Thursday, July 24, 2025

From Ian:

Seth Mandel: Holocaust Miseducation and the Nakba Narrative
Yet the word “Jews” is noticeably absent from the NEA’s bullet point. This is deliberate: the NEA’s members don’t want to secretly slip Holocaust revisionism into lesson plans and quietly appropriate Jewish suffering for their own demented political purposes. They want their intentions to be made clear and public from the start. This is a fight they want to have, because it will force wavering members to announce and to demonstrate their loyalty to the union’s mission of miseducating America’s children.

And why might that be? Why would the NEA “want” the Holocaust for themselves, so to speak?

Well, under the heading “New Business Referred to the Board” we have a couple items that might answer that question.

One of these items is called “Palestine Nakba Education.” The guide claims that “[e]ducating about the Nakba is essential for understanding the Palestinian diaspora narrative and experience, including the ongoing trauma of our Palestinian American students today,” however, the NEA clearly wants to go all-in on the revisionism:

“The Nakba, meaning ‘catastrophe’ in Arabic, refers to the forced, violent displacement and dispossession of at least 750,000 Palestinians from their homeland in 1948 during the establishment of the state of Israel.”

In fact, the Nakba was coined by Arab intellectuals to refer to the failure of the combined Arab armies to destroy the nascent Jewish state. In other words, Nakba literally is the mourning of a failed ethnic cleansing of the Jewish people three years after the liberation of Auschwitz.

Additionally, 750,000 Arabs in Palestine were not victims of “forced, violent displacement and dispossession.” Many of those who fled were forced to do so at gun point, no doubt. But many fled because the Arab leaders told them to get out of the way while the Jews were routed, and many others fled because of debunked stories of Zionist atrocities that were spread by Arab leaders in an attempt to rile up the Arab street but which often had the opposite effect.

No doubt those displaced experienced a catastrophe, and usually that catastrophe was at the hands of others. The catastrophe was real, but it wasn’t what “Nakba” was coined to describe, and it isn’t what is described by the NEA either.

Finally, the handbook has an item explaining that “NEA will use existing digital communication tools to educate members about the difference between anti-Zionism and antisemitism.”

Such a program will no doubt go well with the Holocaust revisionism and delegitimizing of Israel planned by the NEA.

“Teaching anti-Semitism” used to be a phrase one used to refer to teaching about anti-Semitism. The NEA clearly means it to be taken literally.
What the Prime Minister should be saying on anti-Semitism
Anti-Semitism is being normalised in the UK. Stamping it out requires leadership at the highest level. This is the speech to the nation Prime Minister Keir Starmer should deliver:

I speak to you today on a matter I now consider to be a national emergency.

It is said that the greatest test of a democracy is not the experience of the majority but the way in which it protects the rights and wellbeing of the minority.

In the UK today, there are under 300,000 Jews. Jewish people make up just 0.5 per cent of our population. They are a tiny group who contribute a great deal to public life and communities across the nation.

I must tell you today that Britain is failing its Jewish community.

I also tell you that I am drawing a line in the sand. The Jew-hate we are seeing in our country must end now – and as the Prime Minister I am personally going to lead the fight against anti-Semitism.

For those who would like to pretend that racial hatred of Jews is not a very serious problem in our society today, let me put you straight.

We are seeing it on the streets of Britain on a weekly basis. Just last weekend, large numbers of protestors in London chanted “F--- your Jewish State”. Note the language here. Not opposition to the war Israel is fighting but a direct attack on Jews. An open display of racism.

The war between Israel and Hamas has divided opinion. I know that. But it should never be an excuse for the Jew-hate that is creeping its way into the fabric of our society and our national institutions.

Take schools. More than half of Jewish teachers have reported anti-Semitic abuse since the war in Gaza began. They are finding swastika graffiti in the classroom and facing chants of “F--- the Jews”. Some teachers are even fearful of disclosing their religion at work. This is entirely unacceptable. It should shame us all.

Then there’s the NHS. Jewish patients have been abused and left in fear, Jewish doctors and nurses have faced discrimination. In one case a nurse was confronted with the anti-Semitic trope of Jews “drinking blood”. It is hard to believe this is happening in our caring professions. Institutional blindness to anti-Semitism must end now.

The question we must all ask ourselves is: how do we stop this hate in its tracks? It requires leadership, courage and conviction and I am prepared to show it.
‘The shock is gone’: All too used to antisemitism, Parisian Jews weather post-Oct. 7 storm with aplomb
Walking through the bustling cobblestone streets of Le Marais, the historic heart of Jewish Paris, it’s easy not to think about antisemitism.

Once the center of Jewish life in the capital of France, Rue des Rosiers still pulses with trendy kosher and kosher-style restaurants, Judaica shops, and Hebrew signs. On a Friday afternoon in July, hordes of visitors buy challah for Shabbat and eat falafel on the street, chatting in French, Hebrew, English, and countless other tongues.

“People walk around freely in their kippot here,” a local Jew, Levi, mentioned in passing. “Parisian Jews don’t live in fear.”

Others would differ on that point.

Antisemitism in the city of more than 300,000 Jews — the sixth-largest Jewish community in the world and the largest in Europe — has reached historic highs in recent years, particularly since Hamas invaded Israel on October 7, 2023, sparking the ongoing war in Gaza.

That year, the number of antisemitic incidents around the country quadrupled to 1,676, according to the Conseil Représentatif des Institutions Juives de France (CRIF), the representative organization of French Jewish groups. In 2024, that number dropped by six percent to 1,570, but remains alarmingly high.

Those figures don’t include countless cases that went unreported, particularly within the educational system, CRIF has noted.
From Ian:

Bret Stephens: No, Israel Is Not Committing Genocide in Gaza. The Charge Is Obscene
If the Israeli government's intentions and actions are truly genocidal, why hasn't it been more methodical and vastly more deadly? It could have bombed without prior notice, instead of routinely warning Gazans to evacuate areas it intended to strike. It could have bombed without putting its own soldiers, hundreds of whom have died in combat, at risk.

The death count isn't higher because Israel is manifestly not committing genocide, a legally specific term defined by the UN Convention on Genocide as the "intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such." Note the words "intent" and "as such." Genocide does not mean simply "too many civilian deaths" - a heartbreaking fact of nearly every war.

It means seeking to exterminate a category of people for no other reason than that they belong to that category: the Nazis and their partners killing Jews in the Holocaust because they were Jews, or Hamas on Oct. 7 intentionally butchering families in their homes and young people at a music festival because they were Israelis.

Over a million German civilians died in World War II, victims of war but not of genocide. The aim of the Allies was to defeat the Nazis, not to wipe out Germans simply for being German. I am aware of no evidence of an Israeli plan to deliberately target and kill Gazan civilians.

What is unusual about Gaza is the cynical and criminal way Hamas has chosen to wage war. In Ukraine, when Russia attacks, civilians go underground while the Ukrainian military stays aboveground to fight. In Gaza, it's the reverse: Hamas hides and feeds and preserves itself in its vast warren of tunnels rather than open them to civilians for protection. These tactics are war crimes in themselves.

We know how the U.S. would operate in similar circumstances. In 2016 and 2017, the U.S. aided the government of Iraq in retaking the city of Mosul, which was captured by the Islamic State three years earlier and turned into a booby-trapped, underground fortress. As the Times reported on March 28, 2017, "American airstrikes have at times leveled entire blocks - including the one in Mosul Jidideh this month that residents said left as many as 200 civilians dead." I don't recall any campus protests.

Wars are awful enough, but the term "genocide" can't be promiscuously applied to any military situation we don't like.
Seth Mandel: The Enablers of Hamas’s Starvation Strategy
The reason is both simple and demonic. The deterioration of conditions for civilians under Hamas’s thumb has convinced the terror group to keep the war going and to try to bring the enclave to calamity.

And why is this even a workable strategy for Hamas? Here, the answer implicates all those Western leaders who carp and lecture Israel to Hamas’s benefit.

The European Union reportedly decided that Israel’s actions in Gaza violate a 25-year-old Israel-EU trade agreement, opening the door to sanctions. British Foreign Minister David Lammy threatened UK action against Israel for the situation in Gaza. The EU then threatened to suspend the EU-Israel Association Agreement, again over the flow of humanitarian aid into Gaza.

“Other steps could be suspending an aviation agreement, blocking imports from settlements, limiting scientific and technological cooperation, and curtailing travel for Israelis in the visa-free zone known as Schengen, according to a leaked document sent by the EU’s top diplomat, Kaja Kallas, to member states,” the AP reported.

Notice the consistent element of all these stories? That’s right, they all assume Israel is fully to blame for the situation. There is no real threatening of Hamas; on the contrary, the push for Israel to let Hamas-linked UN agencies take over the aid delivery amounts to material support for Hamas.

And yet this whole issue proves why destroying Hamas must be a priority for all involved. If there is a cease-fire or if Israel relents on Hamas-linked aid delivery, there will be a temporary amelioration of the possible hunger crisis. But Hamas will hoard the aid and resell some for astronomical markup. In other words, Hamas’s strategy is to keep the people of Gaza perpetually close to a hunger crisis because that triggers international pressure on Israel to let Hamas restock its own shelves and refill its own coffers.

Hamas’s near-unprecedented monstrousness is being sustained by the supposedly humanitarian West, which is sacrificing the lives of Gazan civilians out of irrational animosity toward Israel.
Andrew Fox: Is Gaza Starving?
Conclusion
The question “Is Gaza starving?” cannot be answered with a simple yes or no. It demands an understanding of how we arrived at this humanitarian impasse. Gazans are not starving in the sense of a biblical famine caused by crop failure; they are starving in a man-made hellscape where more than enough food exists but too often fails to reach the people who need it most. Enormous quantities of aid have poured into Gaza, theoretically enough that no one should go hungry, yet tens of thousands of civilians are going hungry because of deliberate obstruction, chaos, and mistrust.

Israel is not blameless: the hardline strategy of besieging Hamas has resulted in strangling Gaza’s economy and, for a time, even its aid lifeline, leading to substantial civilian suffering.

The UN and international NGOs, for their part, have been shamefully inflexible, loftily and hypocritically prioritising principles of neutrality (as they apply to Israel alone) to the extent of allowing aid to remain unused while people starve, and either underestimating, not caring, or encouraging the manner in which their own systems were compromised and manipulated by Hamas (in breach of their lofty neutrality claims).

Hamas, of course, bears primary responsibility for all suffering in Gaza. Not only did it spark this war, but it also consistently prioritises its military agenda over the welfare of Gaza’s population, profiting from shortages and deliberately perpetuating the crisis. The international community, despite pouring in aid funds, has at times made political blunders, as demonstrated by the ill-timed ceasefire letter that has likely prolonged the fighting.

Is Gaza starving? Many Gazans are, tragically, suffering from starvation in the literal sense: children with swollen bellies, parents skipping meals for days. This should not be dismissed, but it is not because there is no food to be found; it is due to a collective failure to deliver the food to the people. The world’s media often presents it in the simplest terms (“Israel is starving people”). The reality is far more complex, a perfect storm of war, blockade, misrule by Hamas, and a paralysed aid system. Understanding this complexity is not about absolving any party of responsibility, but about recognising what needs to change.

What must change, first and foremost, is that the guns should fall silent, temporarily, to enable a full-scale humanitarian effort. A sustained ceasefire, even if unilateral, would enable food distribution to occur safely and provide negotiators with an opportunity to resolve the GHF-UN impasse. Unlike previous temporary ceasefires, at this stage, Israel, having greatly weakened Hamas, could afford to pause and use that goodwill to secure the remaining hostages’ release.

The UN and aid groups must demonstrate flexibility to ensure that aid reaches every family in need promptly. In the longer term, Gaza’s governance and reconstruction will require creative, likely unprecedented solutions, such as an empowered Palestinian Authority, an international mandate, or some hybrid arrangement. These debates are difficult, but they cannot be postponed indefinitely; otherwise, any Israeli victory on the battlefield will be pyrrhic. History shows that wars often end with new realities on the ground, sometimes including population movements or border changes, but any such outcomes here must centre on the return of the hostages and the welfare and wishes of Gaza’s people, not force them into another tragedy.

Currently, saving lives and reducing suffering are the top priorities. No child in Gaza should be dying of hunger when food is available just a few miles away, sitting on a pallet or locked in a warehouse. This is a solvable problem, provided there is political will. Gazans are not starving due to drought or fate; they are starving because humans, both their own leaders and the international community, have failed them. Whilst Israel has no legal obligation to provide aid that will be repurposed by their enemy, stepping up and ending the failure of others should be a moral duty.
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Jerusalem, July 24 - The jinni and other supernatural beings who, according to officials in Tehran, assisted in IDF attacks on the Islamic Republic last month, have decided to seek public office in the Jewish State, a spokesspirit for the group of demons and other such entities announced today.

The spiritual entities have already begun the paperwork to register for the next Knesset elections, stated a jinn who called himself Buraq. Depending on the fortunes of the current Netanyahu government, the next contest will take place sometime between several months from now and October of next year - giving the various specters and minions ample time to gain relocation and citizenship in Israel just as other allies have done: the Maronite soldiers of the now-defunct South Lebanon Army were absorbed in northern Israel when Israel withdrew from its security zone in southern Lebanon under Prime Minister Ehud Barak.

"It's not that we're not safe in Iran," explained Buraq. "The puny resources and forces of the mullahs cannot harm us in the slightest. The worst they can do to us is continue their incessant whining and blustering, which is enough to drive even us off the deep end. Like, make up your mind, are you the ultimate victims, or are you mighty warriors of a nascent Islamic empire?"

"We're just fed up with spending our time there, and Israel is just a better place to spend our existence - eternal or otherwise," the spirit added.

Iranian leaders and media personalities accused Israel of harnessing the spiritual beings to do its bidding during the twelve-day war between the two countries in June, when Israel neutralized Iranian air defense capabilities and struck targets with impunity via airstrikes from Israel and using drones that the Mossad assembled in Iran itself and then directed at targets.

Many commentators understood the Iranian claims as attempts to save face as the regime was exposed as an impotent windbag that less than two years ago boasted a network of proxies surrounding Israel, and now lies naked and weak with its shortcomings and powerlessness visible to the whole world.

However, the spirits disclosed, they did indeed assist Israel in conducting Operation Rising Lion, not by being recruited, induced, or harnessed in any way, but of their own volition, seeing an opportunity to help end a regime that has oppressed Iranians for more than four decades and prioritized military adventurism over the welfare of its own people.



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  • Thursday, July 24, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon
Antisemitic mural in Tehran



The New York Times reports:
A top Iranian official warned on Wednesday that Iran could withdraw from a key nuclear nonproliferation treaty if Europe followed through on its threats to reimpose sanctions on Tehran.

The remarks, from Iran’s deputy foreign minister, Kazem Gharibabadi, came during a rare on-the-record briefing with reporters in New York, where he was attending meetings at the United Nations. 

Britain, France and Germany announced this month that they would enforce tough U.N. sanctions on Iran by the end of August if the country did not make concrete progress on a deal to limit its nuclear program. The mechanism for applying the sanctions is called a “snapback,” and it refers to a term in the 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and world powers that allows parties to the deal to impose sanctions on Iran before the deal expires at the end of October this year if it has violated its terms.

Mr. Gharibabadi, who is part of Iran’s nuclear negotiating team, warned that enacting snapback sanctions would provoke Iran to retaliate, including potentially by withdrawing from the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, one of the last remaining international safeguards on its nuclear program.

The entire point of snapback was to ensure that Iran adhered to the JCPOA. Once it didn't, then snapback should have happened years ago.

But the Europeans didn't invoke the threat until only two months before the JCPOA  expires anyway!

Even so, Iran is threatening to withdraw from the NPT altogether if the three counties invoke snapback. Which is the best reason why it should have been invoked already. iran's threats to withdraw from the NPT is itself evidence that it has every intent to build nuclear weapons.

The article goes on:

Iranian officials have made similar threats in the past, saying the country would withdraw from the treaty if Israel or the United States attacked its nuclear sites. But even after the United States and Israel did just that during the recent war, Iran did not follow through on that threat.

Mr. Gharibabadi said Iran had shown restraint so far, but he added, “I’m quite confident that if the snapback is triggered, Iran will not show more restraint in this regard.”

This is how bullies work: threaten chaos and pain, and when they are called on it, they suddenly forget their threats. But Britain, France and Germany never learned that lesson, and consistently knuckle under to threats by Islamists and Arabs. 

And not even powerful ones.

How many times over the years have we seen Mahmoud Abbas threaten that if he doesn't get his way, there would be a worldwide conflagration of Muslim terror?

How many times have we seen in recent years how universities chose to avoid conflict with crazed antisemitic protesters who were violating their policies rather than to strictly enforce the policies?

How many times have we seen BDSers threaten to boycott companies or disrupt local politics and get in response offers to "negotiate" with them and issue statements to placate them, instead of telling them to go to hell?

The only reason we still see bullying by the anti-Israel crowd is because it has a track record of working - of frightening liberal Westerners who would rather avoid conflict than stand up for their own alleged principles. And then, over time, they adopt the position of the antisemites because they don't want to think of themselves as the unprincipled cowards they are. 

Bullying works. And the only way to stop it is to call the bullies' bluffs. 




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"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

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 By Daled Amos

For me, Salim symbolized the living partnership between us, certainly the covenant of blood. He was with me when I was in mourning and I was with him when he was in mourning – but a great living partnership. Salim Shufi was a great moral force. He was a splendid man – modest, deep and imbued with values; I loved him very much.

There are times when the media appear incredibly fickle in focusing their coverage of the news, especially in the Middle East. Even with their constant coverage of the region, we are all aware of what they will emphasize and where the media biases lie. 


The fighting began a week ago with clashes between Bedouin and fighters of the Druze community, which like some other minorities distrusts Sharaa's new Islamist government. Damascus sent troops to quell the fighting, but they were drawn into the violence and accused of widespread violations.

Interim President al-Sharaa has blamed the violence on "outlaw groups", promising to protect the rights of Druze and hold to account those who committed violations against them.

The article frames the conflict as sectarian violence between Druze and Bedouin. Later, it goes on to bring up Israeli measures to protect the Druze and mentions in passing Israel's justification for their bombings in Damascus, namely "the goal of protecting the Druze and keeping southern Syria demilitarized."

There is no explanation of why Israel is protecting the Druze in particular.

The Druze are a relatively small ethno-religious group whose beliefs and practices are relatively unknown. Their bond with Israel is partly explained by their loyalty to the state in which they reside. Those who live in Lebanon are loyal to Lebanon, those in Syria are loyal to Syria, and those in Israel are devoted to Israel. The Druze loyalty to Israel goes back to 1948 and even before that, to the Haganah.

And even earlier.

The bond between Jews and Druze goes back as early as the 12th century:

Benjamin of Tudela, the Jewish traveller who passed through Lebanon in 1165, was one of the first European writers to refer to the Druze by name. Even then, they were known as mountain-dwellers, and Benjamin described them as fearless warriors who favoured the Jews.

Although the Druze are Arabs, they have a historically strong connection not only with Israel, but with Jews in general, even back when Jews were neither strong nor a nation. This history helps explain the reason why Israel has actively defended the Druze, including those living in Syria.

And what exactly is Israel defending the Syrian Druze against?

John Spencer, author and researcher of urban warfare, posted on X on June 19:

The perpetrators include radical Islamist militants, Bedouin gangs, and regime-backed elements, all empowered by years of state collapse and lawlessness.

The carnage has been captured on video and is now spreading across social media. These are not vague reports or unverifiable claims. There is footage of Druze civilians being hunted down and executed. 

Elders are dragged into the streets. Their mustaches shaved in acts of humiliation. For the Druze, this is not just an insult, it is desecration. In Druze culture, facial hair, especially the mustache, is a powerful symbol of dignity, piety, and manhood. Elder men are traditionally known for their modest appearance, religious devotion, and strict adherence to tradition, including the wearing of facial hair as a sign of spiritual discipline. Forcing a Druze elder to be shaved is meant to strip him of identity, honor, and religious status in front of his community. It is not just abuse. It is psychological warfare. It is a calculated act of degradation meant to erase who they are.

Women are stripped and assaulted. Men are beaten, tortured, and forced to leap from rooftops as militants cheer. More than one video shows Druze men being driven to the edge of their balconies, their homes surely quiet moments before. Balconies once filled with carefully nourished plants are suddenly overrun by screaming men with AK-47s. The peaceful stillness of domestic life is shattered by terror. The Druze men are forced to climb over the railings. As they leap, they are shot multiple times as they are leaping to their deaths. It is a special kind of evil. Deliberate. Performative. Proud.

All of it is filmed. All of it is shared online for the enjoyment of the killers...

The New York Times takes the same understated approach as Reuters:

The clashes, between armed groups from Bedouin tribes and the Druse religious minority, erupted earlier this month and renewed fears of widespread sectarian violence and attacks against religious minorities.

In a world where terrorists are "freedom fighters" or "militants," we see "massacres" melt away, to be replaced by "sectarian violence". If only these minority groups could get their act together and learn to live with one another so al-Sharaa and his government didn't have to step in and keep the peace!

But Reuters and The New York Times are not framing an accurate narrative.

In a recent edition of Ask Haviv Anything, Haviv Rettig Gur spoke with Rania Fadel Dean, who comes from a prominent Israeli Druze family. Her organization, Covenant, teaches Americans about the Druze community. Dean criticized the prevailing media narrative:

[T]he basic narrative in the international press is that there's this sectarian violence there, you know, this one Middle Eastern tribe and this other Middle Eastern tribe, and you know how it is with Middle Eastern tribes. And so there's a bunch of violence and the Syrian government is coming in to sort it out, and the Israelis are, again, bombing somebody.

The reality is something different. There is a pattern at work that the media fails to explore. She describes Shaara's pattern, referring to him as Julani--his name when he led Hay'at Tahrir al-Sham, a terrorist branch of al-Qaeda:

Julani always does that. He sends this HTS forces, or as they call them Kouwa al-Amn al-Aam, which is the security forces. They send them, they do the massacre, and after that he comes. He speaks to the Western media or the Western leaders, and he whispers this: "I can't control them; I have to open a real investigation and everyone who did that will be punished, and we will pay for that."

This pattern was also pointed out in Israel by Gideon Saar:


Hiba Zayadin, a senior researcher at Human Rights Watch, responded to the Syrian government's investigation of the massacres--which has been criticized as not going far enough--as showing a pattern:
These are not isolated incidents, but part of a recurring pattern of abuse tolerated, and at times facilitated, by the authorities. We are now seeing that same pattern extend to violations against Druse communities.
The Wall Street Journal gives some concrete details on the extent to which al-Shaara's government exacerbated and facilitated the massacres:
Hundreds of the armed Arab Bedouin tribesmen who entered Sweida on July 13 successfully passed through dozens of government checkpoints, mostly run by Sunni Muslim forces.

On July 14th, Syria’s Defense Ministry announced the death of at least six of its soldiers after an ambush by “unlawful groups,” a term they use to refer to Druze militias.

On July 19th, Sharaa described the Bedouin tribes in a televised address as “a symbol of noble values and principles,” and went so far as to praise their nationwide mobilization to defend their community. By contrast, in the same speech, he referred to Druze militias as “outlaws.”

Last Friday, Volker Türk, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, said that his office had documented an attack where “Armed individuals affiliated with the interim authorities deliberately opened fire at a family gathering.”


And some Syrian Druze are even carrying Israeli flags:


It is not clear how long and how far Israel can go to defend the Druze in Syria. Leaders in the West may still be giddy after having visited Syria and shaking al-Shaara's hand. They may be too vested in his taking control and dealing with the various factions and instability--too vested to raise questions on just how much sense it made to give the "former" jihadi leader free rein, and financial support, in war-torn Syria.

But they will always have Israel to criticize.





Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

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  • Thursday, July 24, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon

German site Democ., which documents anti-democratic movements, covers a protest in Berlin last week:
Around 300–400 supporters of Syrian ruler Ahmed al-Sharaa (also known as al-Jolani) gathered in front of Berlin's Red City Hall on Saturday, July 19, 2025. They chanted slogans against Israel, Druze, and Alawites—including open calls for murder and rape.

During the demonstration, anti-Israel, anti-Druze, and anti-Alawite slogans were repeatedly chanted – accompanied by explicit calls for murder and sexual violence. Among other things, the term "tūbz" (Arabic for "to bend") was used as a threat against Druze – a vulgar and extremely violent expression from Syrian Arabic that calls for the sexual humiliation and murder of Druze. In local parlance, the term also describes a particularly degrading posture into which victims are forced before being executed with firearms while kneeling on the ground.
Coming soon to a town near you.

(h/t Daniel)



Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

  • Thursday, July 24, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon
The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation sent a letter to the UN offering to provide security for the delivery of aid that is rotting away inside Gaza.

UN agencies continue to assert that a lack of permissions and security is impeding aid delivery. However, the reality on the ground tells a different story. More than 400 aid distribution points run by the UN and its partners remain closed. Kitchens have shuttered, trucks sit idle, drivers are striking, and convoys are routinely looted. This is not an access issue. It is a capacity and operational issue, and the world deserves honesty about that distinction. 

We are aware that the UN and other aid organizations have essential aid stuck sitting in warehouses, including rice that has been sitting for more than 90 days, flour about to expire, and critical medical supplies already expired. We’ve seen the footage and heard the accounts of trucks being destroyed and food stolen. We’ve even been asked if we can provide security for convoys of other aid organizations. The answer is yes: we stand ready and willing to provide security for UN aid workers and assist in delivering aid.

We invite the United Nations and its partners to join us in adapting to the realities of this complex environment. The people of Gaza simply cannot afford for the world’s largest humanitarian organization to walk away. Our door remains open. We are prepared to support the safe and accountable delivery of UN aid to final distribution points across Gaza. But time is short. The population cannot wait for interagency political games while food sits in warehouses and people go hungry. 
Here is the UN's response:
There is enough work for many humanitarian organizations for us to work with.  We welcome working with any other partners.  All we ask is that those partners work based on the most basic humanitarian principles, one of them being that don’t set up an operation that will increase the risk of people to be shot at or trampled while trying to get food.  Also, we have a system that works.  All we’re asked is to be allowed to do that system.  I don’t think we need to add another layer of for-profit organizations.  We need humanitarian partners, and we welcome working with any and every humanitarian partners that works along those basis.
The UN's hypocrisy is clear.

Even if they disagree with GHF's methods of distributing food, that doesn't mean they cannot use them for security. They can insist that the GHF adhere to their principles for securing the delivery. Their blanket "no" to GHF shows that their supposed concern about humanitarian principles is not principled at all.

But this goes deeper than that. The UN has cooperated with Hamas for years, before and during the war, for aid delivery. Hamas is not exactly a humanitarian organization. But in that case, the UN says that its principles are overridden by practical considerations of how to get the aid to those who need it. 

Hamas hanging with UN members 


Their willingness to partner with Hamas and not with GHF tells you that the UN doesn't care about principles, but politics. It wants control over the aid to Gazans and it has no problem with Hamas skimming the aid and selling it to bankroll its terrorism. 

Think about this: The UN has never said a negative word about Hamas stealing aid, or attacking aid workers and Gaza civilians, or using civilians as human shields, or putting weapons under hospitals. It has criticized an organization that has distributed tens of millions of meals more in the past two months than it has criticized Hamas in 20 years. 

Given all these incontrovertible facts, the UN cannot pretend to care about Gazans today. It wants to take down GHF more than it wants to feed Gazans. And it prefers Hamas to an aid agency that bypasses it to give food directly to the people.

Did the UN ask Gazans if they would accept GHF to secure the trucks and bring in food to their distribution points?  Obviously not, because we know what Gazans would prefer. Which means that the arrogant UN is saying that it knows what's best for Gazans better than Gazans themselves.

Speaking of arrogance, compare the tone of the two messages. GHF recognizes that its model cannot provide food for all and it is begging to partner with the UN. The UN, which has said for months that the reason it cannot distribute the food in Gaza is because of security, changes its tune when its perceived competition offers to solve that problem. 

By any metric, the UN is a thoroughly immoral organization - even in Gaza itself. 





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"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

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Wednesday, July 23, 2025

From Ian:

Seth Mandel: Jewish Peoplehood Is Not a Right-Wing Concept
Whatever its American politics, a Jewish rabbinical institution training Jewish clergy to oppose Jewish peoplehood is a blatant attempt at ethnic self-destruction.

And that brings us to the larger forces at work here. Attacking the legitimacy of the very concept of Am Yisrael has gained purchase in American liberal Jewish circles because for the first time in modern Jewish history, Jewish nationhood has been designated a right-wing, conservative value.

The country saw a glimpse of this after President Trump announced an executive order to fight campus anti-Semitism during his first term, in 2019. Under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, it is a violation to discriminate on the basis of race or national origin. Building on the work of federal agencies in the George W. Bush and Barack Obama administrations, Trump instructed that Title VI be applied to protect Jews on campus. This was uncontroversial among those who had been following the policy development for a decade and a half, but a fair number of left-wing commentators and activists—a surprising number of them Jews—objected vociferously to the concept of Jewish peoplehood being integrated into U.S. law.

It was a glaring neon sign that something was amiss in part of the American Jewish community’s understanding of its own heritage. More broadly, the left seemed to settle on the idea that this was Jewish nationalism as a right-wing political concept and was therefore to be discarded from modern Jewish identity.

Past Jewish intellectuals would have been shocked by such a mistaken assumption. Simon Dubnow, the great Russian Jewish historian who died in 1941, rejected his parents’ Orthodox lifestyle as so much superstition, but he became a prominent advocate of Jewish autonomism. Ahad Ha’am, among the most famous Jewish intellectuals of his era, is universally regarded as having founded “cultural Zionism.” Ha’am’s key insight was that the Jews must first understand themselves as a nation while in diaspora; only then could they responsibly pursue statehood.

It’s true that Vladimir Jabotinsky, the founder of Revisionist Zionism, is his era’s foremost authority on Jewish (or any other) nationalism, and that his political heirs today are on the Israeli right. But Jewish peoplehood was not then, nor ever, a right-wing concept—neither politically nor religiously. (There are ultra-Orthodox anti-Zionists still today.) American Jews must educate themselves on this heritage and embrace it just as their leaders all across the political spectrum always have. Kehillat Israel’s letter is a well-timed reminder of this important facet of Jewish identity.
Gil Troy: 50th anniversary of the Zionism-is-racism resolution - opinion
In four months, a sobering anniversary risks being overlooked: the 50th anniversary of UN General Assembly Resolution 3379 condemning Zionism as racism. Unless they start planning now, America, Israel, and the Jewish people seem doomed to blow the educational and ideological opportunity.

Jewish organizations and educational institutions, along with the Israeli government, should use November 10, 2025, to convey three important messages:

1. Fifty years ago, the Western world united, Left and Right, black and white, to condemn this anti-Zionist resolution as antisemitic, not “just” anti-Israel. Most understood Israel’s centrality to modern Jewish identity. They recognized the Jew-hatred singling out only one form of nationalism, Jewish nationalism, in that forum of nationalisms.

2. Although the UN rescinded this resolution in 1991, this libel nevertheless entered the international bloodstream. Today, too many people believe “Zionism is racism,” that “Israel is apartheid, settler-colonialist, and an oppressor” and now, that Israel is committing a genocide in its justified war of self-defense against Hamas. Resolution 3376, creating a Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People, also passed in 1975, keeps doing damage. Establishing a permanent institutional infrastructure for anti-Israel hatred made Israel the most hated nation.

3. Mainstreaming this green-and-red, Islamist-progressive lie, it’s now fashionable to attack not only what Israel does but that Israel is. What Israel’s UN ambassador Chaim Herzog told America’s UN ambassador Daniel Patrick Moynihan then remains true: “The real core of the conflict is the denial by the Arabs of Israel’s sovereignty and Israel’s right to exist.” Fortunately, it’s now “most” Arabs, not all. What Moynihan feared would happen then, is also true now: Whenever violence erupted in the Middle East, “whether Israel was responsible, Israel surely would be blamed: openly by some, privately by most.” Eventually, “Israel would be regretted.”

The forces shaping anti-Zionism
Another framing for the anniversary examines the origins of the Zionism-is-racism resolution to expose the forces still shaping anti-Zionism. Moynihan didn’t focus on “the accused… but the accusers.” The “obscene” anti-Israel resolutions, he observed, “reeked of the totalitarian mind, stank of the totalitarian state.”

It’s extraordinary that so-called “progressives” toast sexist, racist, homophobic dictators, terrorists, and rapists – in Iran, in Hezbollah, among Palestinians – as long as they oppose Israel. Moynihan denounced this “politics of resentment” and “economics of envy.” Understanding anti-Zionism as an attack on America, democracy, and decency, he proclaimed: “If you define the world as rich and poor –we are guilty; if you define the world as liberal and illiberal – they are guilty.”
The Blood Libel Express
This is based on an ancient prejudice, a conspiracy theory if you like, holding that Jews kill children for ritualistic reasons. In modern times it is more coded, suggesting Jews provoke wars which result in the “suffering of innocents”, or deliberately target children, or institutions linked to children like schools and paediatric hospitals. Or – most recently – images as above depicting the children as starving to death, reminiscent of the images from the Ethiopian famine that provoked Bob Geldof to launch “Live Aid“.

I was disappointed to see an approving repost by British journalist, James Bloodworth, who sneered: “When you’ve lost the daily express …”

The implication is, I suppose, that the “war crimes” of Israel are so great that even the right-leaning Express can’t ignore them.

Even Sadiq Khan, the mayor of London, has bought into this. Today, calling for the recognition of a ‘Palestinian State’, he emoted: “Starving children searching hopelessly for food in the rubble. Family members shot dead by Israeli soldiers as they search for aid…”

Israel certainly is losing the propaganda war chiefly because, I think, the suffering of Jews is subconsciously viewed as “deserved” for the same reason blood libels are so effective. Whether they acknowledge it or not, many otherwise ‘good people’ like to think the worst of Jews and ascribe absolutely everything they do to malice. Even an existential fight for survival is viewed as ‘malicious’ when undertaken by Jews. But I am no psychoanalyst, so I will leave it there. Why did Hamas start a war and take hostages when it knew this is what the outcome would be? The answer is not a big reach: because it created precisely the opportunity they wanted. The real frontline fighters are not the armed wing of Hamas, they are the media officers at their so-called Health Ministry. Their daily salvos are more damaging to Israel than rockets.

Any journalist can watch endless footage coming out of Gaza showing well-fed people. Why don’t they ask themselves how this handful of children can be starving when others around them are not? Is it too much to ask that journalists ask questions before pumping out this fiction? There are plenty of wide-angle images of civilians in Gaza in the news every single day. None show incidental cases of starvation. The only ones that do are specifically posed close ups. The reason is obvious!
From Ian:

Melanie Phillips: Fever pitch in the war against Israel
What “drip feeding of aid”? What Israeli “denial of essential humanitarian assistance”? Israel has supplied 1,863,357 tons of aid to Gaza. The IDF’s aid division COGAT says that recently close to 4,500 trucks entered Gaza with supplies, including flour for bakeries and 2,500 tons of baby food and high calorie special food for children.

There are currently around 950 humanitarian aid trucks that have crossed into Gaza but are just sitting there because the UN and its proxies can’t or won’t distribute their contents. The GHF has pleaded with the UN to collaborate with it in the major task of distributing aid throughout Gaza. The UN is simply refusing to do so.

It’s Hamas that’s been stealing the food and other aid for its own use, causing Gazan civilians to go hungry; it’s Hamas that’s been murdering Gazans for collecting food supplies from the GHF because Hamas knows that if it can’t steal the aid for itself, it’s finished.

Of course the IDF don’t deliberately kill Gazans queuing for food. Why on earth would they do that, since they’ve set up and are policing an entire infrastructure to deliver it to them?

Hamas, on the other hand, have killed hundreds of Gazan civilians for receiving food supplies. Where some Gazan civilians have been killed by the IDF around the food queues, this has clearly been an accidental result of the soldiers firing into the air to warn off these possibly Hamas-infiltrated crowds if they look like they’re about to rush the Israeli troops.

Yet Lammy and the other foreign ministers make zero reference to Hamas stealing the aid and zero reference to Hamas killing Gazan civilians. Instead they blame Israel. Why have they perpetrated this blood libel? Do they actually know this is the reverse of the truth? Do they realise it makes no sense? Are they playing some cynical game? Are they capable of any intelligent thought processes at all? Or are their minds just totally poisoned by hatred of Israel?
Arsen Ostrovsky: I’m a Human Rights Lawyer: What’s Happening to the Druze in Syria Is a Real Genocide. Gaza Is Not.
Israel’s objective has never been to wipe out the Palestinian people, but to dismantle Hamas’ military and governing capabilities, stop further terrorist atrocities and return the hostages.

In war, innocent civilians die. That is a tragedy. But it is also the inevitable consequence of Hamas using their own people as human shields and embedding rocket launchers, tunnel and weapons inside and underneath homes, schools, hospitals, and mosques.

Despite this, Israel has taken unprecedented steps, unmatched by any military in modern history, to uphold the laws of armed conflict and mitigate civilian harm, including issuing warnings, dropping leaflets, establishing humanitarian corridors, facilitating aid and foregoing the pursuit of legitimate military targets to spare civilians.

This is the exact opposite of genocide. This is a state doing everything possible to avoid civilian casualties.

That is a world apart from what al-Sharra’s forces are doing in Sweida: mercilessly targeting a minority group for extermination, an actual genocide.

And yet the world, apparently, couldn’t care less.

Why? Because condemning Ahmad al-Sharra, the jihadist-turned-wannabe-statesman, and new darling of the international community, doesn’t make headlines? Or perhaps the Druze aren’t a trendy cause in the progressive elites?

Perhaps it’s just far easier to bash Israel than confront the real monsters, perpetrating heinous crimes.

Sadly, today the word “genocide” is being tossed around like a political football by those who care more about scoring ideological points than about actual human suffering.

Those levelling the genocide accusation against Israel, don’t care about law or facts. For them, the label is a propaganda weapon, a tool of lawfare aimed at vilifying Israel and absolving Hamas of its actual genocidal intent, which it acted out on during the Oct 7th massacre, and have vowed to repeat “again and again” until Israel is “annihilated.” Genocide is not a political weapon - it is “the crime of crimes.” And when it is falsely and maliciously applied to Israel, it not only distorts the truth, it cheapens and demeans the suffering of real victims, like the Druze, who are being massacred before our eyes in Syria.
John Spencer: I’m a War Scholar. There Is No Genocide in Gaza
Israel has delivered more humanitarian aid to Gaza than any military in history has provided to an enemy population during wartime. More than 94,000 trucks carrying over 1.8 million tons of aid have entered the territory. Israel has supported hospitals, repaired water pipelines, increased access to clean water, and enabled over 36,000 patients to leave Gaza for treatment abroad.

The IDF has coordinated millions of vaccine doses, supplied fuel for hospitals and infrastructure, and facilitated the flow of food and medicine through the UN, aid groups, and private partners. The U.S.–Israeli Gaza Humanitarian Foundation alone has delivered more than 82 million meals—one to two million a day—while weakening Hamas’s control over aid. This is not genocide. It is responsible and historic mid-war humanitarian policy.

Bartov cites death tolls from Hamas health authorities without question. He says 58,000 have been killed, including 17,000 children. But these numbers come from a terrorist organization. They mix civilians and fighters and count anyone under 18 as a child, even though Hamas uses teenagers and younger children as combatants. The figures are not independently verified and have been shown to contain false details, including names, ages, and sex. Civilian deaths are tragic, but in Gaza, they are also part of Hamas’s strategy. No military operation is judged solely by body counts or destruction figures. If we used Bartov’s logic, every major war would be called genocide. Two million civilians died in the Korean War, an average of 54,000 per month. The Iraq and Afghanistan wars killed hundreds of thousands. The fight against ISIS leveled multiple cities and killed tens of thousands. None of those wars were considered genocidal. Gaza is not either. War is evaluated based on the actions of commanders, the goals set by leaders, and how well the military follows the laws of war, not by statistics taken out of context.

War is hell. It is inhumane, destructive, and ugly. But it is not automatically a crime. Nations must not target civilians. They must follow the rules of distinction, proportionality, and take all possible care to avoid civilian harm. Israel is doing that. I have seen it.

In Rafah this summer, Israel spent weeks preparing evacuations. It opened new safe areas and waited until civilians had moved before striking Hamas targets. That operation killed Hamas’s top commander, recovered hostages, and kept civilian deaths very low. It was a clear example of Israel’s extraordinary intent and actions to protect civilians while targeting only Hamas, a part of the story ignored by those who reduce war to headlines and numbers.

What is happening in Gaza is tragic. But it is not genocide. And it is not illegal.

Genocide requires clear, provable intent to destroy a people through sustained, deliberate actions. That burden of proof has not been met. Bartov and others have not even tried. Likewise, the laws of war do not prohibit war itself. They require that military operations distinguish between combatants and noncombatants, that force be proportional to the objective, and that commanders take all feasible precautions to protect civilian life. I have watched the IDF do exactly that. I have seen restraint, humanitarian aid, and deliberate compliance with legal standards, often at tactical cost.

This is not a campaign of extermination. It is a war against Hamas, a terrorist army embedded in civilian areas by design.

The law matters. So does precision. And above all, truth matters.


Disclaimer: the views expressed here are solely those of the author, weekly Judean Rose columnist Varda Meyers Epstein.

The war in Gaza rages on, and the images of destruction and suffering are inescapable. Yet, if truth be told, I feel a profound apathy toward the plight of Gaza’s civilians. My emotions are reserved for the suffering of my own people—Israelis, Jews, soldiers, survivors, hostages, and hostage families. The events of October 7, 2023, and their aftermath, consume all my energy, leaving me unable to muster sympathy for those who, in my view, have aligned themselves with terror.

My feelings are instead completely taken up with the hostages and the 895 IDF soldiers who have died trying to free them. Each soldier’s death ripples through our communities—friends, neighbors, or children of friends. We exchange pained messages on WhatsApp: “Another soldier.” These are not faceless numbers; they are our boys, some barely out of high school, others young fathers or newlyweds. Their sacrifice haunts me, as does the moral calculus: is it right that so many die to save so few?

The hostages, too, consume my thoughts. I can’t linger on the horrors they’ve endured—starvation, beatings, confinement in dank tunnels—without risking my own ability to function. I push away intrusive images of October 7, when Hamas and Gaza’s civilians breached our borders, murdered, raped, and kidnapped. Civilians bragged about their atrocities, spat on our dead, and hid hostages in their homes. They voted for Hamas, an offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood, in UN-overseen elections. They allowed tunnels and weapons under their children’s bedrooms. They are absolutely, 100 percent complicit.

You often hear people say things like, “the majority of Muslims are peaceful” and this always makes me roll my eyes. With what authority do people say this? If such a thing could be quantified, one would have to consider the ample evidence that shows the children of Gaza to be indoctrinated with Jew-hate from birth. They imbibe it with their mothers’ milk.

Do I believe every Gazan is evil? They’re complicit! How can they not be? Maybe some woman whose husband will beat her if she doesn’t vote for Hamas is innocent. I have no clue. But unfortunately, people get killed in war. And this war was started by Gaza. Not only by Hamas, but the people of Gaza, headed by Hamas. And it is definitely the people of Gaza who crowd the streets when there’s going to be a hostage release ceremony. They love to see Jews in captivity. They love to watch them be ridiculed. They love to jeer and spit and grab at them. They love to hate them.

So no. I do not believe that most Gazans are peaceful and neither do any of the polls I’ve seen on the topic. The people of Gaza continue to support Hamas and participate in the atrocities.

Now Gaza is rubble, its people hungry and desperate. Hamas shoots those who seek food or escape. Neither Egypt nor Jordan will take them in. No one will. But my focus must be with my own. My people, our soldiers, my son in the reserves, who leaves his wife and three young children to serve, again and again.

I asked my Facebook friends why they do or don’t care about Gaza’s suffering. Their responses were like an echo of my own thoughts, but perhaps offer greater nuance as well as important context I might have missed.

Avi Perez, 57, who made Aliyah from South Africa and lives in Ramat Beit Shemesh, pulls no punches:

“When a potential Middle Eastern Singapore chooses murder, terror, missiles, and more over prosperity and possibility ... mercy for monsters has left the store.”

Tehilla O., 60, living outside Israel, is uncompromising:

“They aren’t suffering. If they are, it’s self-inflicted. All the hostages are released at the same time, it ends. Simple. They know where they are. Even as ‘civilians,’ they are Hamas. And quite frankly, after 7 October and since and what has and is still being done, they can cry me a river.”

Elihu D. Stone, 67, a religiously observant Zionist in Judea, expresses sorrow but places blame squarely on Hamas:

“I care deeply about innocents suffering the ravages of war in Gaza. The agonies wrought upon families who must endure the predictable and anticipated consequences of Hamas’s savagery of October 7th is absolutely heartbreaking. I wish that the global community would back Israel’s war effort against Hamas whole-heartedly and bring immense pressure to bear… to return all those whom Hamas kidnapped.”

Yael Pedhatzur, 76, from Meitar, Israel, sees Gaza’s suffering as their own doing:

“I have very little empathy for the plight of Gaza and the Gazans as I believe their situation is of their own making. No other country has been made to aid their enemy during wartime. As one who wants complete surrender of Hamas, I know it can’t happen as long as we provide them with food and supplies.”

“Hamas obviously doesn’t care about them either as they shoot their people who take the aid.

“I have been saying this for the last several campaigns in Gaza over the past 15-20 years. No electricity, no water, no food. That’s how you end a war.”

Mark Isser Coopersmith, reflecting on past expulsions, is direct:

“We should be starving them until they let the hostages go.”

Toby Dachs from Jerusalem focuses on Israel’s losses:

“My concern and pain is for the hostages and all the families who lost their sons in this horrific war.”

Batsheva Gladstone, a longtime friend, differs from me in that she makes the effort—she actively struggles to find compassion:

“I have to fight to care in the slightest about any palestinians. I have to remind myself almost daily that G-d doesn’t want us to turn off our humanity. And, if there are indeed any innocents in all this horror inflicted upon the Jewish nation we should try to muster up the decency to differentiate between the terrorists, the terrorist sympathizers, and the victims of circumstance. It’s admittedly a tall order, and sometimes I fail, but I try, and sometimes I can…

“Do I think the war is justified? Yes, sadly, 100%, and necessary. ”

Iris Breidbord Langman questions the existence of innocent Gazans:

“My only concern is for our hostages. The perpetual ‘victims’ joined Hamas in brutalizing our people. Is there a difference between them and Hamas? Show me one ‘civilian’ who came forward to help a hostage and I will care about that person.”

Cheryl Mallenbaum-Ninyo would care about the innocent, but finds none to care about:

“I care about the suffering of innocent people in Gaza. But where are they? (That’s a genuine question.) I can’t help but remember that when Israel offered immunity, safety, and a CEO added financial incentive for anyone in Gaza who helps return a captive, not one single Gazan came forward. So I genuinely wonder: Where ARE these ‘good, innocent people’? (Possibly the exception being newborns who have not yet been indoctrinated to needlessly hate and seek destruction.)

“Those in Gaza (or elsewhere) who support Hamas or who raise their children with blind hatred or who think murder, rape, burning, beheading, kidnapping, mutilation, etc. is justified to “bring attention to a cause” or who hold innocent civilians (and dead bodies) for psychological torture? They don’t have my sympathy.

“If the only way to spread your ‘message’ is to harm others, the ‘message’ isn’t worth spreading.”

Alisa Chessler dismisses the notion of civilian innocence:

“I only care about ‘innocent civilians’ and since we are nearly 2 years with NOT ONE person coming forward to identify the location of our hostages, I don’t believe there are any ‘innocent civilians’ in that sh*thole. So therefore, they can turn the place into a parking lot for all I care.

“My only concern is the environmental impact of the garbage there. It needs to be removed to restore the land back to something livable for Israelis.”

Jan Poller contrasts the lack of Gazan compassion with Israel’s pain:

“We care about a lot more than they cared about the men, women, and children they raped and beheaded.”

Deborah K., a 70-year-old Jew from Scotland, feels torn by guilt but still unmoved about the Gazan people:

“I don’t care about the Gazans… but feel guilty because ‘I’m supposed to/I ought to.’ They’ve been offered various options several times over the years to live there peacefully, refused every time, voted in Hamas, and as long as Hamas are around, Israel is in danger. And Israel has to exist.”


Hinda Rochel Anolick-Rachel Ann
prioritizes her people:

“I care about the people in Gaza. I care more about my people in Gaza. And I care more about my people period. They come first. However terrible it is there, it is worse for my people who are being held hostage, and to give in to terrorists will result in greater harm to my people. It isn't a matter of caring, it is who I care more about.”

These voices, varied in tone and perspective, reflect a shared sentiment: Gaza’s suffering feels self-inflicted—and distant—when weighed against Israel’s personal, uninvited tragedy. We didn’t choose this war. They did.

So when the sound of planes overhead draws my attention away from work, my thoughts are on the men in those planes—not the hunger in Gaza. I pause and say a few psalms.

The moral weight of this war rests not in Gaza’s ruins, but in the lives of our soldiers and hostages. My heart holds only so much—and its space is reserved for my own suffering people: those who are chained, those who are fighting, those who are grieving, and those still waiting for their loved ones to come home.

One name in this piece has been changed at the request of the contributor.



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  • Wednesday, July 23, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon
In May, the UN called Gaza "the hungriest place on Earth."


Here's a headline from the (Arabic) Sudan Tribune in January:



Khartoum, January 18, 2025 – The Preparatory Committee of the Sudanese Doctors Syndicate revealed on Saturday that more than 500,000 infants have died due to malnutrition.

Adiba Ibrahim Al-Sayed, a member of the Omdurman branch of the Doctors Syndicate's Preparatory Committee, told Sudan Tribune that the number of infant deaths has reached 522,000, while cases of malnutrition have risen to 286,000 since the outbreak of the war.

She added that Darfur has witnessed the deaths of 45,000 children due to malnutrition, in addition to 680,000 cases of the same disease among pregnant women.

54 cases of tuberculosis have also been detected among children in South Kordofan, due to weakened immunity caused by malnutrition.

In another context, Adiba Al-Sayed confirmed that 197 children have been raped since the outbreak of the war, noting that most of the victims were young girls, some of whom suffered severe bleeding leading to death, or ruptured vaginal membranes, cervical injuries, involuntary urination, and urinary fistulas resulting from repeated sexual assaults.
Hey, it is only  10,000 times worse than Gaza. Nothing that it is worth protesting, making a sign or tweeting over. 

And there is Haiti, Mali, Somalia, Congo, Chad, Yemen, North Korea....but who cares about them? 

Jews cannot be blamed!






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