Perverted Justice

Perverted Justice

After the kidnapping and murder of Naftali Frenkel, Gilad Shaar and Eyal Yifrach, the Jewish nation mourns. Israel is angry, and rightfully so; can our children not even hitchhike without the possibility of abduction and murder? Do our neighbors hate us so much that they want to kill our children even if it serves no purpose?
The tragedy turns still uglier as we mourn. Following protests in Jerusalem, with signs calling for revenge and chants denigrating Muslims and calling for death to Arabs, the body of sixteen year-old Muhammad Hussein Abu Khdeir was found murdered. Prior to the grisly discovery of Muhammad’s body, social media was filled with demands that the state institute the death penalty for terrorism, and for the Israel Defense Forces to exact revenge against Palestinians. Still uglier, following Muhammad’s murder, there were posts on Facebook and demonstrations celebrating the killing.

Since that terrible night when the Israeli boys were kidnapped and murdered, the Israeli government has been condemning all Palestinians. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu laid the blame on Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, and even after the P.A. president called for the boys’ release and decried the kidnapping, Netanyahu continued to criticize his leadership and insinuate his culpability.
Following the kidnapping, the I.D.F. and Shin Bet arrested hundreds of Palestinians throughout the West Bank. Ahmad Arafat Samada (20), Mustafa Hosni Aslan (22), Mohammed Dudeen (15), Muhammad Ismail Atallah Tarifi (30) were killed during the raids. Fatima Ismail Issa Rushdi (78) died of a heart attack during an Israeli raid on the Arruba refugee camp. On the night of June 30, after the discovery of the bodies, sixteen year-old Yussef Abu Zaghah was killed during clashes in Jenin. Then there was the revenge killing.
Those Palestinian victims have families that will likely never mourn the death of another Israeli. Their friends and neighbors will forever see the brutal, senseless murder of Naftali, Gilad and Eyal through the lens of their own loved ones’ senseless deaths. And the Palestinians will always remember the events of June 2014 according to a completely different narrative, reinforcing this conflict for yet another generation.
The coalition in the Knesset offered no alternative to revenge, and did nothing to prevent the kidnapping from becoming another manifestation of tit-for-tat bloodshed. They set the standard of who should mourn and they punished those whose mourning didn’t meet that standard. What’s worse: they ignored those Palestinians who had mourned with us. For example, Israeli and Palestinian members of the Shorashim/Judhur cooperative project met to grieve this tragedy together, as a community. Rabbi Michael Melchior and Sheikh Ibrahim Al-Hawa of Jerusalem led an interfaith prayer service with Jewish and Muslim participants. Yishai Frenkel, Naftali Frenkel’s uncle, spoke about the condolences and messages of support he had received from Palestinians. 
But the government made it impossible for Palestinians to mourn these boys. They cursed all potentially sympathetic Palestinians as a part of the same community that allowed the tragedy to happen, and pushed them to hate us by bluntly punishing all of them. Those Palestinians who also wanted justice for Eyal, Gilad and Naftali were offered settlements and promises of revenge. This is coercion in its most cynical expression.
Jewish Home party leader Naftali Bennett has always been adamant about directing anger toward “the Arabs,” and he wanted revenge far more than he wanted to scrutinize the security situation that allowed the kidnapping to occur. Bennett is known for shrugging off the murder of Palestinians, and this pattern of incitement is directly responsible for the revenge killing and all the death that will ensue from it.
Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon suggested that building new settlements in memory of the three boys is a just response. The right now targets the left in their coercion, offering only their perverted justice, and manipulating a nation’s anger into political gains.
Justice is not killing Palestinian children, and it isn’t building more illegal settlements. Justice is doing everything necessary to make sure that no family—Jewish or not—will have to experience this again. But until the government internalizes its failure—that this happened because military occupation cannot protect Israel—instead of deflecting responsibility to the Palestinians, don’t expect it to do anything to prevent the next tragedy. Don’t expect Naftali Bennett or Benjamin Netanyahu to take one step toward ending the cycle of violence, steps such as ending Israeli incitement and denouncing calls for Arab blood from the beginning. It is up to the government to turn the nation’s grief into justice, and so far, it has failed.
By | 2014-07-02T13:39:00-04:00 July 2nd, 2014|Blog|9 Comments

9 Comments

  1. BklynToBoca July 4, 2014 at 11:08 am - Reply

    You make assertions about perverted justice with no proof of culpability.
    http://www.israelnationalnews.com/Articles/Article.aspx/15269#.U7aJvdm9LCS

  2. BklynToBoca July 4, 2014 at 11:10 am - Reply

    Perverted Justice ? How about Perverted Journalism?

  3. werner cohn July 6, 2014 at 9:28 pm - Reply

    so “incitement” comes from Israel, and only from Israel. This willful ignoring of what goes on in current Arab culture is a sort of sickness on the part of the self-styled Jewish “progressives.”. It’s a moral blindness that condemns you folks to absolute irrelevance.

  4. Nathan Hersh July 7, 2014 at 6:15 pm - Reply

    Werner: The “Arab culture” you speak about (without clearly defining what, exactly, you mean) does not speak for me. Israel does.

    This is an article about the incitement from the Israeli government, not the incitement from Palestinian society.

  5. werner cohn July 7, 2014 at 8:04 pm - Reply

    Dear Nathan Hersh,

    I did not realize that Israel speaks for you personally, in a way that requires you to rebuke it. Anyway, I take it that you do not live in Israel, so you do not take the risks of the policies you advocate. And, going by what you say, you do not take an interest in the dangers that Israel is facing, not only from incitement, but also from actual daily violence. This violence does not affect you while you sit at your computer somewhere in the US, so you avert your eyes. Try, just try a little, to put yourself in the place of those who actually face death and violence. The old-fashioned word for what is needed is empathy. Can you spare a little ? Just a little ?

    Kindest regards

    Werner Cohn

  6. Ralph Seliger July 8, 2014 at 6:26 pm - Reply

    Dear Werner:
    For your information, Nathan has lived in Israel, served in the IDF and gone to university there. He can speak for himself, of course, but (incredibly) you are mistaking his criticism of specific statements by officials and the ugly attitudes & behaviors of other Israelis as a lack of empathy. You are also ignoring his entire first paragraph.

  7. Nathan Hersh July 8, 2014 at 6:32 pm - Reply

    Werner: I served in the Givati Brigade when I was in Israel, I am in a combat reserve unit, and I’ve reported to every reserve duty I’ve ever been called to, including Operation Pillar of Defense. This recent operation will also likely see my unit called if there is to be a ground invasion. I have every reason to oppose the policies that needlessly put me and my fellow soldiers at risk, not to mention millions of Israelis and Palestinians.

  8. werner cohn July 9, 2014 at 7:47 pm - Reply

    From the postings by Ralph and Nathan, it appears that Nathan, at some point at least, lived in Israel. Good for him. But does he actually live there now ? That is not made clear. But in any case, just where he personally lives at this moment is not the major issue, and I apologize if I have suggested that it was. What bothers me is the New York-based campaign by this whole organization — Partners for Progressive Israel — to tell Israelis how to look after themselves. These NYC denizens have the arrogance to tell the Jews of Israel how to be more “progressive,” i.e. to be more moral, according to the norms practiced by American “progressives.” The most charitable thing I can say about these folks is that their activity is unseemly.

  9. Ralph Seliger July 9, 2014 at 8:32 pm - Reply

    My concern is as a progressive ZIONIST, Werner, not how Israel should be more “progressive.” It is because I see Israel’s present security and its future viability as a Jewish state being undermined by the political power of the pro-settler movement, and also by some intolerant attitudes & policies toward Israel’s Arab minority, that I take the stands I do.

    Werner may be correct that I’d be more persuasive if I were an Israeli, but this doesn’t mean that I have no right to express myself on these matters. I try to do so from an informed pro-Israel perspective, as does Nathan. The fact that Nathan lived in Israel until recently (and served in the IDF), obviously gives him some special insight that neither Werner nor I possess.

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