Does it really matter whether a person dies or is murdered?
After all, when a person is murdered, he definitely dies. So isn’t it all just semantics? Why should it matter so much
how we say things?
And while we’re on the subject, must we specify the nationality
of the person who stabs, or that of the person who “dies?”
Aren’t people, in the end, just people? Stabber, stabbed, why
should it matter? Both are people. To identify them by race, color, or creed,
wouldn’t that be divisive? And anyway, if both of them die in the attempt—that is to say,
both are no longer alive—don’t their deaths simply cancel each
other out in a kind of ugly justice?
Their mothers, being mothers, will miss them fiercely. There
will be no difference between the mourning of Fatma and the mourning of
Tzipora. Just names. They could be any two mothers, mourning sons. Dead sons.
Men.
All these distinctions, isn’t it exactly these which come between war and peace, good and evil? That thin line between the two—the thing
that divides humans into camps: white and black, Jew and Arab.
Think about it:
Some men flew airplanes into the Twin Towers and 2,996 people died
A woman drove a man to a pizzeria and 16 people died
A man was near a playground and a baby died.
Two boys, playing hooky from school, visited a cave and died
A man came in as a woman was cooking supper and as three
children watched, she died
A man came into a home during Shabbat dinner and three of
the people there, died.
A father and a baby in a car, died (stupid rock)
A man walked up to a passenger window and a girl's face burned
A man walked into a café and 12 people died
A man walked into a café and 8 people died
Moment Cafe
Cafe Hillel Memorial
A man walked into a library where he and 8 students, died
A man came through a girl’s bedroom window and she died
A mom and her three daughters drove past five men after a fun visit to Grandma and the youngest daughter, age two, fell into a coma. Two years later, she died
Two men walked into a home on a quiet Sabbath eve. They lived, but four people died. The men left and a baby cried. They came back and the baby died, too.
(h/t Dov Epstein for the concept)
We have lots of ideas, but we need more resources to be even more effective. Please donate today to help get the message out and to help defend Israel.
This blog may be a labor of love for me, but it takes a lot of effort, time and money. For 20 years and 40,000 articles I have been providing accurate, original news that would have remained unnoticed. I've written hundreds of scoops and sometimes my reporting ends up making a real difference. I appreciate any donations you can give to keep this blog going.
Iran Has Been at War With Us for 46 Years
-
“America can’t do a damn thing against us,” Ayatollah Khomeini bragged
while holding our hostages.
The Carter administration had undermined the Shah’s...
Jonathan Sacks: The Real World Shelach Lecha
-
[image: Jonathan Sacks: The Real World Shelach Lecha] Jonathan Sacks: The
Real World Shelach Lecha IsraelSeen.com
Jonathan Sacks: The Real World Shelach Le...
Fighting Iran
-
Dry Bones Blog Golden Oldies, now coming to you by Sali, the LSW (Long
Suffering Wife)
Israel continues to fight Iran!
Praying that our soldiers be pro...
Israel’s enemies drink their own Kool-Aid
-
Israel’s enemies, on the other hand, see self-criticism as a weakness – it
is a source of shame to have anyone publicly contradict what the government
says...
One Choice: Fight to Win
-
Yesterday Israel preempted a potentially disastrous attack by Hezbollah on
the center of the country. Thirty minutes before launch time, our aircraft
destr...
Closing Jews Down Under Website
-
With a heavyish heart I am closing down the website after ten years.
It is and it isn’t an easy decision after 10 years of constant work. The
past...
‘Test & Trace’ is a mirage
-
Lockdown II thoughts: Day 1 Opposition politicians have been banging on
about the need for a ‘working’ Test & Trace system even more loudly than
the govern...