Wednesday, February 28, 2024

ANGST AS ART

 

Ultimately, it had to find a way out. 

 

The angst and melancholy simmering in every Israeli’s chest since October 7 has been finding numerous forms of release. While I suspect people have been less productive at work - (I know I have been) – angst has proliferated in the form of art.

 

Angst-based Comedy 

 

Brave stand-up comedians have been impressive in their portrayal of daily life in the shadow of the  Hamas massacre and ongoing terrorist attacks in our cities. Comedians include Israeli Arab Muslims, performing in Hebrew.

 

Each of these shows manages to beautifully - and in a strange way, comfortably - depict what we are all experiencing. The material includes: vignettes of Arab citizens in a Jewish country under attack by other Arabs; struggles with life in a hotel after fleeing home due to rocket attacks; life as a soldier; the fear felt by tourists when they order a taxi and a car, resembling vehicles used by the murderers in the October attacks, turns up with an Arab driver; and more.

 

TV comedy shows, such as Eretz Nehederet, have been prominent in this effort. One episode, performed in English, highlighted the blatant anti-Israel agenda inherent in BBC news reports

Amazingly, this was picked up by media analysts overseas and stimulated conversation about BBC impartiality.

 

Other comedy sketches cover everything from UNRWA's complicity with Hamas, to antisemitism at American University campuses. 



Memes

 

The Internet has been rife with sarcastic cartoons that manifest the craziness of Israel's current affairs. When feeling aggrieved by fake news, posting an image of the type below can be very satisfying.

 

 



 

Trauma in Art

 

In a previous post, I wrote about an exhibit depicting the Nova music festival massacre.

On display soon after the attack took place, paintings by survivors successfully instilled the intensity of their trauma. (see photos in that post).


 
 
 
 
 
Baby on Board 
 
While the streets here have been plastered with posters bearing pictures of the hostages held by Hamas, as well as signs of all sizes declaring ‘Together We Will Win’, more nuanced messages have started making appearances.

A company is now selling yellow signs for your car's rear windshield. The words ‘Baby on Board’ have been replaced with ‘Baby in Gaza’. While only a small act of defiance against apathy, displaying such a sign is a public declaration that proudly states: I am with you and we are all in this together.

 

 



 

 

Blogs


Sharing and connectedness are a powerful panacea for anxiety and stress. This probably explains the blooming industry of blogs that allows people to express their thoughts and concerns about the quandaries we are living with today. I guess I'm part of that industry. Writing my blog gives me a sense of purpose and a feeling of contribution, while also leaving, for future reference, a testimony of Jewish and Israeli life today.

 

 

Poetry 

 

Poetry is another specialised artistic field that lends itself perfectly to memorialising our current experience. Large billboards posted outside the President's house contain a poem (in three languages), along with photographs, that describe an art gallery in Kibbutz Beeri that was destroyed by the terrorists in their rampage. 

 






 
Graffiti
 

Graffiti is the perfect medium to scream blue murder in a public forum.

In Jerusalem, crude graffiti has turned up on walls cursing Bibi with crass language. This may, of course, all be the work of one individual. Either way, when found, the municipality messily paints over them to render the text illegible.

Painted on a wall in town were the words ‘Bibi=Hamas’. Someone later crossed out the word Hamas and replaced it with ‘King’.

 

 

 

 

 

Public Participation

 

The Djanogly Visual Arts Center in Jerusalem runs workshops for the public. I was alerted to the Center's current exhibit by my friend Yonit Rosen, and I was so pleased to find it. Artists were invited to celebrate heroines of the war: women unwittingly thrust into situations of adversity, and their courage and ingenuity in saving lives.  
 
The experiences that inspired the displays are surreal. 
 

One room at the Center is dedicated to young graffiti artist Inbar Haiman. Known in the art world as 'Pink’, she was kidnapped by Hamas and held captive in Gaza. 

Family and friends held a campaign for her release. 

 

Sadly, in late October, her family was notified that Hamas killed her in captivity. 

 

Inbar was an attractive young college student. She was kidnapped as leverage in negotiations with Israel. She was held by Hamas, which is known for its murderous sexual assault of its victims. The fact that Inbar did not survive leads me to wonder whether her value to Hamas as a bargaining chip was lower than as a sexual victim. What did she suffer? My stomach turns. 


The words, Rest in Pink, together with an emotional message by another young artist who had never met her, were subsequently added to the exhibit.


 


Each wall in the building was made available to artists. Some painted directly on the plaster walls, while others prepared posters and other works that will auctioned off after the exhibition is closed. The proceeds will be donated to damaged communities of the Gaza envelope. 
 

Female Warrior
 
Aged 25, Inbar Leiberman, of the Kibbutz Nir Am first-response security team, felt something wasn’t right on the morning of October 7. Alerting other members of her team, Inbar took the initiative and directed operations. Inbar and her team fought off numerous Hamas attackers, saving her kibbutz. She is sexily portrayed on the wall with sass and style.

 

 


 

The Cookie Monster

 

When Hamas terrorists barged through the door of 65 year old Rachel Edri and her husband, she knew her only defense against being murdered was time. Unbelievably, Rachel convinced her attackers to let her bake them fresh cookies and take care of them. Somehow, miraculously, her ploy worked for almost 20 hours, during which time she and her husband were held at gunpoint. It gave her policeman son the time to summon an armed team to come and save his parents.

https://www.businesstoday.in/latest/world/story/israel-hamas-war-how-a-65-yr-old-israeli-grandma-tricked-hamas-militants-with-tea-moroccan-cookies-402534-2023-10-19

 

 

 

 

Daring Droppings

Probably the most poignant display at the art center is that of numerous little twirled plaster statues. I looked at them curiously, At first I thought they looked like ice-cream Sundays. But then again, they could have been piles of feces. Visitors are invited to paint them in a variety of colours. I spoke to the curator who gave me a tour. We arrived at the table of statues. 

 

‘These really describe public sentiment.”
 
“Are these what I think they are?” I asked.
 
“These are called Happy Shit”. The curator and I both smirked for a moment, knowingly. It was a moment of shared absurdity. But I suspect that inside, each of us was crying just a little bit. 

 

 


 

 

Among Friends

 

Rivkah Blok, a highly talented young woman in her early twenties (whom I have known since she was born) epitomised the state of the nation, in an image she crafted so well and shared on social media. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Every time I look at it I feel a sad stillness. A need to take stock. Connection. Responsibility, and perhaps responsibility that has been disappointed. As with the figure in the image, I too feel a need to sit still for a moment and cry.

 

And that, my friends, is the power of art.

 

 






Thursday, February 22, 2024

Nature, Nurture, and PTSD


The Dwindling Hostage Count

I was recently invited to join friends for dinner. On entering their living room I saw a poster on one of the armchairs. It contained the image of Uriel Baruch, a young Israeli man taken hostage by Hamas.
https://forward.com/forward-newsletters/looking-forward/569286/there-are-240-hostages-in-gaza-one-is-uriel-baruch/


“Have you met Uriel?” I was asked. I looked at the poster and then for somewhere to sit. “Oh, please sit in the armchair - Uriel's happy to make room for you.” The poster was moved to a kitchen chair. Behind me was a flame burning in a 7-day candle. I looked at my host inquisitively. “A candle will stay burning until all the hostages come home,” I was told with a stern look. “They are always with us”. 

Following a deal in November, which saw about a third of the hostages released by Hamas, 136 Israelis have remained in captivity. They remain in the minds of most people in Israel and Jews globally. Bring Them Home has been a rallying cry throughout the country.

https://m.facebook.com/StandWithUs/videos/136-hostages-are-still-in-the-captivity-of-genocidal-hamas-terrorists-in-gaza-du/236227396223208/

 

Hersh Goldberg is one of those still held.

https://nypost.com/2023/10/24/news/horrifying-footage-shows-hersh-goldberg-polin-moments-after-arm-was-blown-off-by-hamas/

 

A few weeks ago I walked past his parents’ home in Jerusalem. Their balcony is adorned with an enormous number, for all in the neighbourhood to see, representing the number of days he's been in captivity. Each morning his mother updates the number. After 100 days had passed, his parents requested that people wear this number as a badge on their clothing. “We cannot forget them”. At an engagement party I went to last week, many of the guests wore this badge of honour. Before making a celebratory speech to his friends, the groom began with one moment of silence for the captives and the soldiers looking for them in Gaza, and made a prayer for their safety.

 

 

On February 6 it was announced that approximately 32 of the remaining hostages were known to have perished. 

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/02/06/world/middleeast/israel-gaza-hostages-dead.html

This news only serves to increase the anxiety of Israelis who know that the longer they remain in captive conditions the lower their chances of survival, and time is running out.

https://www.cbsnews.com/newyork/news/hourglass-in-times-square-represents-time-running-out-for-israeli-hostages/

This became even more poignant (if that were possible) after evidence - both testimony and forensic evidence - started coming out of the sexual abuse and assault of girls and women in Hamas captivity.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/jan/18/evidence-points-to-systematic-use-of-rape-by-hamas-in-7-october-attacks

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2023/12/20/hamas-sexual-violence-rape-hostages-oct-7/71917113007/

Note that three films are currently in production on this issue.

 https://www.msn.com/en-ca/news/world/sheryl-sandberg-unveils-oct-7-film-about-hamas-s-sexual-atrocities/ar-BB1hXj35

The implications of all this are horrific. Everyone here is sick to the stomach from what is going on, and is partially paralysed by a feeling of helplessness. Protests are increasing in intensity for the Government to ‘bring the hostages home’ by any means.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2024/02/17/hostage-family-protest-israel-netanyahu/

Politicians (you know who I mean) are accused of making strategic decisions based on self-interest, at the expense of reaching a deal facilitating the release of the hostages; assuming, of course, that such a deal is possible.

https://edition.cnn.com/2024/02/17/middleeast/hamas-hostage-deal-demands-delusional-israel-intl/index.html

None of this is helped, of course, by the fact that the radio news here is aired with music in the background, which increases in intensity as each item is read out by the broadcaster. Many have taken to only looking at the print media, or foregoing the news altogether.

To relieve my anxiety from the stream of news I focus on my budgies, Dov Ber and Chaya Mushka. They have also experienced a little stress lately, so I spent a week building them a larger aviary, and then some toys to play with. With radio interviews blaring in the background, the birds chirp loudly as if to drown out the constant hum of awful information.

 

 




I even went to buy them a treat. “I’ve got one packet of budgie treats left,” said the pet store owner, reaching up to the shelf, “but it’s past its use-by date. You can have it for free.” I thanked him and looked at the date marked on the packet. 7-10-23. A chill went down my spine.

In early February, newly elected Argentine President Javier Milei visited Israel. A colourful character, he has announced his intention to convert to Judaism.

https://www.jta.org/2024/02/06/global/argentinas-new-president-javier-milei-heads-to-israel-on-his-first-overseas-diplomatic-trip

During his visit, the Argentine President was taken to the Western Wall where, with tears in his eyes, he  prayed for the welfare and release of hostages held by Hamas.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=96pybR_stUM

Days later, on February 12, the Israeli military announced that two hostages, held captive in Rafah, had been rescued in a special operation by the IDF. Both hostages were of Argentinian descent.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2024/02/12/israel-hostage-rescue-rafah/

This was a major coup for the military and for the government, and everyone in the country felt a surge of excitement. But the feeling didn’t last long. It did not lead to a slew of hostages being saved. On the contrary; Hamas is more wary than ever of such operations, and concern for the remaining hostages' safety has grown significantly.

 

Facts on the Ground

 

Almost all Israeli media reports since October 7 have focused on the Hamas attack and its aftermath. Video footage filmed by Hamas fighters, Israeli soldiers, dog-mounted cameras from the army’s canine unit and aerial photography have all been aired. Released captives have spoken about the conditions they endured in Gaza, whether in the custody of hostile Gazan families, in deep underground tunnels, or in dedicated secure areas in Gazan hospitals.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/israeli-forces-storm-main-hospital-in-southern-gaza-saying-hostages-may-have-been-held-there/ar-BB1iiVLW

 

As Israel’s mission in Gaza proceeded, much material was collected that provided significant information. This has included clues about the hostages, their conditions and whereabouts. The sources of data are varied: interrogation of Hamas fighters who have surrendered, abandoned Hamas computers (with files of prisoner lists, sentry lists, fighter lists, battalion details, battle strategies and instructions, etc.), security camera footage from the tunnels, and more.

https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/israeli-military-says-weapons-found-al-shifa-hospital-2023-11-15/

 

Amongst other things, an Israeli car stolen by Hamas during its massacre of Israeli citizens was found by troops in the Nasser Hospital parking lot in Gaza. This, despite claims that hospitals are humanitarian safe zones and not used by terrorists.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/vehicles-stolen-from-israel-unopened-medicine-for-hostages-found-at-nasser-hospital-says-idf/ar-BB1itBtN

 

And let’s not forget the plethora of children’s books found in the bedrooms of regular Gazan homes. Below are photos I took of a report shown on Israeli TV showing pages from a variety of children’s books found by soldiers, glorifying attacks on Jews.

 

 
 


For more details, listen to the following interview with a man who grew up in Gaza and escaped its culture of death against Jews. He came to Israel to verify what he had been taught and to see Jews for himself. This led him to convert to Judaism. As distinct from Jewish boys - who are circumcised with the blessing that they should be raised to observe Jewish law, get married, and do good deeds - Gazan newborns are paraded with a knife beside them in the hope that they will grow up to kill Jews. According to him, the culture of murdering Jews is so pervasive that there are no innocent civilians in Gaza. Anyone who disagrees with the genocide of Jews has long ago been either executed as a collaborator with Israel, or has moved overseas.

https://youtu.be/qbCuOSSc9j0?si=sClD3U9scLubgcEY

 

Conflicting Terms of Reference

 

A fundamental driver of anti-Israel opinion is the misunderstanding of occupation. Protaganists have a sense that the Hamas massacre of innocent Israeli civilians (both Jewish and Arab) was justified resistance to Israel’s purported ‘occupation’ of Arab land.

Western well-wishers believe that hostilities will end when the occupied territories - evidently something Jews stole from Arabs - are returned. (Note that a new expression - Jewed - which I first heard in Australia, refers to unfairly taking property that belongs to another.) These well-wishers have no idea if these occupied territories mean Gaza, Judea, the West Bank, Samaria (yes, I know it’s the same thing), Palestine (whatever that is), and pretty much everything from the river to the sea. In the same breath they declare that Israel can stay where it is. After all a 2 state solution sounds fair, doesn’t it? 

By contrast, the Arabs have a clear agenda. Israel and the Jews must go. Everything from the river to the sea - i.e.: the West Bank, Gaza and the entire State of Israel - is occupied and must become an Arab state called Palestine.

To them it is not relevant that the West Bank is governed by the elected Palestinian Authority and Gaza by its elected government Hamas, except insofar as these two bodies are the leading crusaders for the destrucion of Israel. Nor is it considered relevant that much of British Palestine was given over by the British to the Hashemite tribe for the creation of the country Transjordan (today known as Jordan). Imagine if the British had had the foresight to name it Arab Palestine...

Israel sees itself as a country with western values, while also understanding what the Arab Palestinians mean when they talk.

But as long as there are such conflicting terms of reference, and the West allows anti-Semitic undertones to blind its agenda, Israel will be abused by both the East and the West.

 

Genocide

 

Much of the international media spins the Israel-Hamas conflict in the most ridiculous terms. The accusation of genocide has been bandied about so much that, in my opinion, it has lost most of its meaning.

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/brazil-lula-israel-gaza-genocide-holocaust_n_65d2913be4b0ce1bdc39fc2e

 

Israel has been bashed, and battered, and even dragged to the International Court on accusations of - you guessed it - genocide.

https://www.npr.org/2024/01/26/1227078791/icj-israel-genocide-gaza-palestinians-south-africa

 

When Brazil’s president Lula de Silva (see the link above) accused Israel of genocide, he was driven by anti-Semitism. How so? By wilfully mis-framing Israel’s operations in Gaza as retaliation for the initial Hamas attack, and not as a defensive action preventing future attacks that have been promised by Hamas, de Silva wrongly portrayed Israel as motivated by genocidal intent. The same is true for South Africa and others.

For the sake of broad-mindedness, I follow a variety of news services, including those hostile to Israel. The latter all have one thing in common: a misunderstanding of facts and how they work. Sometimes my head spins as I try to untangle the confused logic they spew. And each time I’m dumbfounded by the credence given to them. As it turns out, I am the stupid one for thinking that most people think logically and critically consider the veracity of things they are told. 

In these news services the main character of our story - Hamas - is either mentioned only in passing or not at all, and is generally not deemed relevant of judgement, even when that group openly states it will continue to carry out similar massacres on Israeli citizens in the future.

https://nypost.com/2023/11/01/news/hamas-official-vows-to-repeat-israel-attacks-again-and-again-until-its-destroyed/

 

 

Nature, Nurture, and PTSD

 

With climate change bringing us a warmer winter than usual, I was pleased when a week of stormy weather hit our shores. These days the nightly forecast includes weather conditions expected in Gaza and the Hermon, for the benefit of any soldiers serving who are listening. I thought of our soldiers, sloshing around in the Gazan mud, unable to change their clothes for days at a time.

On hearing the forecast, I took the opportunity to go flood-hunting in the desert and hopefully clear my head. 

My windscreen wipers screeched rhythmically as I turned towards the desert, and the dark sky suddenly cleared. Within minutes I was heading south towards the Dead Sea, past the long suburbs of East Jerusalem on the ridge above me. Bedouin encampments replaced them as the hilly slopes became more barren. At sea level, I stopped off to visit my friend Ahmed, who gives camel rides to passing tourists. We stood in the winter sunshine shooting the breeze, and I thought of the constant accusations of apartheid leveled at Israel. Why don’t people come here to see for themselves?

 


I continued to the Dead Sea and turned south along its coastline. Radio reception was weak, but I could still make out a discussion on the main channel. The mother of a deceased soldier wanted to become a grandmother. She had posthumously had her son’s sperm harvested and frozen. Together with other grieving mothers, she had petitioned the authorities to clear the way for artificial insemination. The Knesset Health Committee has approved the process, for which legislation is now being prepared. While this has been available in Israel until now for widows who lost their partners, not so when the request came from the deceased’s parents.

https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/article-780309#google_vignette

A few kilometres past Qumran I turned off the road and parked under the massive rocky cliffs of the Judean desert. A fast-flowing river, normally dry, rushed seaward. The rocky ground crunched underfoot as I followed the river, which carried the day’s rainfall from Jerusalem. In the distance, a thundering waterfall, with 3 levels, poured down the side of a cliff.

 


Two young men, returning along the valley to their car, walked towards me. One held a baby, the other an M16 rifle. We greeted each other and started chatting. Childhood friends, they had both just been released from serving in Gaza and came out to the desert for a break. “I come here to see the waterfall every winter,” said the one with an enormous, soft smile. His rifle dangled behind his back and he readjusted the strap across his chest.

We cooed at the sweet baby held by the other.

“Do you have any other kids?” I asked.

“Four others” he replied. I was taken aback. He must be older than I expected and was probably a reservist.

 


“How long were you in Gaza?” I asked.

“Four months” replied the father. He saw the expression on my face. “Yes, it was a long stint. I actually got out last week.”

“Wow! Have you managed to sleep yet, or are the kids hanging onto you all the time?”

He laughed. “Something like that.”

“Are you back at work? Is your job okay?” I have heard stories of reservists returning after long periods of military service, but their employers had needed to hire someone else when they were away fighting.

“I’m fine. At least now my wife can work while I take care of the kids. Beforehand she didn’t have any free time and couldn’t work properly.”

The implications of this war are so diverse and not discussed, especially abroad.

I didn’t want to ask him what he did during his four months, or what battalion he was in. Nonetheless, he told me of a few of the places he had served. Most of the Strip.

Gesturing towards the gorge and the river, I said “It must be surreal coming here after fighting in Gaza. Like being on a different planet. Good on you for keeping your sanity while experiencing the dissonance. I am always amazed how Israeli soldiers do their duty but, on returning, never discuss what they have seen and experienced.” He nodded in agreement.

“We are out there doing our thing so that the citizens of Israel can get on with their lives. We all have a part to play. Yours is to keep the country going. Otherwise there’s no point to what we are doing.”

His words were powerful. 

I wished the two friends well and went on my way.

Later, I drove out to the shores of the Dead Sea to see some desert wildflowers. 

 

 
 

 

The spot was secluded except for a rented caravan beside a swinging bench on a cliff, overlooking the blue water of the sea. In the distance, the mountains of Edom shone in the late afternoon sun. A young man sat silently in a chair by the caravan. Having returned from service in Gaza, he had sought somewhere to be alone and rented this spot from a local. It seemed perfect.

 



 

I could only imagine the tumultuous experiences in his head: explosions, bullets, heat, the barking of orders, constant tension making his pulse a deafening clamour, distinguishing between little boys running into his gunsights as they searched for their mothers, and others running into his gunsights as they lobbed grenades at him. And he would shoot, shoot, shoot, the bullets exploding beside his ear as the casings popped out of the rifle in succession.

As I have said, I can only imagine. But whatever the case, the still, quiet, desert air - silent apart from the periodic screech of a migrating bee-eater or the ubiquitous Tristram’s starling - is the perfect place to spend a few days to process an aspect of life that this young man has spared most of us from.

https://www.idf.il/en/mini-sites/our-soldiers/how-the-israeli-military-is-fighting-ptsd-at-its-core/

https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/other/october-7-and-war-trauma-will-lead-to-at-least-30000-new-cases-of-ptsd-expert-says/ar-BB1iCrzZ

 

 


 







Tuesday, February 6, 2024

Did You Know?


Today, the media are flooded with catch-cries, prejudices and fake news. 

Many facets of our lives are not made public or are cast in a limited light. 
Some questions don’t get asked, while others don’t get answered. Nuances get lost.

Let’s take a peek at some of these nuances.

 

When Did The War Known as Iron Swords begin - and why?


Much of what is happening today results from differing views about when this war began, and who are the Palestinians.


Israel supporters say the current war began on October 7, 2023, when Hamas - the elected government of Gaza - crossed the border into Israel and carried out a massacre. This, even though Hamas has in fact been attacking Israel with rockets almost continuously since it was elected to govern Gaza, 17 years ago.

I posted about such attacks in 2009 and 2014.

https://alanmeerkin.blogspot.com/2009/01/


Arab 'Pro-Palestine' supporters say the war began in 1948, when the Jewish State of Israel was established. 

For them, the current conflict is a continuation of the 1948 war between them and the Jewish Palestinians. That is why they always complain about 75 years of Israeli occupation - despite the fact that Gaza was only under Israeli control for 39 years (from 1967 to 2006).


Woke Westerners who join the Arab protests seem to believe that the latter want to live in an Arab Palestinian state in what they see as 'occupied Gaza and the West Bank'. For these Westerners, the details are not important.

As can be seen, this lack of nuance has significant implications.


To my thinking, the current crisis began on June 25, 2006, when Hamas, as the newly elected government of Gaza, committed its first major attack on Israel (as a government) by kidnapping Gilad Shalit. This was followed by the firing of rockets on Israeli towns. Close to two decades later, the rocket attacks have not stopped.

https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/hamas-israel-history-confrontation-2021-05-14/



A Battle Against Innocents


Today, after 4 months of fighting to disable Hamas, Israeli soldiers are still dying in battles raging against well-armed Hamas fighters. To a logical mind, this should debunk the image presented in the world media of a regional superpower steam-rolling a defenceless, innocent population.

 

Many here feel that each Israeli soldier is his/her own child. I know I do, and almost everyone I speak to expresses the same feeling.

https://aish.com/an-open-letter-to-an-israeli-soldier/

 

“What a tragedy,” is a sentence that is sadly oft repeated here, when a young Israeli man dies in battle. Last week, a father of two young children, serving on reserve duty, came home after being released. Then he was requested to return to Gaza to serve for one more week. The morning of his final release was his last morning on this earth.
 
Soldiers’ funerals are sometimes attended by thousands of grieving people, most of whom never personally met the deceased.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1hGxY2QHLgs

https://www.i24news.tv/en/news/israel/society/1688727288-israel-lays-first-sergeant-shilo-yossef-amir-to-rest-thousands-attend-the-funeral

 

I was recently at a family celebration. Also attending were a number of young men who had just been discharged after 3 months of service in Gaza. The family matriarch sat in a corner quietly crying, grateful that they had returned home safely.
 
A small number of Gazan Palestinians, seeking shelter in the humanitarian corridor set up by Israel, have been protesting against Hamas, and the devastation it has wrought on Gaza.

https://www.i24news.tv/en/news/israel-at-war/1706106277-palestinian-civilians-protest-against-hamas-in-gaza

https://jewishinsider.com/2023/12/hamas-gaza-israel-war-october-7-palestinians/

 

Such protests are not reported on the BBC of course.
 
Gazans’ discontent with Hamas was also expressed before the current war, but was subdued by Hamas with an iron fist.

https://apnews.com/article/gaza-hamas-demonstration-israel-blockade-palestinians-306b19228f9dd21f1036386ce3709672\\


What About the Bodies?

 

About 1500 Hamas terrorists were killed on Israeli soil while being repelled on October 7.

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/hamas-fighters-bodies-israel-toll-gaza-ground-invasion-rcna119640

 

What happened to their bodies? How were they treated? Were they buried?

A friend told me that the Israeli authorities carefully collect the bodies, clean them and treat them with religious respect, before burying them together.

 

That’s certainly a contrast from the dismemberment and mutilation of Israelis (often while still alive) by Hamas operatives, who were instructed to deface, dishonour and defile non-Muslim corpses.

https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/defense-news/article-770086


Many Israeli victims could only be identified by DNA, dental records and other forensic means.

https://www.npr.org/2023/10/17/1206601854/israel-turns-to-dna-and-dental-imprints-to-identify-unrecognizable-bodies

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2023/10/31/israel-attack-victims-forensic-identification/


After a few weeks, it was even necessary to bring in Israeli archaeologists to detect human remains.

https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/2023-10-30/ty-article/.premium/israeli-archaeologists-help-identify-human-remains-in-gaza-communities/0000018b-80c6-d4a8-a3cf-bcef30330000


Judaism is so strict about respectful treatment of corpses, that even the smallest parts of a deceased person are honoured. This explains why the burnt-out cars incinerated by Hamas terrorists while young Israelis attempted to flee, were not later towed for scrap. After scouring the vehicles, Zaka (the Israeli Disaster Victims Identification Unit) found it was impossible to identify residual body parts, so the cars themselves were buried.
 
By early January, 2024, an estimated 9000 Hamas fighters had reportedly died fighting the IDF in Gaza.
The image in my mind, of Israeli soldiers scanning the war zone in Gaza for black figures wearing green Hamas bandannas, popping out of tunnels with rifles and rocket propelled grenades, reminds me of a game of whack-a-mole.
 
I assume that, in Gaza, the bodies of Hamas fighters are given last rights by the Palestinian authorities. Either way, Hamas reports them as civilian casualties. With the disdain for Israel held by the indoctrinated civilian population of Gaza, it may be more accurate to count the civilian casualties as being hostile Hamas operatives.
 
I am sad even making such a statement and wonder to whom I am doing a disservice by making it.
 

More About the Tunnels


The Gaza tunnel network is now estimated to be between 500 and 700 km long.
It is locally known as ‘The Metro’.
 
It is larger in scale than the London Underground and the NYC subway, but in a much smaller area.
 
These tunnels were professionally built over a 15-year period, paid for by international aid.
This aid had been donated to build better lives for the residents of Gaza; not to build a war machine to destroy the lives of Israelis.

 

Consider this:


Construction of the tunnels was not a secret. They have been reported on for decades (see the Wikipedia entry for the Gaza tunnels). I wonder if this makes the donor countries, who knew that their aid to Gaza was being exploited by Hamas, criminally liable for complicity in the support of terror, in contravention of the International Convention for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism (1999).

https://www.un.org/securitycouncil/ctc/sites/www.un.org.securitycouncil.ctc/files/ctc_cted_factsheet_cft_oct_2021.pdf

 

Also consider this:


Israel focuses its efforts on defence. It provides bomb shelters in almost every building or neighbourhood in the country. It has also spent billions in developing the Iron Dome missile deflection system, to protect all Israeli (Jewish, Muslim, Christian, Druze and other) citizens.
 
By contrast, Hamas built a whole underground city dedicated to a clandestine economy and warfare, to which regular Gazans have no access. Which is ironic, because when Israel attacks Gaza to disable Hamas rocket launchers, Hamas complains that Gazan civilians have no bomb shelters to retreat to. In reality, however, they have a whole underground city to go to, but Hamas won’t let them in.
It’s such a pity. With almost 6000 access shafts - many in hospitals, mosques, schools and children’s bedrooms - these safe spaces are perfectly placed and are more than large enough to provide refuge for all the citizens of Gaza, for whose welfare the Hamas government is responsible.


Daily Changes


Just like the nooks and crannies, and twists and turns, in the narrow streets of Khan Younis, there are so many nuances, intricacies and variables that affect our understanding of the current war. And the situation changes daily.

There is so much more I would like to share, but so little time for me to write and for you to read.
We are all getting a little war-weary. But we trudge on for the greater good.

That is all we can do: trudge on for the greater good.