MacCallum is absolutely correct. But no one who is swept up
in the antisemitic protests cares about the nature of the “spark” that lit the
fire in Gaza. It’s too late for that—they’ve been indoctrinated with the
falsehood that Israel, in 1948, by its very creation, was the spark that led to
the destruction in Gaza in the wake of the October 7, 2023, massacre.
"You won't see rape, there's no rape in this
video... We won't show you beheaded babies," a senior Israeli officer said
to a small group of journalists, saying such images existed but would not be
shown.0000
The journalists were the first to watch a screening of an
hour-long reel cobbled together from Hamas helmet cam, mobile phone video,
surveillance video, dashboard camera video and victims' livestreams. . .
. . . Journalists
were not allowed to record or use the video presented, and our phones were
deposited outside the room.
The video started slowly. Hamas fighters are seen on the
back of a pickup, with RPGs spiking out in every direction. You can sense their
excitement. The video shows several groups cut through the fence and wave a
pickup truck through.
Then it shows three separate angles of motorists in Israel
being flagged down, then gunned down -- the AK-47s puffing smoke -- on the road
outside the Kfar Aza and Be'eri kibbutzim. Bodies are yanked out of cars.
Then a pair of attackers in Be'eri is shown. For several
minutes, we watch as they amble around the kibbutz. They poke into one house
and you can hear someone's alarm going off. It's 8 a.m. You can hear them
breathing heavily. The one wearing the body camera has a high, soft-spoken
voice that seems to belie his mission.
At a playground, he wonders in Arabic, "Where are the
kids?" The duo set fire to one house, shoot an encroaching dog, and shoot
another old man through a darkened screen. They are parsimonious with their
ammunition, and chillingly unhurried as they pick through the tidy vegetable
gardens and open the latches of wooden fences.
Then the video gets grisly. Other militants are busy mashing
a dying man's face with their boots. Another pair screams "Allahu
akbar" as they use a garden hoe to try to decapitate another man.
In another house, a gunman sticks the muzzle of his rifle
into a room inhabited by a family. It's a mash of colors. In one, a terrorist
is standing on an Israeli man's chest and shoots him point-blank in the face.
Then, the scenes of bloodied bedrooms start to blur. The
rooms and the gore are the same -- it's how the bodies are arrayed in death
that's different. There are so many children. Some are jam-packed together in a
slippery mass of human flesh. Huge blood stains streak the tiles.
So many of the bodies are burnt. It was unclear if this was
because they were set fire to or if it was from the grenade blasts. Other
videos show Israeli first responders trying to put out the still-smoldering
skeletal remains of victims -- with water bottles, as if watering a parched
plant.
In another video, a grenade was apparently tossed into one
of the bomb shelters that line the roads in southern Israel. It was filled with
partygoers who'd left the Supernova music festival. The camera shows a flash of
limbs, some dismembered, some still attached to writhing, screaming bodies. A
selfie camera shows a young man weeping, while someone croaks hoarsely in the
background, "help, help." Hamas then drags survivors out, some by
their hair, to trucks, and then batters them some more in the backs of the
pickups on the way to Gaza.
Forensic images show bodies burned in cars, on beds, on the
streets and in the fields in various states of incineration.