israeli politics

writing about war - 8.1.25

The other night I chaired a small group session of writers who spoke about the effect of the war on their writing.  As small as it was, almost every political opinion was voiced.  Only one of us lost their home, but all of us seem to have lost direction.   Who are we? Do we recognize ourselves?  What has happened to our lives?  Of course the people who came from abroad are a little less disoriented, but not much.  

Years ago a wrote an article about how people reacted in poetry to September 11 (https://read.dukeupress.edu/poetics-today/article-abstract/26/2/257/20856/The-Poetry-of-September-11-The-Testimonial?redirectedFrom=PDF)

, and suddenly I remembered it, and how different the grief and mourning was then from the crippling depth of mourning in our writers.  I’m sure this little group represents the way most Israelis feel about this war – helpless to the point of wordlessness.

The worst part of this is that even though we know theoretically about how people feel and live in Gaza, we have no communication.  All we hear are  threats, terrifying threats from Hamas. Hostage who were released tell of families who caged them, starved them, and demeaned them, and hostages still there are kept alive only to torture us with videos of their terrifying suffering.  Articles like that from the New Yorker this week that concentrate on the suffering of the Gazan population would be something with which we would identify with completely except for the fact that we can only think first of the terrible tortures, rapes, murders this population inflicted on our people.     

(https://www.newyorker.com/news/the-lede/treating-gazas-collective-trauma)

It is almost impossible to form any kind of empathy with people who murdered your children and yet I am becoming convinced that the only way we can ease our pain is to talk. As much as we are repelled by one another, we suffer together.


writing about war – 8.1.25 Read Post »

israeli politics

food - 7.30.25

As we left the beach long past 9 at night, we passed two men who were cooking on the sidewalk for their family sitting on the grass.   I said, “bon appetit” in Hebrew because I couldn’t remember how to say it in Arabic, and they absolutely shouted thanks with great enthusiasm.  

Of course this moment will be burnt into my memory forever.  Because I had been watching CNN all afternoon and heard again and again about the famine in Gaza and how it is our fault.  I hear it all the time but because I was feeling ill today I couldn’t move and kept hearing the same thing.  The problem is, I know the food is going in there and is getting hijacked by Hamas.  I know so much food is getting destroyed on the way to the hungry people.  And I know that feeding people who are firing rockets at us is a problem.

May all who are hungry be fed.

food – 7.30.25 Read Post »

israeli politics

all day long - 29.7.25

we were supposed to have a lovely day at the museum, lunch, the optomologist, and then maybe a movie. 

But it went the other way.  It began when I went to the health clinic to return the holter (results next week).  Ezi wasn’t feeling well and asked for an EKG.  This led to cancelling the morning  and going home to consider what to do.  That led to a consultation with the doctor that led to the emergency room. 

And then, since Ezi was actually feeling better,  for the rest of the day I got to admire the brand new triage center while he went through a series of tests.  It was quite amazing because in the many times I have been to the emergency ward, it was always chaotic and a bit frightening.  With the new triage center, it was fast, efficient, and not at all unpleasant.  

To tell the truth the ‘pleasant’ part was due in part to the fact that the section we were in dealt only with ambulatory patients, which made speed much more possible.  

So the only real wait was the waiting for blood test results.  The exam, tests, etc went speedily along like a conveyor belt, and he came through exactly as he had entered.  with no changes, no medication, no instructions.  

At least it kept us off the streets and away from the news.

 

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israeli politics

hunger - 7.28.25

It’s basically all we talked about all day.  All we wrote about.  “Is it possible,” a strange woman asked me in the health clinic., “that we are responsible for this?”  “Doesn’t matter.  Right now what matters is to stop greater tragedies,”  I found myself answering.  The fact that the world is blaming us isn’t the issue.  The issue is how do we alleviate the situation.  We’ve tried to distribute food and were overwhelmed by crowding masses.  What we didn’t do was set up closed-off allocation areas, so we control who gets in and at what rate.  And at a much earlier date.  It would have been so much easier if we had been able to work logically – but we’ve lost our heads.   

 

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israeli politics

morality - 7.28.25

I wonder if people in Germany tried to demonstrate against Hitler.  For us it seems we have not been able to prevent the mess this country has made in Gaza.  Nothing we do sways the government from its stupid activities.  Perhaps it is not our fault that there are Gazans starving but we are definitely responsible for righting the situation.  I am horrified by the fact that there are politicians who remind us how terrible it is to aid the enemy at a time of war, when we are the ones guarding the borders.  I remember the fields and orchards in Gaza, the bustling fruit and vegetable markets, the herds of goats and sheep.  They seem to be all gone now – and it doesn’t matter who started this round or who is keeping the food for private use.  All of us are guilty now.

 

 

Morality – 7.28.25 Read Post »

israeli politics

hunger - 7.25.25

Nothing makes sense.  Hamas is feasting in the tunnels, ready to fight until the last child dies of hunger – and people still support Hamas?

And this is our fault – that we’re not sufficiently feeding the people who keep trying to murder us?  

Of course I have no respect for this government, but I think it is in a stupid situation.

And one of the reasons is that we haven’t had the time to deal with our goals what with all the petty infighting we’re doing.

hunger – 7 Read Post »