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Ariel, Shiri, and Kfir Bibas murdered in captivity by Hamas |
There must be something in the air. When a major component
of Meir Kahane’s views about Palestinians becomes mainstream, that should shake things up a bit.
As I’ve said from the very beginning - and numerous times
since - Meir Kahane’s views about the Palestinian mindset with respect to Israel were
exactly on target. He was prescient. Most rational people considered him an extremist with extremist views. Well he was an extremist. But his belief about their mindset appears to be becoming mainstream.
Please do not misunderstand me. I did not and do not endorse his tactics
or rhetoric, all of which are reprehensible. But when it comes to
understanding what Palestinians really want, more people
are beginning to realize what Kahane already knew decades ago. It’s just too bad that it took the events of
October 7th to wake everyone else up to this reality.
Even so, how can I be so sure that Kahane was right about that? It is after all humanly impossible to know exactly what is
on the mind of an entire people. Only God can know that. But when there is a
convergence of opinion from sources as disparate as Reform Rabbi Amiel Hirsch, Ben Shapiro and Laurence Bolotin, there has to be a reason. When they are all saying a version of what
Kahane said decades ago, we had better believe it, lest we pay the ultimate
price as a people.
The turning point may have come at different times and after
different events, but the moral clarity that Kahane had on this issue remains
the same. I had always trusted Kahane’s wisdom on this issue. But I used to
think that peace could nevertheless be achieved by virtue of the realities of
Israel’s proven might. That the Palestinians people would prefer peace and prosperity to death and
destruction. But as October 7th taught me, that is clearly not the case.
The turning point for the more liberal Jews among us has
come now, in the aftermath of the cold-blooded murder of the Bibas children by
their Hamas abductors - via strangulation, by hand!
Here is what conservative pundit, Ben Shapiro said:
"This week, the world was reminded of the deep and
abiding evil that has wormed its way to the center of Palestinian nationalistic
culture by the news that the Bibas family — a mother, Shiri; a 4-year-old boy,
Ariel; and his 9-month-old brother, Kfir...
They were not, in fact, kidnapped by identified members of Hamas. They were
kidnapped by Palestinians in civilian dress, who joined Hamas for their
murderous spree. For over a year, zero Palestinians apparently revealed the
whereabouts of the Bibas family to the Israelis; zero worked to keep them safe
or to restore them to liberty.
This fits with a pattern of civilian involvement in Palestinian terror
activity: The reality is that the Palestinian terror apparatus is incestuously
intertwined with the Palestinian civilian population. That is why released
hostages tell of being held by civilian families in Gaza; why terrorists merge
so easily into the surrounding civilian population; why the popularity of
Palestinian terrorist groups remains sky-high among Palestinians generally. The
hard division between terrorist and civilian so cherished by the West simply
doesn’t exist in practice in places like the Gaza Strip."
If Shapiro is too conservative to your liking, read what Rabbi Ammiel Hirsch said:
"Something snapped in me this week," said Rabbi
Ammiel Hirsch, the senior rabbi at the Stephen Wise Free Synagogue in New York
City…
"It is what the Bibas family symbolizes—the concretization and
normalization of pure evil in the face of pure innocence—that finally crushed
me this week...
"A community that condones the murder of infants and toddlers, a people
that is not horrified by the savagery, the cheers, the parading of infant
remains, is desperately troubled and suffering from moral miasma and social collapse,"
he declared. "Palestinianism is infused with fantasies of conquest and
mythologies of victimhood, fueling an endless cycle of violent depravity, in
part encouraged and even funded by perhaps well-meaning but naive Western
politicians and NGOs, and glamorized by armchair revolutionaries whose fervor
increases the further they are from Gaza."
That’s right. Ammiel Hirsch, a Reform rabbi whose movement
is among the most liberal/left in the Jewish world (if not the entire world),
is echoing what Meir Kahane said all those many years ago! To quote Ben Shapiro, "Sometimes, moral clarity
isn’t difficult."
We now know with relative certainty that, no matter how
futile the task, Palestinians prefer death and destruction of even their own
people in pursuit of expelling the Jewish people from ‘their’ own land - over the peace and prosperity having their own state next to Israel would bring them.
Those who naïvely say that Israel’s destruction of Gaza in
its war against Hamas has produced more terrorists (and there are a lot of
well-meaning people who believe this) remain clueless to the reality Meir
Kahane knew was true all along. Only now a lot more people realize this.
And yet, except for the U.S. (especially now under a
president who also understands this), the rest of the world (united under an abomination called the UN) clings to the false notion that a two-state solution
is the only path forward. I guess moral clarity is something Europeans don’t
possess. And never did as was evident in their collaboration with the Nazis
during the Holocaust.
Finally, there is this op-ed in the Chicago Tribune
by Laurence Bolotin, a former board member of the American Jewish
Committee (one of the most progressive Jewish organizations in America). He had
this to say:
"The images of (the murdered Bibas children being
returned) to Israel should shake us to our core. They should force us to
confront not only the brutality of their deaths but also the moral vacuum that
allows such horrors to be met with indifference. When the killing of children
no longer provokes outrage—when the world’s response is muted, conditional, or
absent altogether—it speaks to something deeply broken in our collective
conscience.
There was a time when we did not ask what flag they were born under before
deciding whether their deaths were worth mourning. There was a time when the
idea of children being slaughtered in their homes, at a festival, in a war
zone, or in a school would bring us together in sorrow and anger. But today,
the moral clarity that once guided us seems eroded by political narratives,
selective empathy, and a deep-seated fear of taking a stand.
The silence surrounding these deaths is not accidental. It is cultivated. It is
born out of a reluctance to acknowledge suffering that does not fit neatly into
a preferred narrative. It is maintained by the fear of being accused of taking
the wrong side—as if the murder of children is ever a matter of political
debate rather than a fundamental moral failing."
Indeed! Need I say more?