„We need the world to step in — now.“

Eine Intervention von Noam Schuster (15. November 2023)

Israeli leaders are ignoring our calls for a ceasefire. You shouldn’t – We are being held hostage by politicians who have no plan and only know how to bomb. We need the world to step in — now.

It is now clear to any person with common sense that Israel will not stop its massive bombardment and ground invasion of the Gaza Strip without serious external pressure. I am not a radical. I am not a traitor. But you would have to be delusional to trust the same people who led us into this disaster to take the proper steps to lead us out of it. Our government has no answers and no limits.
I have attended the few small protests in Tel Aviv in recent weeks calling for a ceasefire. We leftist activists are a tiny minority in our society, and we are currently having to choose our words carefully. We are scared for our own safety amid the crackdown on dissent within Israel since Hamas’ October 7 massacres, which is forcing us to tone down the visibility of our rage. If we are completely silenced, who will be left to protest for an end to the war and the release of the hostages?

During the speeches by the hostages’ families, many have stated in no uncertain terms that their calls are being shunted aside to allow the Israeli army to continue its aggression in Gaza. If our government is not even listening to them, who will listen to us? The fear is numbing, like everything could blow up in our faces, and Itamar Ben Gvir’s police could lock us up with ease. We feel frustrated and powerless.
There is no ceasefire because the only way Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu knows how to survive politically is through blood and tanks, satiating a fascist base thirsty for ever more settlements and resources to achieve their messianic dreams. He is fueling division even in our grief, now even suggesting that the October 7 massacres were enabled by army reservists refusing to serve in opposition to the government’s judicial coup.

While polls currently indicate that a majority of the Israeli public wants Netanyahu gone as soon as the hostilities are over, we know this war criminal far too well to expect him to exit the stage quietly. He will surely find some way to pit us against each other again to try to remain in office.

There is no ceasefire because Netanyahu doesn’t care enough about what the survivors of October 7 massacres actually want. Many of them are secular liberals and leftists — the very people who for the previous nine months were joining mass demonstrations against his government each weekend. The prime minister believes he has no political obligation to them.

There is no ceasefire because this far-right government is drunk on power, lacking a clear plan, and unable to provide legitimate answers to tough questions about the destruction it is currently waging. Their only strategy is to pummel Gaza with a level of brutality never before seen.

There is no ceasefire because, although patience in the United States is waning, no one is forcing Israel’s hand. We have the full backing of the most powerful countries in the world. After all, the United States itself has carried out the same type of assaults before in the Middle East.

There is no ceasefire because our government cannot handle the failure of October 7. They are responsible for failing to prevent it, and for failing to stop it sooner. They know that when the war machine stops, when we all have a moment to think clearly, our rage will turn on them.

There is no ceasefire because Palestinian lives do not matter to this government, and Israel pays no price for Gaza’s ever-increasing death toll. Palestinian students, doctors, and journalists are dehumanized and slaughtered, their hopes and dreams deemed irrelevant at best, and dangerous at worst.

There is no ceasefire because Jewish leftists and Palestinian citizens of Israel are being silenced, and anyone who dares to express solidarity with the people of Gaza is hunted by the police. Meanwhile, government ministers who “metaphorically” suggest nuking Gaza are only briefly suspended. We are afraid. The political space to fight for a ceasefire has vanished.

This is where you come into the picture.

Help us

Maybe to you, my reader, all of this sounds obvious, but it is actually an extremely unpopular opinion here in Israel. From mainstream journalists to celebrities, the vast majority of Israelis roundly believe we should continue “erasing” Hamas. But is Hamas being erased? We do not know. Are the hostages okay? We have no idea. “Together we will win” — that’s all that matters.

The collective Israeli belief that the current violence is justified relies on a bizarre view of reality. We have successfully convinced ourselves that we are “more moral” because we told civilians in Gaza to evacuate their homes before bombing them — even though they have nowhere else to go. We feel good about ourselves because we think this entire war is the fault of Hamas alone. And somehow we are okay with continuing a senseless bombardment and invasion led by a failed leadership and a corrupt prime minister who is only interested in saving his own ass while the rest of us sit in the dark and wait for it all to be over.

This is a disaster. An ongoing, deteriorating, unspeakable disaster — for us Israelis, for Palestinians in Gaza, the West Bank, and Israel, for the hostages, and for anyone who believes we have no choice but to somehow share this land with one another in full equality. And shame on you if you don’t believe the pain that Jews or Palestinians are feeling: we shouldn’t have to work extra hard during a war to “prove” to you that we’re suffering.

I refuse to blindly follow the herd that surrounds me. I’d rather be unpopular than give up my humanity. I lost loved ones in the October 7 massacres, while others are still being held hostage by Hamas. I want to do everything I can to save them. But instead of listening to those of us who lost friends and family — and may still lose more — to this violence, the government is using our pain to justify its war and silencing us when we level our dissent.

With the world focused on the horrors unfolding in Gaza, Israeli settlers and soldiers are running wild in the West Bank, terrorizing and displacing hundreds of Palestinians who lack any protection. Efforts to come together as Jews and Palestinians to talk common sense are shut down by the police. And all the while, our prime minister is busy approving funds for the renovation of his residence.

The sad truth is that we are being held hostage by leaders who don’t have a real plan, and don’t have real answers for their citizens. The only thing they know how to do is bomb. Senselessly. To keep the war machines going. To silence their critics. To draft young people into another war on the empty promise that this will be the last. To exploit our pain and grief. But the atrocities of October 7 cannot be rectified through the slaughter of thousands of Palestinians.

How can it be that my friends whose family members are being held hostage have to beg their government to talk to them and listen to them? How is it that people around the world can have more compassion toward our hostages than their own leaders? How can they sleep at night?

Please, if you want Palestinians and Israelis to live, we need you to apply pressure for an immediate ceasefire. Right now. We’re suffering. We’re mourning. We’re orphans. Our leaders don’t care about human life. We want to live. We can’t do it by ourselves. Help us.

(Online unter anderem auf +972mag)

Am Abend des 19. November

Wie weit ist eine „Vereinbarung“ über ein (kurzes?) Schweigen der Waffen und die Freilassung von Geiseln noch entfernt?

Jack Khoury weist in der Haaretz zu Recht auf die wachsenden Spannungen an der „dritten“ Front, der Westbank hin, hier ein paar Zitate aus dem Beitrag:

„If, before the war, incidents were focused on the northern West Bank, between Nablus and Jenin, since October 7 there has not been a city or refugee camp in which clashes have not been recorded.

In addition to the large number of dead and wounded, there has also been a drastic increase in the number of people arrested in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem. Close to 3,000 people have been detained since the start of the war. The Palestinian Prisoners’ Administration notes that such a large number of arrests in such a short time has not been seen since the Second Intifada.
(…)

Israel can continue to crush the Gaza Strip under the banner of “hunting Hamas” and it can bulldoze the West Bank under the slogan of “fighting terrorism,” but in between, we must understand that with force and more force there will be no horizon for either side. For every fatality, another generation of young Palestinians will emerge and will join the struggle against Israel, seeing themselves as freedom fighters.

Every time Israel punishes the Palestinians by deducting taxes it collects on their behalf, it puts another nail in the coffin of the PA. Every expropriation of land for the construction of another outpost, every roadblock, every closure, every narrowing of civilian living space, closes another window of hope for change.

A month and a half after the war began, someone in Israel needs to realize that another attack and more force will only increase the anger and frustration among another generation of Palestinians. (…)“

„In Israel, October 7 is often described – and rightly so – as a trauma that will lead to fundamental change, both social and political. The question is what kind of change Israel hopes for. A society that aspires to change for the better must rise from a crisis and think about reality. Because even after the crushing of Hamas and the paralyzing of the PA, the Palestinian people will not go away – not in the Gaza Strip and not in the West Bank.“

Am Abend des 18. November

Demonstrationen und Debatten, Kämpfe und Gewalt gehen weiter, den einen ist ein Waffenstillstamd Verrat, den anderen der einzig gangbare Weg.

***

Neben diesen Nachrichten heute einmal ein Hinweis auf ein Ereignis, daß ohne die letzten Wochen wohl so schnell nicht geschehen wäre. Am 21. Oktober bereits beschlossen, wurde die Versöhnung der beiden (griechisch-orthodoxen) Patriarchate am Mittwoch, 15. November 2023 bei / durch den Besuch (Bericht) einer Delegation in Amman vollzogen:

„Patriarch John X of Antioch and All the East, charged with a task Metropolitan Athanasios of Latakia and its Dependencies, and Ephrem, Metropolitan of Aleppo and Alexandretta and their Dependencies of visiting Amman, the capital of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan.

Their task was to bring to the Church of Jerusalem a message of fraternal love and the restoration of ecclesiastical communion between the Patriarchate of Antioch and the Patriarchate of Jerusalem. (…) „

(Bericht auch auf Vatican News).

[In einer früheren Fassung war der Besuchstag in Amman irrtümlich mit dem 16.11.23 angegeben].

Am Abend des 17. November

Immer häufiger stehen bei der Berliner Zeitung die wirklich interessanten und überlegenswerten Beiträge, gerade solche, die einen auf-/anregen, im Bereich Open Source. Hier „gibt der Berliner Verlag freien Autorinnen und Autoren sowie jedem Interessierten die Möglichkeit, Texte mit inhaltlicher Relevanz und professionellen Qualitätsstandards anzubieten„.

So auch der Beitrag von Daniela Dahn vom 16. November:

Am Abend des 16. November

Podcast der US-amerikanischen Sektion von Peace Now über Pläne/Überlegungen/Hoffnungen von Teilen der (messianischen) Siedlerbewegung zur Wiedererrichtung der Siedlungen im Gazastreifen.

#302: Eyal Lurie-Pardes on the Push to Rebuild Jewish Settlements in Gaza

Nov 16, 2023

Ideological settlers are seriously talking about plans to resettle the Gaza Strip,  to re-establish Gush Katif and turn back the clock on the 2005 disengagement, which they perceive as a national trauma. Eyal Lurie Pardes, a visiting fellow at Washington’s Middle East Institute, discusses this matter. 

Eyal’s article on this topic in the Forward:
https://forward.com/opinion/568553/israel-settler-movement-gaza-reoccupy/

Eyal’s article on the Israeli government’s curtailing the freedom of expresion during the Gaza war: https://www.mei.edu/publications/amid-gaza-war-palestinian-citizens-israel-feel-target-witch-hunt

Contact: oir@peacenow.org / https://peacenow.org/donate

Am Abend des 15. November

Mindestens diese beiden sind Geschwister, (auch wenn zur Familie auch noch die paar Anhänger:innen des Christentum gehören). Jehoschua Ahrens und Mira Sievers in einem Beitrag der Rheinischen Post.

Am Abend des 14. November

Manchmal gibt es auch ganz andere Reaktionen, unerwartete Lichtblicke, nicht naiv sondern nach vorne gewandt:

Demo für Frieden – Bublevska & Karaosma

WDR 5 Neugier genügt – Redezeit. 13.11.2023. 27:01 Min.. Verfügbar bis 13.11.2024. WDR 5.

Israel oder Palästina? Das Thema Nahostkrieg scheint die deutsche Bevölkerung zu spalten. Kristina Bublevskaya und Zeynep Karaosman warnen vor schwarz-weißen Sichtweisen. Sie haben die Gemeinschaft „Palästinenser und Juden für den Frieden“ gegründet und rufen zur Solidarität mit den Opfern beider Seiten auf. Moderation: Julia Schöning

Am Abend des 13. November

Was kommt, was muß am Tag danach kommen? Sonja Thomaser erläutert in der Frankfurter Rundschau die Debatten, die z.B. in der israelischen Tageszeitung Haaretz (etwa hier) geführt werden.

Am Abend des 12. November

Auf die Arbeit von Standing together oder der Combatants for Peace haben wir an dieser Stelle schon öfter verwiesen. Gil Shohat ist als Sohn israelischer Eltern in Bonn aufge­wachsen. Er ist Historiker, hat in Berlin promoviert und leitet seit Frühjahr 2023 das Israel-Büro der Rosa Luxemburg-Stiftung in Tel Aviv.

In der taz schreibt er über die Logik der Solidarität: In Zeiten des Krieges gilt es besonders der Polarisierung entgegenzuwirken. Einige jüdische und palästinensische Ak­ti­vis­t:in­nen in Israel bringen den Mut dazu auf. – Und ein anderes aktuelles Beispiel siehe weiter unten …

Am Abend des 11. November

Während die gewaltsame Auseinandersetzung andauert und ein Ende oder ein Waffenstillstand kaum abzusehen sind, auch wenn es erste (öffentliche) Signale dafür gibt, ist die Debatte über Empathie und Solidarität, über Verständnis(se) und Kontexte wohl gerade erst am Anfang und wird die veröffentlichte Meinung noch lange beschäftigen (müssen).

Hier die lesenswerte Stellungnahme der amerikanischen Philosophin Seylah Benhabib zur Debatte innerhalb der Linken über die „Kontextualisierung“ des Krieges.

Hier zwei kurze Zitate:

„The attacks of October 7, 2023 are not “just one salvo in an ongoing war between an occupying state and the people it occupies, or as an occupied people exercising a right to resist violent and illegal occupation“, [Columbia Faculty Letter: Grave Concerns About the Well-Being of Our Students (google.com) ] They are a turning point not only for the Jewish people in Israel and elsewhere, but also in the history of the Palestinian people.“

„But at the end of the day, a Palestinian state must be established. There must be an exchange of prisoners for hostages. Israel is holding thousands of Palestinians in its prisons; some must be released in accordance with conditions conforming to international law in return for hostages.“