes needs
to examine their own tribalism and prejudice.
If you or your loved ones were forced out of your
homes to scramble up and down Gaza for refuge from Israel’s fusillades–and
bombed and shot anyway while you fled or waited in line for food relief–you
would not be mouthing platitudes in support of your attackers, like ‘war
sucks,’ ‘civilians always take the brunt of it,’ ‘Hamas started it’ (a
statement which elides decades of subjugation by Israel), and ‘Israel does not
intentionally target civilians.’ (It absolutely does; plus, wantonly failing to
protect civilians is tantamount to targeting them.)
Such utterances only serve to condone and perpetuate
Israel’s savagery.
If Israel were the Middle East’s shining beacon of
human rights, it would not be heaping collective punishment on Palestinians,
any more than we would justify calling in airstrikes on a synagogue full of
worshipper-hostages to kill a band of terrorists who shot their way into it.
If the U.S. were such a standard-bearer of human
rights, it would not be breaking its own rules to reward Israel with weapons to
murder more Palestinian civilians. Amid this mayhem, Biden administration
officials’ rote admonitions to Netan-yahoo to protect innocent lives is just
nauseatingly enabling lipservice.
That Hamas fighters embed among civilians does not
give Israel license to obliterate Gaza to get at Hamas. Few Israel hawks would
advocate leveling the locations where the remaining Israeli hostages are held
to kill their captors. The only “reasons” for valuing tens of Israeli hostages’
lives over tens of thousands of Palestinian children’s lives are tribalism and
racism.
That Israel’s options may be constrained by Hamas’
venality is largely Israel’s own fault after decades of occupation and
brutality–including holding scores of Palestinian hostages without
fair legal process–just as Israel’s slaughter today will provoke conflict yet
to come. There is nothing about Israel’s reaction to October 7 which is making
the world safer for Jews.
One option Israelis do have, which
is not available to the Gazans it is butchering, is to elect a different
government. Isrealis should exercise this power to end apartheid and uproot
settlements in the West Bank, and to foster a viable, sovereign Palestinian
state.
Instead, the banality of evil is on historic display
in Good Israelis’ and Good Americans’ rationalizations of Israel’s stark war
crimes. If that reference to WWII Germany offends, it is because the person
taking offense is not Palestinian.
Yes, the scale is totally different. No, Israel on
the whole is not trying to exterminate the Palestinian people–though numerous
Israelis in and out of government want this. In reality, a big plurality of
Israelis would like to rid ‘Canaan’ of Palestinians–from the river to the sea.
The difference between Israeli and Palestinian
extermination rhetoric is that Israel actually has and is using the power to
back it up. What Palestinians say with Israeli boots on their necks is not
predictive of how they will act when the pressure is off.
A people forced to choose between exodus and rubble
are living and dying with the reality of genocide, while academics continue to
debate the applicability of the term. We
each have but one life to live and one to give. I guarantee you that if yours
were Palestinian lives, you would not hesitate to condemn Israel’s monstrous
war crimes.
And since that’s true, you should strive to be just
as appalled as if you were Palestinian.
If I’ve learned one useful teaching from Judaism,
it’s that breaking down our othering walls is the ultimate quest and hope for
humanity.
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