Sunday, March 31, 2024

Hatikvah. The Hope.

So it’s Easter Sunday. Happy Easter to those who celebrate, I am one of them, not religiously, but more from the viewpoint of days gone by, when on this particular Sunday I would pilgrim to my godparents house to fetch my Easter CANDY!

To me, it’s more of a sweet memory, rather than the celebration of the first official zombie. What? Can’t possibly be too soon!! It’s been almost 2000 years! Come on, people. Flow with it.

Today, along with Easter, is a special Sunday, because my dear achoti (@lisaaronowatelier) landed in Israel, a few hours ago. She’s in Jerusalem, now. I wish her the best time possible, and look forward to seeing Israel through her eyes, as she walks the Promised Land.

To me, it’s a chance to remotely be a part of something special, and for once experience the sights of Israel through personal images, instead of the news or other’s feeds.

As I admire the beauty of this small country that means the world to so many, I can’t help to think about what will inevitably show on my feeds. Both the hope and the hate. Today I choose to focus on HOPE. Hence this morning’s suggestion of Hatikvah. For it is the one thing the Jewish people never lost, and chose to enshrine in their national anthem.

Hatikvah. The Hope.

“Hatikvah bat shot alpayim
l’hiyotam choishi b’artzenu,
eretz tzion v'yerushalayim…”

“The hope of two thousand years,
To be a free nation in our land,
The land of Zion and Jerusalem.”

Such a small piece of land…
Such immense hope for the future.

Today, there are still those who claim to own the truth. Be it the ones claiming for a free Palestine or those proclaiming a greater Israel, they all root their delusions in God. Today is a good day to remember God belongs only in our private set of beliefs, an individual choice of faith that can neither belong to others, nor be imposed upon them. At the same time protected from those who choose not to believe, and respectful of them.

Such is the genesis of the problem facing Israelis and Palestinians, today. And in it lies embedded the solution: remove God from the equation. God only has place in the privacy of the believers, and the only divine right is that of one’s choice in faith itself, respecting all others.

I have always looked at Jerusalem as the key. The one place where peoples of all faiths could live in peace, leading by example, sharing the ground they all deem sacred respectfully, in harmony.

The kind of place Herzl dreamed of, but could not envision with two states yet, removed as he was by many years from the reality we face today. Yet it is what he described, when he imagined a land where Jews and Arabs coexisted in peace, prosperity, progress, and respect. He couldn’t have had the hindsight to foresee the days we live in, but he had enough vision to predict any kind of return to Zion would mean sharing the land with all who lived there.

As we endure the consequences of years of turmoil and war between populations doomed to it by the deeds and aspirations of colonial powers who couldn’t care less for them, Jewish or Arabic, we realize Herzl’s dream has been upended, but it lives still. It lives in the Hope of Israel, carried in the hearts of millions. As a teenager, I attempted to go and be part of it, traveling to Israel to work in a kibbutz.

It was the time of the post Yom Kippur war Israel. It was a difficult time. My parents adamantly denied my wishes, and that was that. Fate took me in the opposite geographical direction, and today I find myself an American citizen, living farther away from Israel than I have ever been, and yet feeling closer to it than I ever was. And now, on Easter Sunday, I find myself living on the 177th of October, like millions of others in Israel and around the world.

There is no end in sight for the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians, but there are clear choices that both can and should make, if there is to be an end to it.
If you wish for a viable Palestine, start by making sure Palestinian children are no longer taught to hate in school. If you wish for a strong Israel, start by making sure those children have a real future to live for.

There is no denying History, and just as we recognize Palestine as a Roman definition of the region, until then known as Judea, so must we recognize that both Jews and Arabs lived in that same land during the Ottoman Empire, and the British occupation. They all tried to break free from colonialism, through the ages, seeking to live in peace in the land where their ancestors lived. And before that, to live in peace in Judea.

Of course the sands of time run steady and indifferent to the wishes of those looking back, who try to project their will onto the outcome of events literally set in stone. Before the Turks, the Arabs had their shot at administering the region, as did the Europeans. Through virtue of political actions, often enforced by military power, the Europeans had their final say in the Middle East, after the Turks were gone.

By then, both Jews and Arabs set their sights on the Holy Land. The former by virtue of their presence in Judea, later Palestine, since the establishment of the first tribes in the region, the latter by virtue of their presence in that same soil for many, many years. The movement of peoples around the Earth has produced similar situations, in every Continent, throughout the centuries. They have learned to live in the lands they stood on by the merit of those leading them.

There are hundreds of “Palestines” in Europe. There are places there where street signs are written in multiple languages, and borders are but administrative barriers on maps, designed over the years and eventually recognized, after struggles of all sorts, political, legal, and military, but seldom, if at all, religious. The West successfully removed God from government, as as core principle of its civilization.

Whatever problems Europe faced in the XX Century, they had little to do with God. Some, like the great wars, were immense. But they got solved, in the end. Outside of Europe, however, it was a different story. In a conscious move, the repercussions of which are felt to this day, Europe decided it was best for the Arabs not to have a follow up to their renaissance. It was best to keep them mired in pre XX century values, trapped in the past, as stagnant and ignorant as possible.

As a result, most of the Arabs live in a world that resembles the European Middle Ages, more than a contemporary one; and they became, mostly, chained to religion. As western societies deal with their internal problems through political discourse, the Arabs persist in looking to God for solutions. And we all know how that turns out. We were there once, it was a mess. We evolved, but we stopped them from achieving a similar progression.

You may say the same is true of the Jewish people, as religion is so much an important part of their lives. But it’s hardly the same. With the exception of the Haredim, and a few right wing nut jobs, most Jews view religion as a path to understanding and acceptance, of themselves and of others. And most Jews don’t wish God involved in political discussions, as they are mostly influenced by Western civilization morals, and their values are mostly contemporary.

From the very beginning of the establishment of the State of Israel, these two very different versions of society collided. The Israeli society became open, tolerant, diverse, progressive. Are they the paragon of civilization? No. They are working through their problems, in search of a better tomorrow, just as we are. On the other hand, the Arabs persisted in obscurantism, religious mysticism, and fanatical hegemonic ideals, rooted in one thing only: religion.

This is what history shows us. It teaches us to deal with reality in pragmatic terms. To accept Israel has existed as a nation and one people for centuries. But to also accept Arabs have lived in Palestine for many years, mostly as a colonized people, not very long as colonizers themselves.
And from 1948 onwards, these two realities need to come to resolve themselves into one: the fact both Jews and Arabs inhabit the region.

Today is a day for Hope. Hatikvah. The hope of Israel. The hope for peace. A better tomorrow, in which all the lives lost since October 7, nearly six months ago, will not have just been lost, but their meaning not wasted in the grip of hate.
May their memory be a blessing. The memory of all of them; Jews, gentiles, and Muslims. May we never forget them, and may we one day find true peace.

This is my hope, today.
Am Yisrael Chai.




Hope.

Today is a day for Hope.
Am Yisrael Chai.

Hatikvah.

AB Singers.



Saturday, March 16, 2024

Nova.

Good Caturday morning, Threaders, Threadheads, and all in between. Coffee is black and strong. ☕️

I will be posting yesterday’s good morning post (A Disneyland of Hate) in blog format today. I am glad some of you found it worthy of some introspection. Thank you.

The Nova Festival massacre was, to me, the most horrific event of October 7, 162 days ago. And I talked about it on the post mentioned. But it needs reinforcement.

Many Israelis have tried all they could to coexist peacefully with a Palestinian state. There are two realities, however, that also coexist in Israel.
They materialized, up to 10/7, in the way some Israelis interact with Palestinians in Gaza and in the West Bank. They reveal both sides of the same coin, one good, one bad. The good side is haunted by excess, just as the bad side is tempered by good will. It’s complex, and deserves a lot of thought, as neither is without flaws.

The bad side, is manifested through the settler movement, ongoing on the West Bank since Menachem Begin’s government of 1981, on steroids since 10/7, courtesy of Israel’s minister of Finance, Bezalel Yoel Smotrich, himself a settler. Under the excuse of creating a protective layer between the West Bank portion of the Palestinian state and the state of Israel, settlements remain more a spear than a shield, and constitute a source of legitimate grievance to the Palestinians.

This is the ugly side of Zionism, not “my Zionism”, a side that Herzl was very much against, but others made sure was part of the Cultural Zionist playbook, in which the divine right to the land of Israel is imposed above all else, at any cost. And even if we understand “land for peace” will not work, as long as Islamic Jihadists control the Palestinian Authority, the goal should be to remove those extremists from the equation, to allow for a true two state solution.

The Oslo Accords remain an elusive dream, but dream we must, if we wish not just peace, but democracy in a Jewish State that is still in the making, as much as our American experiment is still ongoing. After 250 years, Americans still struggle with the quest for a more perfect Union, do not expect Israel to reach it in 75. The truth is we will never reach perfection, but try we must, and trying we are, both in the US and in Israel.

Settlements have a positive aspect, and would indeed allow for a better coexistence between Israelis and Palestinians, in the sense that they would allow for Jews to live in Palestine, just as Arabs live in Israel. Now that is a pretty close vision to that of Theodor Herzl, but one that did not come to be. Most, if not all, of Jewish settlements in the West Bank are created at the expense of Palestinian displacement, and are not helping Israel, at home or abroad.

As opposed to this movement, in the East, another was set in motion in the West, around Gaza. Unlike the settlements in the West Bank, the Kibbutzim around the Gaza Strip were created respecting the 1967 borders, on Israeli land, and the people in them were mostly activists who worked very closely with the Palestinian population of Gaza, trying to minimize the impact of Hamas rule and Israel’s response to that reality, naive in the belief that most Gazans were opposed to it.

Since 2005, many Israelis living near the border with Gaza tried their best to help the Palestinians reach stability and safety, by meaningful interactions with them, from technical assistance, trying to teach them new technologies, to medical assistance, very often transporting Palestinians to Israeli health care centers in Israel, so they could get proper care. All in the hopes that one day they would be able to care for themselves, and remember those who helped them.

It was a conscious and concerted effort geared towards peace and coexistence, but rooted in the flawed belief Hamas would allow it. And this is the real tragedy of October 7, 2023. After almost 20 years of work, the people in the communities that truly were engaged in the peaceful coexistence between Israelis and Palestinians in Gaza, were the ones Hamas chose as targets. This is not a coincidence, or a geographical imperative with no relation to Hamas intentions. This was their goal.

And this is what makes the Nova Festival tragedy the single most important event of October 7.
The festival was a manifestation of peace, good will, and the strive for coexistence.
Set near the Re’im kibbutz, five kilometers (three miles) from the border with Gaza, the Nova Festival organizers had planned for a massive flying of kites to be held on the morning of 10/7, so the Palestinians across the border could see the Israelis were thinking of them, and would not abandon them.

Hamas knew this very well. They could have avoided the Festival, as they could have chosen to attack only military targets, but that was not the plan. The plan was to inflict maximum damage to those who most actively helped the population of Gaza, a cooperation they not only looked down on, but despised. And because their greatest enemy is peace, they willingly chose to destroy the most peaceful among their opponents. Those who opposed them, while helping their people.

The Nova Festival has become a painful symbol to all peace loving people around the world, especially Israelis. A reminder that those who seek violence and war will stop at nothing to destroy those who dream of peace. A reminder that sometimes peace can only be achieved through war, not because of the nature of those seeking it, but because of the nature of those who live to destroy it.
Such is our old reality turned new. One we cannot look away from, no matter what.

This is what Israel is up against. What we must never forget, and the reason why remembering the Nova Festival victims and the survivors, is so important.

So remember.
Never forget.
Never again.

Am Yisrael Chai 💔🕊️🇮🇱

Link to Holiday Horror Story on Instagram.






Saturday, March 2, 2024

Magic Happens. 03/02/2024

Good morning.

Magic happens.
Running through Threads this morning, I found someone who chooses “Love Over Gold” as the best ever album by the Dire Straits (*)… I prefer “Making Movies”, as it has my favorite song in it, but the double vinyl that blew me away is my favorite. It’s suitably named “Alchemy”, recorded at the Hammersmith Odeon, London, in 1983. Their first live album, never to to surpassed.


Many times I tried to play it here, but “Alchemy” is not available on Spotify (spare me the Spotify spiel, music is music). But today… I found the recordings. They are assembled in an album named “Dire Straits Live 1978-1992”. The Hammersmith Odeon recordings!! I just couldn’t believe it! I had the “Alchemy” vinyls, once. Now I am left with the CD’s… But I can finally share the magic here, the… Alchemy.

So, dear Threaders, Threadheads, and all in between, without politics or cats, today I wish to have focus on music, for music may well save us all, for more than any other art form, it combines the essence of love. And love is all you need.

Ladies and gentlemen… Mark Knopfler and the Dire Straits, live at the Hammersmith Odeon, London. 1983. And my favorite song ever… (The acoustic guitar… Unbelievable…)

Happy trails… 💙🎧

Live at the Hammersmith Odeon, London, 1983.

Cut from “Dire Straits Live 1978-1992”.




Trojan Horse.

Morning, Threaders, Threadheads, and all in between. Black coffee in the storm. Secular. The behavior free from religious or spiritual belie...