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How can we see the Palestine- Israel conflict from a Qur'an alone perspective

Started by Sarah, October 25, 2023, 02:28:15 PM

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Jafar

Quote from: almarh0m on December 19, 2023, 12:07:16 AM
وَقَضَيْنَا إِلَىٰ بَنِي إِسْرَائِيلَ فِي الْكِتَابِ لَتُفْسِدُنَّ فِي الْأَرْضِ مَرَّتَيْنِ وَلَتَعْلُنَّ عُلُوًّا كَبِيرًا
Yusuf Ali:   And We gave Warning to the Children of Israel in the Book, that twice would they do mischief on the earth and be elated with mighty arrogance (and twice would they be punished)!

Stereotyping... who are this "Bani Israil" in today's context?
Even the Zionist is having a hard time defining "Who / What Is A Jew" which shall deserves a 'special status' within "(Apartheid) State Of Israel".
If one wishes to digest this issue can start on this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Who_is_a_Jew

If "Bani Israel" = Citizen of State Of Israel, then 30% of Non-Jews Citizens of Israel (3 Million People) must be included. They identified themselves as Arabs, Druze, Armenians, Samaritans etc..
If "Bani Israel" = "Those who have Jacob, somebody who lived in middle east around 3000 years ago, as among their super great grandpa" then nearly everyone in the region can be labeled as "Bani Israel".

Next if we use the category of "doing mischief on earth and act of arrogance" then we can observe such attitude being expressed by many groups in middle east! From ISIS, Hamas, Zionist, Arabs Nationalist, Hizbullah, Wahhabis, Ikhwanul Muslimin, Ultra Orthodox Judaism Priest, Sunni/Shiites Clerics etc.. etc..

Thus the reason why I avoid stereotyping and zoom in on the detail of attitude shown by each individual.
Anytime, anywhere the attitude of "I/We are superior to others" shown by anyone, it always spelled trouble.

almarh0m

Quote from: Jafar on December 23, 2023, 03:00:27 AM
Stereotyping... who are this "Bani Israil" in today's context?
Even the Zionist is having a hard time defining "Who / What Is A Jew" which shall deserves a 'special status' within "(Apartheid) State Of Israel".
If one wishes to digest this issue can start on this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Who_is_a_Jew

If "Bani Israel" = Citizen of State Of Israel, then 30% of Non-Jews Citizens of Israel (3 Million People) must be included. They identified themselves as Arabs, Druze, Armenians, Samaritans etc..
If "Bani Israel" = "Those who have Jacob, somebody who lived in middle east around 3000 years ago, as among their super great grandpa" then nearly everyone in the region can be labeled as "Bani Israel".

Next if we use the category of "doing mischief on earth and act of arrogance" then we can observe such attitude being expressed by many groups in middle east! From ISIS, Hamas, Zionist, Arabs Nationalist, Hizbullah, Wahhabis, Ikhwanul Muslimin, Ultra Orthodox Judaism Priest, Sunni/Shiites Clerics etc.. etc..

Thus the reason why I avoid stereotyping and zoom in on the detail of attitude shown by each individual.
Anytime, anywhere the attitude of "I/We are superior to others" shown by anyone, it always spelled trouble.

The Ones Who Claim to Own The Title/Deed of The Land of Palestine  , based on The Old Testament , got it?



"He who Created me, it is He who Guides me"

almarh0m

 
Supremacism inevitably leads to crime
by Thierry Meyssan
In the space of a few months, Israel, which had a long and contradictory tradition, both democratic and criminal, has sunk. Its fundamental laws have been reformed and its Prime Minister has organized, with the complicity of the Muslim Brotherhood, a bloody pretext to liquidate the Palestinian people.
Since then, the Israeli ruling class has been gripped by a kind of supremacist madness. All they can talk about is eradicating Hamas and forcibly transferring the Gazans. Before our very eyes, we are witnessing a genocide, live on social networks.

VOLTAIRE NETWORK | PARIS (FRANCE) | 12 DECEMBER 2023
ČEŠTINA DEUTSCH ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΆ ESPAÑOL FRANÇAIS ITALIANO NEDERLANDS POLSKI PORTUGUÊS РУССКИЙ


After a coup d'état, Benjamin Netanyahu organized with the Muslim Brotherhood Brotherhood for the October 7 operation. Now he's trying to liquidate the Palestinian people.
All the quotations in this article were written or spoken in the last two months.

We all know that supremacist ideologies give rise to unheard-of massacres.

In recent years, we have witnessed the genocide of the Tutsis by Hutu Power, or that of the Yazidis by Daesh. In both cases, the aim was not to get rid of political opponents, but to physically eliminate a population group deemed non-human.

Over the past two months, many Israeli personalities have equated all Palestinians with the crimes of Hamas, and shown their contempt for their people as a whole. Defense Minister Yoav Gallant has called them "human animals". Some personalities have concluded that the war must be "total".

For example:

• MP Nissim Vaturi (Likud), Deputy Speaker of the Knesset, wrote on X "All this preoccupation with whether or not there is Internet in Gaza shows that we haven't learned anything. We are too human (...) Burn Gaza now, nothing less! Don't let in any fuel, don't let in any water until the hostages are back!
• Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said: "We are very happy for the return of the freed hostages, but now the idea of a truce has gained ground.
To agree to stop [the war] any further would be a terrible mistake that only shows weakness (...) We must sever all ties and negotiations with Hamas and the mediators and only look at the enemy through the scope of a rifle".
• Heritage Minister Amichai Eliyahu told Radio Kol Berama that Israel was considering using atomic weapons in Gaza: "it's a solution... it's an option". He then compared the residents of the Gaza Strip to "Nazis", assuring that "there are no non-combatants in Gaza" and that the territory does not deserve humanitarian aid. "There are no uninvolved people in Gaza".

On this ideological basis, Israeli and European leaders first evoked the "dream" of the "revisionist Zionists" - i.e., the followers of Ukrainian Vladimir Jabotinski (1880-1940) -: the forced expulsion of all Palestinians or their massacre.

Here's how this crime was prepared:

• MP Eliyahu Revivo (Likud) has written to the Appointments Committee to ensure that the word Gaza no longer corresponds to any place or appears on any signpost.
According to him, "There is no doubt that the name 'Gaza' is immediately associated with a negative and evil connotation".
• On October 13, the Minister of Intelligence, Gila Gamliel, drafted a memorandum for the attention of the coalition government (no opposition minister had joined it by then). Entitled Alternatives to a political directive for the civilian population in Gaza, it advocated expelling the 2.2 million Gazans to the Egyptian Sinai [1]. Leaked on October 29, the Prime Minister's Office assured foreign journalists that Gila Gamliel was an unimportant minister who would write anything to get press.
• A personal friend of the Prime Minister, Amir Weitman, wrote a report for the Institute for National Security and Zionist Strategy entitled Plan for the Resettlement and Definitive Rehabilitation in Egypt of the Entire Population of Gaza: Economic Aspects [2]. In it, he estimates the cost of forcibly relocating Gaza's population to Sinai at around $8 billion. This Likudnik also considers Russia to be solely responsible for the ongoing massacres.
• General Giora Eiland, former National Security Advisor to Ariel Sharon, declared at the end of October: "Gaza must become a place where no human being can live, and I say this as a means rather than an end. I say it because there is no other option to ensure the security of the Israeli state. We are fighting a war that threatens our very existence.
• On November 14, two members of parliament, Danny Danon (Likud) and Ram Ben-Barak (Yesh Atid), published an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal [3]. In it, they wrote: "Europe has a long history of helping refugees fleeing conflict (...) The international community can work together to provide one-time funding for support programs for Gazans interested in moving. It can help with moving costs and integration. All we need is for a handful of nations to share the responsibility of welcoming Gazan residents. Even if these countries received only 10,000 each, it would help to alleviate the crisis.
• The President of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, visits Cairo on November 18.
She first tried to persuade Egypt to open its border and give asylum to the 2.2 million Gazans. Then, faced with General President Al-Sissi's refusal, she proposed setting up a gigantic camp to temporarily house the Gazans in Sinai, while they were transferred to other countries, including Germany and France.
• On November 19, Gila Gamliel returned to the fray, publishing an op-ed in the Jerusalem Post [4], in which she wrote: "Some world leaders are already discussing a global refugee resettlement program and say they would welcome Gazans in their countries. This could be supported by many countries around the world, especially those who claim to be friends of the Palestinians (...) We need to try something new, and we call on the international community to help make it happen. It could be a win-win solution: a victory for the civilians of Gaza [sic] who are looking for a better life, and a victory for the Hebrew state after this devastating tragedy".

However, the images of the massacre broadcast live on social networks have aroused the indignation of 95% of Internet users. 20,000 Palestinians were killed, if we add up the bodies found and the bodies of the missing, still under the rubble. The Biden administration, which is supplying the bombs to kill them, has been forced to claim that it is putting pressure on the Israeli government to "show restraint". Rhetoric that doesn't match deeds, since the IDF has no bombs in advance and Washington continues to supply them. However, as the US presidential election campaign gets underway, Joe Biden will at some point be forced to halt deliveries and thus stop the massacre, for lack of weapons to continue it. Israeli leaders are therefore considering that the Palestinians will stay at home and that a government will have to be appointed for them, knowing that Hamas will have to be excluded.

Two options are being considered:

Set up a provisional international administration, under a UN mandate
However, no state is willing to deploy troops wearing the UN blue helmet, or to manage the Palestinian Territories.

- Creating a Palestinian administration
• The Abbas government's former Minister of State for Security, Mohamed Dahlan, exiled in the United Arab Emirates, is making the rounds of Arab TV studios.
He is clearly a candidate to lead a "renewed Palestinian Authority" (sic). He has sent his deputy from the "Democratic Reform Bloc", Samir al-Mash'harawi, to meet a Hamas delegation in Cairo. An agreement was reached.
• President Mahmoud Abbas is also a candidate for his own succession. However, the ambiguity of his position in the face of the massacre makes him even less legitimate today than he was before the massacre.

Incidentally, if the Palestinian Territories are maintained, many Israeli leaders want to gradually colonize them.

• Itamar Ben-Gvir, the Minister of National Security, declared in an interview with Kan Sunday public radio: "After the Gush Katif settlements were evacuated [in 2005], the world changed; reality changed (...) What we need here is an occupation. Every time our enemies have lost territory, they've lost the war. We should have total control; that will deter our enemies, let them know we've won and that we're allowing residents to return home. I'm not afraid of Israelis resettling in Gaza.
• Yoav Kisch, the Minister of Education, said he would not rule out a scenario in which he would rebuild settlements in the Gaza Strip. A bill has been tabled in the Knesset to restore Israelis' right of free movement in the Gaza Strip. The unity government has tested this issue with several allied states. It seems that they would express their dissatisfaction, but would not break their ties with the "Jewish State".
• Bezalel Smotrich, the Finance Minister in charge of civil administration in the West Bank, has called for the creation of security zones around West Bank settlements. This strategy could eventually lead to their expansion.

Obviously, not all Israelis support the blindness and fury of their leaders.

• The Prime Minister's Office refuses to work with the military team in charge of repairing the infrastructure. The team is commanded by General Roni Numa, who has filed a petition with the Supreme Court against the "reform" of the country's fundamental laws, which he has described as a "coup d'état".
• The Minister of Information, Distel Atbaryan, resigned, refusing to swallow any more bullshit. The IDF continues to censor the Israeli press in connection with the war, including on unrelated political issues.
• The Prime Minister banned all demonstrations in support of the civilian population of Gaza.
An Israeli Arab organization, Adalah, and the Hadash party took the case to the High Court.
Inhabitants of Kafr Aqab, a neighborhood in East Jerusalem where the Israeli government hoped to confine the capital of a possible Palestinian state, were locked in after 5pm.
• The Minister of Security, Itamar Ben-Gvir, attacked three Israeli Arab judges. In his view, they had not sufficiently condemned Maisa Abdel-Had, an actress who had expressed her solidarity with the people expelled from East Jerusalem; against an old man who denounced the conditions of incarceration of Palestinian prisoners; or refused to divulge the name of a defendant accused of being pro-Hamas.
• A Civics and History teacher, the Jewish pacifist Meir Baruchin, was arrested and imprisoned by the Shin Bet for publishing a tweet listing the names and ages of six young Palestinians, aged 14 to 24, killed in Gaza with the words: "They were born under the occupation. Lived there all their lives. They never knew a single day of freedom. They were executed by our wonderful boys".
• MPs Aida Touma-Sliman (Hadash-Ta'al) and Iman Khatib-Yassin (United Arab List) were suspended from the Knesset with salary deductions.
They had observed that crimes attributed to Hamas were in fact Israeli collateral victims of the IDF.


To wage its war, the emergency government was forced to mobilize almost all Jews (not Arabs) of fighting age. However, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was afraid that some would revolt and refuse to obey criminal orders. That's why he set up a new target designation procedure within the IDF in advance. In the past, the staff would struggle to choose a hundred targets a day. Officers had to be careful to limit collateral damage. From now on, no one chooses the targets - they are selected by software. There is no human responsibility, and therefore no one to oppose criminal orders. The machine selects five hundred a day. It no longer informs us of possible collateral damage. The less we know, the better it works.

Images have just been posted on social networks.
They show Palestinians who have been arrested by the IDF. These men were arrested because they were in the wrong place at the wrong time. Perhaps a Hamas member got mixed up with them. They are in their underwear, without shoes, on their knees under the guns that threaten them. They were then taken, still without clothes, in dump trucks to interrogation centers. Attorney General Galia Baharav-Miara authorized their detention for 60 days without access to a doctor or lawyer. After 60 days, it will no longer be possible to find any traces of their torture.

Thierry Meyssan
Translation
Roger Lagassé
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"He who Created me, it is He who Guides me"

Jafar

Quote from: almarh0m on December 23, 2023, 09:58:16 PM
The Ones Who Claim to Own The Title/Deed of The Land of Palestine  , based on The Old Testament , got it?

It doesn't say so specifically..

I would agree if it is:
The Ones Who Claim I/We are Superior/More Righteous/The Chosen/The Believer (and any other superioristic narrative) than others thus we are eligible to: claim the land / claim your wealth / lead you / kill you / enslave you / convert you / having more privileges than you.

And that include those who based their claim on any "holy books/doctrines" (Quran, Gospel/Bible, Tanakh, Mishna, Hadith, Meinkampf included)

QuoteSupremacism inevitably leads to crime
Indeed, totally agree..


almarh0m

Israel: SA Is Anti-Semitic to Invoke Genocide Convention
December 30, 2023
Save
False accusations of anti-semitism are all Israel and its defenders have left.  Once the "But Hamas!" and "But Oct. 7!" excuses are spent, false accusations of hating Jews is all that remains, writes Caitlin Johnstone.


The World Court sitting in The Hague. (U.N. Photo/Flickr)

By Caitlin Johnstone

CaitlinJohnstone.com.au

Listen to Tim Foley reading this article.



South Africa has invoked the Genocide Convention, formally launching a case at the U.N.'s International Court of Justice accusing Israel of genocide for its mass atrocities in the Gaza Strip. Israel immediately responded by accusing South Africa of "blood libel".

Blood libel, for those who don't know, refers to the way medieval Europeans would falsely accuse Jews of murdering Christians in blood sacrifices in order to justify persecuting them. Which is to say, Israel has responded to South Africa's accusations by accusing South Africa of anti-semitism.



https://twitter.com/JoshuaPHilll/status/1740805317061988391
False accusations of anti-semitism are all Israel and its defenders have left. It's the only tool left in their toolbox. Once you've exhausted the "But Hamas!" and "But October 7!" excuses they make for Israel's deliberate butchery of civilians via airstrikes and siege warfare, false accusations of hating Jews is all that remains.

And it's so sick, because it exploits a healthy impulse in those who oppose racism and genocide, and does so in order to defend racist acts of genocide. It causes people who care deeply about human rights to take a step back and say "Hold on, am I guilty of embodying the same hateful prejudices which led to the Holocaust?" and shuts them down and shuts them up, even as Israel rolls out its own holocaust against Palestinians.

It exploits a noble, healthy inclination people cultivate in themselves in good faith in order to support the horrific genocidal nightmare in Gaza in entirely bad faith. It exploits people's good nature to advance a profoundly evil cause. It's despicable. It's depraved.

Israel apologists always speak as though all critics of Israel are constantly obsessing over Jews, when nothing remotely like that is happening. It's a fantasy. The only reason people like me ever make any mention of Jewishness is because 90 percent of the arguments made by Israel's defenders rely on babbling about Jews and antisemitism, and those arguments need to be addressed.



https://twitter.com/jeremyscahill/status/1740802377970843831
If Israel's defenders weren't constantly babbling about Jews and antisemitism, it would never even occur to me to think about those things in relation to what's happening in Gaza, and I'm quite sure the vast majority of people on my side of this issue are the same.

When you see mass atrocities of unfathomable horror unfolding in real time in a nonstop deluge of video and photo evidence, the very last thing on your mind is what religious faith the perpetrators espouse. It's not something normal people think about.

Throughout my life I've had a positive view of Jews and Jewish culture because so many of the people I've admired and been influenced by have been Jewish, but other than that it's not something that I've really thought about much.

This notion that opposition to the criminality of the Israeli government is driven by a demented hatred of Jewish people is a complete work of fiction. People in our society simply do not feel that way about Jews. Real antisemitism does exist, but it's a small fringe view. Normal people just want the mass slaughter of children and the ethnic cleansing to stop.

If I saw someone murdering a child, there are many things I might say and do, but the very last thing that would ever occur to me would be to wonder what religion he is. It's the silliest, most nonsensical narrative in mainstream politics and media today.

And that's why fewer and fewer people are buying it.

Caitlin Johnstone's work is entirely reader-supported, so if you enjoyed this piece please consider sharing it around, following her on Facebook, Twitter, Soundcloud, YouTube, or throwing some money into her tip jar on Ko-fi, Patreon or Paypal. If you want to read more you can buy her books. The best way to make sure you see the stuff she publishes is to subscribe to the mailing list at her website or on Substack, which will get you an email notification for everything she publishes.  For more info on who she is, where she stands and what she's trying to do with her platform, click here. All works are co-authored with her American husband Tim Foley.

This article is from CaitlinJohnstone.com.au and re-published with permission.

The views expressed are solely those of the author and may or may not reflect those of Consortium News.

Please
"He who Created me, it is He who Guides me"

almarh0m

Chris Hedges: The Cost of Bearing Witness
December 28, 2023
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There are scores of Palestinian writers and photographers, many of whom have been killed, who are determined to make us see the horror of this genocide. They will vanquish the lies of the killers.


Bearing Witness – Mr. Fish.

By Chris Hedges
ScheerPost

Writing and photographing in wartime are acts of resistance, acts of faith. They affirm the belief that one day — a day the writers, journalists and photographers may never see — the words and images will evoke empathy, understanding, outrage and provide wisdom.

They chronicle not only the facts, although facts are important, but the texture, sacredness and grief of lives and communities lost. They tell the world what war is like, how those caught in its maw of death endure, how there are those who sacrifice for others and those who do not, what fear and hunger are like, what death is like.

They transmit the cries of children, the wails of grief of the mothers, the daily struggle in the face of savage industrial violence, the triumph of their humanity through filth, sickness, humiliation and fear. This is why writers, photographers and journalists are targeted by aggressors in war — including the Israelis — for obliteration.

They stand as witnesses to evil, an evil the aggressors want buried and forgotten. They expose the lies. They condemn, even from the grave, their killers. Israel has killed at least 13 Palestinian poets and writers along with at least 67 journalists and media workers in Gaza, and three in Lebanon since Oct. 7.

I experienced futility and outrage when I covered war. I wondered if I had done enough, or if it was even worth the risk. But you go on because to do nothing is to be complicit. You report because you care. You will make it hard for the killers to deny their crimes.


Atef Abu Saif in 2018. (Alebaa News, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY 3.0)

This brings me to the Palestinian novelist and playwright Atef Abu Saif. He and his 15-year-old son Yasser, who live in the occupied West Bank, were visiting family in Gaza — where he was born — when Israel began its scorched earth campaign. Atef is no stranger to the violence of the Israeli occupiers. He was 2 months old during the 1973 war and writes "I've been living through wars ever since. Just as life is a pause between two deaths, Palestine, as a place and as an idea, is a timeout in the middle of many wars."

During Operation Cast Lead, the 2008/2009 Israel assault on Gaza, Atef sheltered in the corridor of his Gaza family home for 22 nights with his wife, Hanna and two children, while Israel bombed and shelled. His book The Drone Eats with Me: Diaries from a City Under Fire, is an account of Operation Protective Edge, the 2014 Israeli assault on Gaza that killed 1,523 Palestinian civilians, including 519 children.

"Memories of war can be strangely positive, because to have them at all means you must have survived," he notes sardonically.

Refaat Alareer

He again did what writers do, including the professor and poet Refaat Alareer, who was killed, along with Refaat's brother, sister and her four children, in an airstrike on his sister's apartment building in Gaza on Dec. 7. The Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor said that Alareer was deliberately targeted, "surgically bombed out of the entire building." His killing came after weeks of "death threats that Refaat received online and by phone from Israeli accounts." He had moved to his sister's because of the threats.

Refaat, whose doctorate was on the metaphysical poet John Donne, wrote a poem in November, called "If I Must Die," which became his last will and testament. It has been translated into numerous languages. A reading of the poem by the actor Brian Cox has been viewed almost 30 million times.

If I must die,

you must live

to tell my story

to sell my things

to buy a piece of cloth

and some strings,

(make it white with a long tail)

so that a child, somewhere in Gaza

while looking heaven in the eye

awaiting his dad who left in a blaze—

and bid no one farewell

not even to his flesh

not even to himself—

sees the kite, my kite you made,

flying up above

and thinks for a moment an angel is there

bringing back love

If I must die

let it bring hope

let it be a tale.


Atef, once again finding himself living amid the explosions and carnage from Israeli shells and bombs, doggedly publishes his observations and reflections. His accounts are often difficult to transmit because of Israel's blockage of Internet and phone service. They have appeared in The Washington Post, The New York Times, The Nation and Slate.

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On the first day of the Israeli bombardment, a friend, the young poet and musician Omar Abu Shawish, is killed, apparently in an Israeli naval bombardment, though later reports would say he was killed in an airstrike as he was walking to work.

Atef wonders about the Israeli soldiers watching him and his family with "their infrared lenses and satellite photography." Can "they count the loafs of bread in my basket, or the number of falafel balls on my plate?" he wonders. He watches the crowds of dazed and confused families, their homes in rubble, carrying "mattresses, bags of clothes, food and drink." He stands mutely before "the supermarket, the bureau de change, the falafel shop, the fruit stalls, the perfume parlor, the sweets shop, the toy shop — all burned."


Child wounded by Israeli airstrike in Gaza being transported to the Indonesian Hospital in Jabalia, north of the Gaza Strip on Oct. 9. (Wafa for APAimages, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0)??

"Blood was everywhere, along with bits of kids' toys, cans from the supermarket, smashed fruit, broken bicycles and shattered perfume bottles," he writes. "The place looked like a charcoal drawing of a town scorched by a dragon."

"I went to the Press House, where journalists were frantically downloading images and writing reports for their agencies. I was sitting with Bilal, the Press House manager, when an explosion shook the building. Windows shattered, and the ceiling collapsed onto us in chunks. We ran toward the central hall. One of the journalists was bleeding, having been hit by flying glass. After 20 minutes, we ventured out to inspect the damage. I noticed that Ramadan decorations were still hanging in the street."

"The city has become a wasteland of rubble and debris," Atef, who has been the Palestinian Authority's minister of culture since 2019, writes in the early days of the Israeli shelling of Gaza City.

"Beautiful buildings fall like columns of smoke. I often think about the time I was shot as a kid, during the first intifada, and how my mother told me I actually died for a few minutes before being brought back to life. Maybe I can do the same this time, I think."

He leaves his teenage son with family members.

"The Palestinian logic is that in wartime, we should all sleep in different places, so that if part of the family is killed, another part lives," he writes. "The U.N. schools are getting more crowded with displaced families. The hope is that the U.N. flag will save them, though in previous wars, that hasn't been the case."


United Nations flag at half-mast at UN headquarters to honour colleagues killed in Gaza, Nov. 13. (UN Photo/Evan Schneider)

On Tuesday Oct. 17 he writes:

"I see death approaching, hear its steps growing louder. Just be done with it, I think. It's the 11th day of the conflict, but all the days have merged into one: the same bombardment, the same fear, the same smell. On the news, I read the names of the dead on the ticker at the bottom of the screen. I wait for my name to appear.

In the morning, my phone rang. It was Rulla, a relative in the West Bank, telling me she had heard there'd been an airstrike in Talat Howa, a neighborhood on the south side of Gaza City where my cousin Hatem lives. Hatem is married to Huda, my wife's only sister. He lives in a four-story building that also houses his mother and brothers and their families.

I called around, but no one's phone was working. I walked to al-Shifa Hospital to read the names: Lists of the dead are pinned up daily outside a makeshift morgue. I could barely approach the building: Thousands of Gazans had made the hospital their home; its gardens, its hallways, every empty space or spare corner had a family in it. I gave up and headed toward Hatem's.

Thirty minutes later, I was on his street. Rulla had been right. Huda and Hatem's building had been hit only an hour earlier. The bodies of their daughter and grandchild had already been retrieved; the only known survivor was Wissam, one of their other daughters, who had been taken to the ICU. Wissam had gone straight into surgery, where both of her legs and her right hand had been amputated. Her graduation ceremony from art college had taken place only the day before. She has to spend the rest of her life without legs, with one hand. 'What about the others?' I asked someone.

'We can't find them,' came the reply.

Amid the rubble, we shouted: 'Hello? Can anyone hear us?' We called out the names of those still missing, hoping some might still be alive. By the end of the day, we'd managed to find five bodies, including that of a 3-month-old. We went to the cemetery to bury them.

In the evening, I went to see Wissam in the hospital; she was barely awake. After half an hour, she asked me: 'Khalo [Uncle], I'm dreaming, right?'

I said, 'We are all in a dream.'

'My dream is terrifying! Why?'

'All our dreams are terrifying.'

After 10 minutes of silence, she said, 'Don't lie to me, Khalo. In my dream, I don't have legs. It's true, isn't it? I have no legs?'

'But you said it's a dream.'

'I don't like this dream, Khalo.'

I had to leave. For a long 10 minutes, I cried and cried. Overwhelmed by the horrors of the past few days, I walked out of the hospital and found myself wandering the streets. I thought idly, we could turn this city into a film set for war movies. Second World War films and end-of-the-world movies. We could hire it out to the best Hollywood directors.

Doomsday on demand. Who could have the courage to tell Hanna, so far away in Ramallah, that her only sister had been killed? That her family had been killed? I phoned my colleague Manar and asked her to go to our house with a couple of friends and try to delay the news from getting to her. 'Lie to her,' I told Manar. 'Say the building was attacked by F-16s but the neighbors think Huda and Hatem were out at the time. Any lie that could help.' "

Leaflets in Arabic dropped by Israeli helicopters float down from the sky. They announce that anyone who remains north of the Wadi waterway will be considered a partner to terrorism, "meaning," Atef writes, "the Israelis can shoot on sight." The electricity is cut. Food, fuel and water begin to run out.

The wounded are operated on without anesthesia. There are no painkillers or sedatives. He visits his niece Wissam, racked with pain, in al-Shifa Hospital who asks him for a lethal injection. She says Allah will forgive her.

"But he will not forgive me, Wissam."

"I am going to ask him to, on your behalf," she says.


Man with body bags in Jabalia, Gaza Strip, Oct. 9. (Bashar Taleb, Wafa for APAimages, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0)

After airstrikes he joins the rescue teams "under the cricket-like hum of drones we couldn't see in the sky." A line from T.S Eliot, "a heap of broken images," runs through his head. The injured and dead are "transported on three-wheeled bicycles or dragged along in carts by animals."

"We picked up pieces of mutilated bodies and gathered them on a blanket; you find a leg here, a hand there, while the rest looks like minced meat," he writes. "In the past week, many Gazans have started writing their names on their hands and legs, in pen or permanent marker, so they can be identified when death comes.

This might seem macabre, but it makes perfect sense: We want to be remembered; we want our stories to be told; we seek dignity. At the very least, our names will be on our graves. The smell of unretrieved bodies under the ruins of a house hit last week remains in the air. The more time passes, the stronger the smell."

The scenes around him become surreal. On Nov. 19, day 44 of the assault, he writes:

"A man rides a horse toward me with the body of a dead teenager slung over the saddle in front. It seems it's his son, perhaps. It looks like a scene from a historical movie, only the horse is weak and barely able to move. He is back from no battle. He is no knight. His eyes are full of tears as he holds the little riding crop in one hand and the bridle in the other. I have an impulse to photograph him but then feel suddenly sick at the idea. He salutes no one. He barely looks up. He is too consumed with his own loss. Most people are using the camp's old cemetery; it's the safest and although it is technically long-since full, they have started digging shallower graves and burying the new dead on top of the old—keeping families together, of course."

On Nov. 21 after constant tank-shelling, he decides to flee the Jabaliya neighborhood in the north of Gaza for the south, with his son and mother-in-law who is in a wheelchair. They must pass through Israeli checkpoints, where soldiers randomly select men and boys from the line for detention.

"Scores of bodies are strewn along both sides of the road," he writes.

"Rotting, it seems, into the ground. The smell is horrendous. A hand reaches out toward us from the window of a burned-out car, as if asking for something, from me specifically. I see what looks like two headless bodies in a car — limbs and precious body parts just thrown away and left to fester."

He tells his son Yasser: "Don't look. Just keep walking, son."

In early December his family home was destroyed in an airstrike.

"The house a writer grows up in is a well from which to draw material. In each of my novels, whenever I wanted to depict a typical house in the camp, I conjured ours. I'd move the furniture around a bit, change the name of the alley, but who was I kidding? It was always our house."

"All the houses in Jabalya are small. They're built randomly, haphazardly, and they're not made to last. These houses replaced the tents that Palestinians like my grandmother Eisha lived in after the displacements of 1948.

Those who built them always thought they'd soon be returning to the beautiful, spacious homes they'd left behind in the towns and villages of historic Palestine. That return never happened, despite our many rituals of hope, like safeguarding the key to the old family home. The future keeps betraying us, but the past is ours."

"Though I've lived in many cities around the world, and visited many more, that tiny ramshackle abode was the only place I ever felt at home'" he goes on. "Friends and colleagues always asked: Why don't you live in Europe or America? You have the opportunity. My students chimed in: Why did you return to Gaza?

My answer was always the same: 'Because in Gaza, in an alleyway in the Saftawi neighborhood of Jabalya, there stands a little house that cannot be found anywhere else in the world.' If on doomsday God were to ask me where I would like to be sent, I wouldn't hesitate in saying, 'Home.' Now there is no home."

Atef is now trapped in southern Gaza with his son. His niece was transferred to a hospital in Egypt. Israel continues to pound Gaza with over 20,000 dead and 50,000 wounded. Atef continues to write.


Palestinians in the aftermath of an Israeli airstrike on the El-Remal aera in Gaza City on Oct. 9. (Naaman Omar, Palestinian News & Information Agency, or Wafa, for APAimages, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0)

The story of Christmas is the story of a poor woman, 9 months pregnant, and her husband forced to leave their home in Nazareth in northern Galilee. The occupying Roman power has demanded they register for the census 90 miles away in Bethlehem. When they arrive there are no rooms. She gives birth in a stable.

King Herod — who learned from the Magi of the birth of the messiah — orders his soldiers to hunt down every child 2 years old and under in Bethlehem and the vicinity and murder them. An angel warns Joseph in a dream to flee. The couple and infant escape under the cover of darkness and make the 40-mile journey to Egypt.

I was in a refugee camp in the early 1980s for Guatemalans who had fled the war into Honduras. The peasant farmers and their families, living in filth and mud, their villages and homes burned or abandoned, were decorating their tents with strips of colored paper to celebrate the Massacre of the Innocents.

"Why is this such an important day?" I asked.

"It was on this day that Christ became a refugee," a farmer answered.

The Christmas story was not written for the oppressors. It was written for the oppressed. We are called to protect the innocents. We are called to defy the occupying power.

Atef, Refaat and those like them, who speak to us at the risk of death, echo this Biblical injunction. They speak so we will not be silent. They speak so we will take these words and images and hold them up to the principalities of the world — the media, politicians, diplomats, universities, the wealthy and privileged, the weapons manufacturers, the Pentagon and the Israel lobby groups — who are orchestrating the genocide in Gaza.

The infant Christ is not lying today in straw, but a pile of broken concrete.

Evil has not changed down the millenia. Neither has goodness.

Chris Hedges is a Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist who was a foreign correspondent for 15 years for The New York Times, where he served as the Middle East bureau chief and Balkan bureau chief for the paper. He previously worked overseas for The Dallas Morning News, The Christian Science Monitor and NPR.  He is the host of show "The Chris Hedges Report."
"He who Created me, it is He who Guides me"

good logic

Thank you brother for your posts.
My heart started to melt as I am reading. I am overwhelmed and broken. I take a moment to gather my thoughts and strength.

Surely the guilt will also overwhelm the culprits and deliberate murderers. leaders and those obeying the order to press the buttons  of the war on the innocents.

I ask ; "Do they have a heart? ". It seems no.
The Lord gives a lesson to those who have a heart ,but alas evil persists with harden hearts and minds: They think they are powerful!;
Many a generation before them, who were more powerful, we annihilated. They searched the land; did they find an escape?
وَكَم أَهلَكنا قَبلَهُم مِن قَرنٍ هُم أَشَدُّ مِنهُم بَطشًا فَنَقَّبوا فِى البِلٰدِ هَل مِن مَحيصٍ
This should be a lesson for everyone who possesses a heart and a mind, or is able to hear and witness.
إِنَّ فى ذٰلِكَ لَذِكرىٰ لِمَن كانَ لَهُ قَلبٌ أَو أَلقَى السَّمعَ وَهُوَ شَهيدٌ

Just like these innocent Gazans cannot find helpers to protect them from the bombs, their murderers will not find protectors to help them from GOD.

GOD bless you.
Peace.
TOTAL LOYALTY TO GOD ALONE.   IN GOD I TRUST
38:65″ Say:? I warn you; There is no other god beside GOD, the One, the Supreme.?
[url="https://total-loyalty-to-god-alone.co.uk/?p=28"]https://total-loyalty-to-god-alone.co.uk/?p=28[/url]

almarh0m

Middle East : arsonists shout «Fire!»
While they claim the opposite, NATO and the EU together pursue the project of destroying the Palestinian state. The Hamas attack is only a pretext to finally accomplish the plan of the "revisionist Zionists", set out in the 1930s by Vladimir Jabotinsky and his private secretary, Bension Netanyahu (father of Benjamin Netanyahu).

VOLTAIRE NETWORK | ROME (ITALY) | 31 DECEMBER 2023
DEUTSCH ESPAÑOL FRANÇAIS ITALIANO NEDERLANDS


The one waged by Israel in Gaza is called by the Washington Post "one of the most destructive wars of this century." This war - implemented by Israel with the full support of the U.S. NATO and the EU - has so far left more than 20,000 Palestinians dead and 55,000 seriously wounded, most of whom will not survive as Israeli forces systematically destroy Gaza's hospitals. Women and children account for 70 percent of the dead. About 2 million people, corresponding to 85% of the population, are displaced. Increasing at the same time are Israeli raids in the West Bank. Against this background, PM Netanyahu enunciates, in an article in the Wall Street Journal, as the first "prerequisite for peace" the need that "Hamas must be destroyed." He stresses that "in destroying Hamas, Israel will continue to act in full compliance with international law."

Netanyhau "forgets the official statement he made in 2019: "Anyone who wants to obstruct the creation of a Palestinian State must support Hamas and transfer money to Hamas. This is part of our strategy: to isolate the Palestinians in Gaza from the Palestinians in the West Bank." For years, in agreement with Israel, Qatar has sent hundreds of millions of dollars in cash to Gaza each month to support the Hamas government. A 40-page document, code-named by Israeli intelligence "Wall of Jericho," shows that Israel knew for more than a year, in detail, the plan for the attack carried out by Hamas on Oct. 7, 2023. It served Israel's leaders to justify "one of the most destructive wars of this century," the purpose of which was clear from the beginning: to wipe out the territories of the Palestinian State, massacring and deporting its entire population. This was confirmed today by Paula Betancur of the UN High Commission for Human Rights: "The Israeli military operation in Gaza aims to deport the civilian population en masse."

The Israeli war to permanently wipe out the Palestinian State is part of the U.S.-NATO-EU strategy to maintain by war the control of a strategic region, the Middle East, in which the West is losing ground in the face of advancing political-economic projects, such as that of the BRICS, that are changing world assets.

Video in Italian
"He who Created me, it is He who Guides me"

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AS`AD AbuKHALIL: Hamas & Arab Public Opinion
January 3, 2024
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The Palestinian people have been waiting for a moment to shake the earth underneath the Israeli army.


Palestinian flag in the West Bank city Ramallah, the de facto administrative capital of Palestine, 2015. (Chetanya Robinson, Flickr, CC BY 2.0)

By As`ad AbuKhalil
Special to Consortium News

U.S. President Joe Biden and Secretary of State Antony Blinken, trying to appear sensitive, claim that Hamas does not speak for the Palestinian people.  All along they have sought to portray the war on the Palestinian people as a war on Hamas.

More than 21,000 Palestinian have been murdered and the war ostensibly is still solely  targeted against Hamas, according to U.S. and Israeli officials.

(Israel at least admits more than half the dead are not Hamas combatants, wildly exaggerating the number of Hamas fighters killed in order to camouflage genocide. Israel brags it has killed "only" over 10,000 Palestinian civilians).

The Biden administration made its preference clear: they want the Fatah movement (after its "revitalization" or "revamping") to rule over Gaza (on behalf of Israel).

But the Palestinian Authority is widely hated and despised by the Palestinian people and its leaders are rightly perceived as thugs, criminals, embezzlers and collaborators with Israel.

The Palestinian Authority can only stay in power by force of arms, just like repressive Arab regimes. It is for good reason that Fatah has refused to hold any election since Hamas won in 2006. Nor does the U.S., which used to press the Palestinians to hold elections, want to allow elections to take place because it is clear that the Fatah gang would be ousted in a vote.

Repressive Palestinian Authority 


The Palestinian Authority's Presidential Palace in Bethlehem, 2017. (White House, Flickr, Shealah Craighead)

The rule of the PA is now like any Arab authoritarian government and the repressive army of thugs is run by U.S. intelligence. Hamas has run Gaza far less repressively than Fatah ran the West Bank, and Hamas only went after who they found to be Israeli collaborators and spies.

The competition between Hamas and Fatah was long settled.  Hamas has been favored by the Palestinians for many years, and for many reasons.

Hamas is not corrupt while Fatah is the personification of corruption; Hamas fights Israel, while Fatah collaborates with Israel; Hamas leaders live among the people, while Fatah leaders live in well-protected mansions; Hamas leaders live a modest life, while Fatah enjoy extravagant lifestyles.  Furthermore, Fatah is rightly blamed for the failed and miserable path of the Oslo accords, which Hamas never supported.

But Hamas is now undergoing a second rebirth.  One military operation can make a difference in the history of Palestinian national struggle for independence.

The Karamah battle of 1968 (in which Yasser Arafat and Fatah wildly exaggerated their exploits) propelled the Fatah movement into the position of preeminent leadership within the PLO.  Hani Hassan (one of the Fatah leaders) tells how thousands of Palestinians flocked to join the movement after Karamah.

But the Hamas operation ("The Deluge of Aqsa") of Oct. 7, will be more significant than Karamah in Palestinian historical memory, and indeed in Arab historical memory.

Regardless of Western condemnations and recriminations — or maybe partly because of them — Arabs and Muslims worldwide were impressed with the daring operation and the ability of Hamas fighters to take the Israeli army by surprise.


Iranians celebrate the Al Aqsa Flood attack by Hamas on Oct. 7, 2023. (Ahamadreza Madah, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY 4.0)

The details of what happened on that night remain murky and Israel is very secretive about what transpired to suppress news of its complicity in the killing of Israelis.  The nature of the attacks on civilians are still being debated and many Arabs disbelieve Israeli narratives and blame the Israeli army for the death and destruction that ensued.

Hamas made it clear that it did not engage in the atrocities or sexual assaults that Israel claimed happened on that day, and there is absolutely nothing in Hamas history to corroborate Israeli claims of sexual assaults.


The Palestinian people have been waiting for a moment to shake the earth underneath the Israeli army.  The Oslo process and the creation of a collaborationist regime in Ramallah (which serves as an appendage of the Israeli occupation and takes its orders from regional U.S. intelligence officials), smashed the hopes of masses.

Those who dreamt for decades about the liberation of Palestine experienced even worse stages of the occupation, and the cruel siege of Gaza only got tighter over time.

Palestinians in the West Bank, for the first time, had to deal with fellow Palestinians who were put in charge of them to prevent them from engaging in resistance or even criticizing the collaborators.


A Palestinian confronts a group of charging Israeli soldiers in Bilin in the occupied West Bank in 2010. (Edo Medicks, Flickr, CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

There was an expectation that something would happen to break the hold of the occupation and the PA over the lives of Palestinians.  And in Gaza, the miserable life that Israel forced on the Palestinians could not last forever.

Hamas broke out of the prison, and there was unanimous support for its action in Palestinian and Arab public opinion. (For some reason, Western media assume that Western opinions influence people around the world. They discovered in the Ukraine war that the "world" is not the West).

Moreover, Arab governments — under the leadership of Saudi Arabia and the UAE — have all but abandoned the Palestinian cause. They have concluded that normalization with Israel is a requirement to receive the most advanced weapons from the U.S. government, and that it is a great guarantor of American indulgence of human rights abuses.


Sept. 15, 2020: From left: UAE's Minister of Foreign Affairs Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyani, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Bahrain's Minister of Foreign Affairs Abdullatif bin Rashid Al-Zay and  U.S. President Donald Trump during the signing ceremony for the Abraham Accords. (White House, Joyce N. Boghosian)

Egypt's Anwar Sadat experienced that first hand and for that, in the months preceding his assassination, went on a rampage of repression, crackdowns and persecution of dissidents.  The West supported him all the way, as it supports present-day despots, provided they don't bother Israel and its occupation.

The Palestinians did not pin their hopes on Arab governments, but the level of open Gulf hostility toward the Palestinians killed any chance that Arab governments would help recover Arab lands from Israel.  Far from it, the Saudi regime media embarked on a campaign of demonizing Palestinians, especially Hamas. 

In the wake of the Deluge of Aqsa, admiration for Hamas and for its perceived bravery and daring spread among the Arab people. The videos of Abu `Ubayda (the military spokesperson of the military wing of Hamas) were a huge hit, and were widely circulated in traditional Arab and social media.

The image of `Ubayda was painted on walls and children dressed like him, covering their faces with the traditional Palestinian kufiyyahs.


Poster of Hamas' military spokesman Abu `Ubayda at the Istanbul city wall, Nov. 10, 2023. (Mahmoud al-turki, Wikimedia Commons, CC0)

The quality of Hamas military propaganda improved greatly and people were glued to their screens in anticipation of the next pronouncement.  The tone of defiance in Hamas statements impressed many in the Arab world and they contrasted that with the abysmal political and military performance of the PLO.

Three months into the fighting, and the mighty Israeli army could not score a notable military victory and is still unable to reach to the top command of Hamas (yet, it bragged about capturing a shoe of Hamas leader, Yihya Sinwar and hitting an apartment that it claimed was once used as a hideout). [On Tuesday, Israel killed Saleh Al-Arouri, deputy head of the political bureau of Hamas, in a drone attack in Beirut, Lebanon.]

In 1982, the Israeli army crossed the entire South Lebanon region into the outskirts of Beirut in a matter of hours, despite the presence of thousands of fighters from the PLO and the Lebanese National Movement. 

New Quality of Resistance

Arab public opinion has taken notice that the new resistance movements, in Lebanon, Palestine and Yemen are of a different quality from those of the  past. That the personalities of the new leaders of the resistance are fierce and even ruthless in comparison to PLO leaders who did not hold up well under pressure (even Arafat who handled pressure better than many of his colleagues, experienced bouts of doubt and exhibited severe temper tantrums during the siege of Beirut, according to the account of the then Lebanese prime minister, Sa'eb Salam, in his recently posthumously released memoirs). 

The rise of Hamas will continue, and it will dominate the Palestinian political scene for many years to come.  The name of Hamas is heard in all the chants of Arab demonstrators and the names of its leaders can be recognized in street graffiti.

The UAE and Saudi Arabia meanwhile want to promote the Palestinian Authority as the alternative (the UAE wants to replace Mahmoud Abbas with the thuggish, Muhammad Dahlan, a tool of Muhammad Bin Zayid). 

The Palestinian political spectrum is likely to shift after the dust settles in Gaza.

It is likely that those Fatah officials who built their careers on corruption and fealty toward the Israeli army will be ostracized or even assassinated.  The end of the Gaza war will usher in a phase of internecine Palestinian war, where collaborators will be targeted (Yahya Sinwar, the political leader of Hamas, has a history of chasing and punishing Israeli collaborators and infiltrators).

The Palestinian Authority is unlikely to spread into Gaza, despite the wishes of the Biden-Blinken team.  Hamas, in the wake of Gaza, will be more emboldened and the plan (by the U.S. and Israel) to eliminate Hamas will ensure that it will remain the backbone of the Palestinian liberation movement.

Paradoxically, while Israel and the U.S. insisted that Hamas will be eliminated, the genocidal war in Gaza and the stiff resistance by Hamas has guaranteed it a prominent place of the movement in Palestinian and Arab public opinion.  Hamas will not be dislodged no matter how much brutal force Israel employs.

As`ad AbuKhalil is a Lebanese-American professor of political science at California State University, Stanislaus. He is the author of the Historical Dictionary of Lebanon (1998), Bin Laden, Islam and America's New War on Terrorism (2002), The Battle for Saudi Arabia (2004) and ran the popular The Angry Arab blog. He tweets as @asadabukhalil

The views expressed are solely those of the author and may or may not reflect those of Consortium News.

"He who Created me, it is He who Guides me"

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Chris Hedges: Israel's Genocide Betrays the Holocaust
January 3, 2024
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The Nazis shipped their victims to death camps. The Israelis will ship their victims to squalid refugee camps in countries outside of Israel.


Jewish prisoners of the Gestapo prison KZ Radogoszcz in Lodz, Poland, 1940. (Bundesarchiv, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0 de)

By Chris Hedges
ScheerPost

Israel's lebensraum master plan for Gaza, borrowed from the Nazi's depopulation of Jewish ghettos, is clear.

Destroy infrastructure, medical facilities and sanitation, including access to clean water. Block shipments of food and fuel. Unleash indiscriminate industrial violence to kill and wound hundreds a day.

Let starvation — the U.N. estimates that more than half a million people are already starving — and epidemics of infectious diseases, along with the daily massacres and the displacement of Palestinians from their homes, turn Gaza into a mortuary.

The Palestinians are being forced to choose between death from bombs, disease, exposure or starvation or being driven from their homeland.

There will soon reach a point where death will be so ubiquitous that deportation — for those who want to live — will be the only option.

Danny Danon, Israel's former ambassador to the U.N. and a close ally of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, told Israel's Kan Bet radio that he has been contacted by "countries in Latin America and Africa that are willing to absorb refugees from the Gaza Strip."

"We have to make it easier for Gazans to leave for other countries," he said. "I'm talking about voluntary migration by Palestinians who want to leave."


Danny Danon during a Security Council session in 2017, while he was Israel's U.N. ambassador. (Eskinder Debebe, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0)

The problem for now "is countries that are willing to absorb them, and we're working on this," Netanyahu told Likud Knesset members.

In the Warsaw Ghetto, the Germans handed out three kilograms of bread and one kilogram of marmalade to anyone who "voluntarily" registered for deportation. "There were times when hundreds of people had to wait in line for several hours to be 'deported,'" Marek Edelman, one of the commanders of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising, writes in The Ghetto Fights. "The number of people anxious to obtain three kilograms of bread was such that the transports, now leaving twice daily with 12,000 people, could not accommodate them all."

The Nazis shipped their victims to death camps. The Israelis will ship their victims to squalid refugee camps in countries outside of Israel. Israeli leaders are also cynically advertising the proposed ethnic cleansing as voluntary and a humanitarian gesture to solve the catastrophe they created.


This is the plan. No one, especially the Biden administration, intends to stop it.

The most disturbing lesson I learned while covering armed conflicts for two decades is that we all have the capacity, with little prodding, to become willing executioners. The line between the victim and the victimizer is razor thin. The dark lusts of racial and ethnic supremacy, of vengeance and hate, of the eradication of those we condemn as embodying evil, are poisons that are not circumscribed by race, nationality, ethnicity or religion.

We can all become Nazis. It takes very little. And if we do not stand in eternal vigilance over evil — our evil — we become, like those carrying out the mass killing in Gaza, monsters.

The cries of those expiring under the rubble in Gaza are the cries of the boys and men executed by the Bosnian Serbs at Srebrenica, the over 1.5 million Cambodians killed by the Khmer Rouge, the thousands of Tutsi families burned alive in churches and the tens of thousands of Jews executed by the Einsatzgruppen at Babi Yar in Ukraine. The Holocaust is not an historical relic. It lives, lurking in the shadows, waiting to ignite its vicious contagion. 

We were warned. Raul Hilberg. Primo Levi. Bruno Bettelheim. Hannah Arendt. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. They understood the dark recesses of the human spirit. But this truth is bitter and hard to confront. We prefer the myth. We prefer to see in our own kind, our own race, our own ethnicity, our own nation, our own religion, superior virtues. We prefer to sanctify our hatred.

Some of those who bore witness to this awful truth, including Levi, Bettelheim, Jean Améry, the author of At the Mind's Limits: Contemplations by a Survivor on Auschwitz and Its Realities, and Tadeusz Borowski, who wrote This Way for the Gas, Ladies and Gentlemen, committed suicide.

"The moral universe has been turned upside down. Those who oppose genocide are accused of advocating it. Those who carry out genocide are said to have the right to 'defend' themselves."

The German playwright and revolutionary Ernst Toller, unable to rouse an indifferent world to assist victims and refugees from the Spanish Civil War, hanged himself in 1939 in a room at the Mayflower Hotel in New York City. On his hotel desk were photos of dead Spanish children.

"Most people have no imagination," Toller writes.

"If they could imagine the sufferings of others, they would not make them suffer so. What separated a German mother from a French mother? Slogans which deafened us so that we could not hear the truth."


Primo Levi in the 1950s. (Mondadori Publishers, Wikimedia Commons, Public domain)

Primo Levi railed against the false, morally uplifting narrative of the Holocaust that culminates in the creation of the state of Israel — a narrative embraced by the Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C.

The contemporary history of the Third Reich, he writes, could be "reread as a war against memory, an Orwellian falsification of memory, falsification of reality, negation of reality." He wonders if "we who have returned" have "been able to understand and make others understand our experience."

Levi saw us reflected in Chaim Rumkowski, the Nazi collaborator and tyrannical leader of the Lódz Ghetto. Rumkowski sold out his fellow Jews for privilege and power, although he was sent to Auschwitz on the final transport where Jewish Sonderkommando —  prisoners forced to help herd victims into the gas chambers and dispose of their bodies  — in an act of vengeance reportedly beat him to death outside a crematorium.

"We are all mirrored in Rumkowski," Levi reminds us.

"His ambiguity is ours, it is our second nature, we hybrids molded from clay and spirit. His fever is ours, the fever of Western civilization, that 'descends into hell with trumpets and drums,' and its miserable adornments are the distorting image of our symbols of social prestige."

We, like Rumkowski, "are so dazzled by power and prestige as to forget our essential fragility. Willingly or not we come to terms with power, forgetting that we are all in the ghetto, that the ghetto is walled in, that outside the ghetto reign the lords of death, and that close by the train is waiting."

Levi insists that the camps "could not be reduced to the two blocks of victims and persecutors." He argues, "It is naive, absurd, and historically false to believe that an infernal system such as National Socialism sanctifies its victims; on the contrary; it degrades them, it makes them resemble itself."

He chronicles what he called the "gray zone" between corruption and collaboration. The world, he writes, is not black and white, "but a vast zone of gray consciences that stands between the great men of evil and the pure victims." We all inhabit this gray zone. We all can be induced to become part of the apparatus of death for trivial reasons and paltry rewards. This is the terrifying truth of the Holocaust.

"We all can be induced to become part of the apparatus of death for trivial reasons and paltry rewards. This is the terrifying truth of the Holocaust."

It is hard not to be cynical about the plethora of university courses about the Holocaust given the censorship and banning of groups such as Students for Justice in Palestine and Jewish Voices for Peace, imposed by university administrations.

What is the point of studying the Holocaust if not to understand its fundamental lesson — when you have the capacity to stop genocide and you do not, you are culpable?

It is hard not to be cynical about the "humanitarian interventionists" — Barack Obama, Tony Blair, Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden, Samantha Power  — who talk in sanctimonious rhymes about the "Responsibility to Protect" but are silent about war crimes when speaking out would threaten their status and careers.

None of the "humanitarian interventions" they championed, from Bosnia to Libya, come close to replicating the suffering and slaughter in Gaza. But there is a cost to defending Palestinians, a cost they do not intend to pay. There is nothing moral about denouncing slavery, the Holocaust or dictatorial regimes that oppose the United States. All it means is you champion the dominant narrative.

The moral universe has been turned upside down. Those who oppose genocide are accused of advocating it. Those who carry out genocide are said to have the right to "defend" themselves.


Protester holds a dead baby doll at a ceasefire for Gaza demonstration  in Washington, D.C., Oct. 28, 2023. (Diane Krauthamer, Flickr, CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

Vetoing ceasefires and providing 2,000-pound bombs to Israel that throw out metal fragments for thousands of feet is the road to peace. Refusing to negotiate with Hamas will free the hostages.

Bombing hospitals, schools, mosques, churches, ambulances and refugee camps, along with killing three former Israeli hostages, stripped to the waist, waving an improvised white flag and calling out for help in Hebrew, are routine acts of war.

Killing over 21,300 people, including more than 7,700 children, injuring over 55,000 and rendering nearly all of the 2.3 million people in Gaza homeless, is a way to "deradicalize" Palestinians.

None of this makes sense, as protesters around the world realize.

A new world is being born. It is a world where the old rules, more often honored in the breach than the observance, no longer matter. It is a world where vast bureaucratic structures and technologically advanced systems carry out in public view vast killing projects.

The industrialized nations, weakened, fearful of global chaos, are sending an ominous message to the Global South and anyone who might think of revolt —  we will kill you without restraint.

One day, we will all be Palestinians.

"I fear that we live in a world in which war and racism are ubiquitous, in which the powers of government mobilization and legitimization are powerful and increasing, in which a sense of personal responsibility is increasingly attenuated by specialization and bureaucratization, and in which the peer group exerts tremendous pressures on behavior and sets moral norms," Christopher R. Browning writes in Ordinary Men, about a German reserve police battalion in World War Two that was ultimately responsible for the murder of 83,000 Jews.

"In such a world, I fear, modern governments that wish to commit mass murder will seldom fail in their efforts for being unable to induce 'ordinary men' to become their 'willing executioners.'"

"The industrialized nations, weakened, fearful of global chaos, are sending an ominous message to the Global South and anyone who might think of revolt —  we will kill you without restraint."

Evil is protean. It mutates. It finds new forms and new expressions. Germany orchestrated the murder of 6 million Jews, as well as over 6 million Gypsies, Poles, homosexuals, communists, Jehovah's Witnesses, Freemasons, artists, journalists, Soviet prisoners of war, people with physical and intellectual disabilities and political opponents.

It immediately set out after the war to expiate itself for its crimes. It deftly transferred its racism and demonization to Muslims, with racial supremacy remaining firmly rooted in the German psyche. At the same time, Germany and the U.S. rehabilitated thousands of former Nazis, especially from the intelligence services and the scientific community, and did little to prosecute those who directed Nazi war crimes. Germany today is Israel's second largest arms supplier following the U.S.

The supposed campaign against anti-Semitism, interpreted as any statement that is critical of the State of Israel or denounces the genocide, is in fact the championing of White Power. It is why the German state, which has effectively criminalized support for the Palestinians, and the most retrograde white supremists in the United States, justify the carnage.

Germany's long relationship with Israel, including paying over $90 billion since 1945 in reparations to Holocaust survivors and their heirs, is not about atonement, as the Israeli historian Ilan Pappé writes, but blackmail.

"The argument for a Jewish state as compensation for the Holocaust was a powerful argument, so powerful that nobody listened to the outright rejection of the U.N. solution by the overwhelming majority of the people of Palestine," Pappé writes.

"What comes out clearly is a European wish to atone. The basic and natural rights of the Palestinians should be sidelined, dwarfed and forgotten altogether for the sake of the forgiveness that Europe was seeking from the newly formed Jewish state. It was much easier to rectify the Nazi evil vis-à -vis a Zionist movement than facing the Jews of the world in general.

It was less complex and, more importantly, it did not involve facing the victims of the Holocaust themselves, but rather a state that claimed to represent them. The price for this more convenient atonement was robbing the Palestinians of every basic and natural right they had and allowing the Zionist movement to ethnically cleanse them without fear of any rebuke or condemnation."

The Holocaust was weaponized from almost the moment Israel was founded. It was bastardized to serve the apartheid state.

If we forget the lessons of the Holocaust, we forget who we are and what we are capable of becoming. We seek our moral worth in the past, rather than the present. We condemn others, including the Palestinians, to an endless cycle of slaughter. We become the evil we abhor. We consecrate the horror.

Chris Hedges is a Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist who was a foreign correspondent for 15 years for The New York Times, where he served as the Middle East bureau chief and Balkan bureau chief for the paper. He previously worked overseas for The Dallas Morning News, The Christian Science Monitor and NPR.  He is the host of show "The Chris Hedges Report."
"He who Created me, it is He who Guides me"