israeli politics

high noon

I fell asleep before i finished posting this last week, and suddenly it turned up on my screen.  Even though it breaks the law of ‘writing to the moment’ i thought you’d like to see it:

Half asleep, I found myself watching “High Noon,” the 1952 film with Gary Cooper and .  “Why am I watching this instead of going to sleep, when any moment a Houti rocket may send me to the shelter and if I don’t sleep while I can, I’ll be too exhausted to make my exit in time?”  I had been mulling over the success of the Houtis in cancelling many flights to Israel just by writing letters threatening world-wide attacks to the airline companies flying to Israel, and decided to take a break by going to old movies.

But there they were, the same excuses of the citizens who refused to join the sheriff in defending their town – the defenses that the sheriff isn’t perfect, that the problem isn’t theirs, that business will suffer, that they will be endangering themselves.  Grace Kelley plays the Quaker bride who is only convinced at the end of the film that her intervention is necessary to save the life her love. 

My beloved high-school history teacher, a Quaker himself, once told us that at a meeting the participants sat silent, not responding to an issue, until one old man stood up and in his frail voice said “Two skeletons were in a closet.  For centuries they stood silent.  Suddenly one turned to the other and said, “You know, if we had any guts we’d get out of here.” 

I remembered that remark when I thought of the terrible implications of a country threatening international airlines – after their successful bout of indiscriminating attacks on shipping. 

  

high noon Read Post »

israeli politics

Ezi's birthday - 6.5.25

This is a day of pure celebration and we are doing only what we want to do.  But first we have to watch the news, and then I have to look up when I was last in touch with Judy Weinstein before she was murdered on Oct 7.  The bodies of her and her husband were brought home today after information was ‘volunteered’ from a captured Hamas soldier.  And then I have to make sure I get my shopping delivered tomorrow morning so we can make a family lunch for Ezi on Saturday.  And then we can get dressed and go out to celebrate.

 

ezi’s birthday – 6.5.25 Read Post »

israeli politics

missiles - 6.3.25

Tonight the alarm caught us as we left a local restaurant – for a moment i couldn’t figure out where to hide, it took me a few seconds before i figured out where to take our guests from abroad, because the celebrants at the restaurant were drinking and didn’t even listen to the sirens.  They were busy singing “Sana Hilwe” in Arabic.  But we found a shelter on our own, crowded with revellers, stayed there the required 10 minutes, and suddenly didn’t feel like taking a stroll in the park.  

missiles – 6.3.25 Read Post »

israeli politics

siren tonight - 6.2.25

After a long day at Tel Aviv cafes and restaurants, we found ourselves exhausted, but the new system of early warning made the predictable missile bearable.  

I must explain – in the morning we met with the family of the man whose father saved the lives of my parents – at the gorgeous cafe of their grandson – Nomene – on 54 Allenby – a noble, restored building from the ’40s.  “My mother used to take me here when I was a little boy!”  

There were all kinds of connections, memories, great stories – but no food, so we picked up some grandchildren for lunch at Mateo’s on Bograshov. 

All that sitting and eating.  too much escape….

siren tonight – 6.2.25 Read Post »

israeli politics

erev hag - 6.1.25

Every year we spend the night of Shvuot with friends.  We used to discuss the Bible but have gotten tired of it in recent years, and talk more about recipes and politics.  Tonight we had a missile warning around 4:30 in the afternoon and were a bit discombobulated about getting into a holiday spirit on time.  The Houtis seem to know exactly when we’re vulnerable, and although they favor any hour of the night, they also aim for times when the kids are off to school, or when we are having weekly family dinners, or on holidays.

As a friend from the US pointed out to me when I told him that this holiday was celebrating the giving of the torah, there is a law about not killing.  He was being subtle because we have been friends for 6o odd years, but I understood that I’m being blamed for murder, and I have been doing what I can to change the situation, as have all the other people I know, but we are in a corner.  completely.

 

erev hag – 6.1.25 Read Post »

israeli politics

introducing our little traumas - 5.31.25

The emphasis in the news all over the world has been on Gaza, and there is no doubt the situation there is absolutely horrible.  We have destroyed most of the buildings there.  We stopped sending in food and medicine for weeks and weeks.  But there is another angle to consider – Hamas still has the food, the medicines, in fact all the supplies.  So it is not just Israel that was withholding supplies.  

But I wanted to add another layer to the mess in the middle east.  Lately I’ve been writing poems about everyday events in Israel – not lost hostages, not even the thousands of wounded we see every day on the street, but the lady whose son has been fighting for over a year and she’s not sure when she’ll see him again, all the people who have been displaced and have no idea how and when to rebuild their lives.  No, not all the people, but the individuals.  

It is my fervent hope that soon I will meet with people from Gaza, and see and hear their stories.  I know I am not alone in this wish….

introducing our little fears – 5.31.25 Read Post »

israeli politics

600 ימים – 28.5.25

600 ימים – 28.5.25

מאת קרן אלקלעי גוט,


מי היה מאמין שהכאוס הזה יימשך 600 ימים. אם היום היו מחזירים את בני הערובה, האם לא היה קשה להצדיק את המלחמה הזו בכל דרך שהיא?

הערב, בזמן שאנשים נורמליים צעדו ברחוב, אנחנו היינו בקונצרט. עכשיו, זה אולי נראה כמו בריחה מהמציאות, אבל כששומעים את המוזיקה של בנג’מין בריטן נגד המלחמה, ואז את ה”אירויקה” של בטהובן, מבינים שכל היבט בכל יום מושפע מהמצב שלנו.

האירויקה של בטהובן, שנכתבה כדי לברך על עליית עידן חדש עם נפוליאון, בוצעה בפעם האחרונה באולם היכל התרבות כאן ב-23 באוקטובר 2023. העורף לא איפשר לקהל להתכנס בגלל מבול הרקטות, ולכן היא נוגנה מול אולם מלא בתמונות של נפגעים ובני ערובה. הסימפוניה הזו של תקווה, הערב, בעודנו עדיין משתוקקים לשובם של שאר בני הערובה, מקבלת משמעות מיוחדת.

 

600 ימים – Read Post »

israeli politics

gaza- 5.29.25

At the beginning of this war, when the murder of so many Israelis and the hundreds of hostages was still fresh, I didn’t believe the pictures and the statistics from Gaza.  The pictures were so obviously doctored, and the hatred expressed so strongly, I couldn’t sympathize totally.  Of course the suffering of individuals can’t be ignored  But lately, when it became clear we were self-consoring, I began to look for the individuals, remembering Gazan children I ran into in the hospital, remembering the visits to Gaza with my husband and daughter, where the kids played together.  The humanity quickly got the better of me.

This morning an op ed appeared in Haaretz by Rafi and Tzvia Valdan.  It was in Hebrew, but after I read it I knew I had to share it with you in English.  So Ezi translated it – just like that. Here it is:

 

Nine Dead. Not in Our Name!
Rafi and Tzvia Waldan

HAARETZ
May 29, 2025

Tzvia Waldan is a linguist.
Rafi Waldan is a physician and human rights activist.

Primo Levi’s book received two Hebrew translations. The first was titled “Is This a Man?” and the second “If This Is a Man.” Of the author, who began writing two months after returning from Auschwitz, it was said: he “observes the human beings whom the camp stripped, one by one, of their identity as human beings, wonders ‘if this is a man,’ and clings to moments of grace—remnants of humanity—in which, and through which, man becomes human again.”

Look at the photo of the 11-year-old boy. He is a human being. That is his name—Adam. Until Friday, he had nine brothers and sisters: Yahya, Rakan, Raslan, Jubran, Ayyub, Rifan, Sidin, Lakman, and Sidra—the oldest was 12. But after an Israeli airstrike on Khan Yunis, the nine siblings were killed. Only Adam survived, badly injured.

These ten children, of whom only one survived, are the sons and daughters of Dr. Alaa Al-Najjar, a pediatrician at the Al-Tahrir Clinic in the Nasser Medical Center. She was at the hospital when her children and husband—Dr. Hamdi Al-Najjar, also a doctor—were at their nearby home. The father was also seriously wounded and was filmed being carried out on a stretcher.

Look at the pictures. The videos on social media show horrifying scenes. The burnt bodies of the children being pulled from the house in sacks. Additional evidence of this terrible tragedy comes from various sources, including colleagues of the couple and foreign doctors volunteering in the area.

Not in our name! We can no longer remain silent! This cruel and senseless war must end. We do not agree to massive killing that fails to distinguish between terrorists and young children and infants. We will not settle for the IDF spokesperson’s statement that “the incident will be investigated.” We demand an immediate halt to the barbaric conduct of systematic killing of innocent people.

Meanwhile, we demand that the State of Israel allow the three remaining family members—father, mother, and child—to leave Gaza together and immediately, so they can receive proper treatment and rehabilitation. There are people in the world who will help them and care for them—such as Dr. David Hassan from Duke University in the United States and others from the medical community who will rally to save what remains of the family—three out of twelve.

Primo Levi wrote about the remnants of humanity among Holocaust victims, despite the inhuman conditions in which they were held. Today, when we have control over the fate of Palestinians—life or death—we must ask ourselves: who deserves to be called human? Perhaps, from among the ongoing horrors we inflict on Gaza, this peak tragedy will stir “moments of grace,” a spark of compassion that will save at least the father, the child, and the mother—three individuals among the tens of thousands affected.

And we will not stop demanding the return of all the hostages—now.

 

g Read Post »