When Six Israelis Are Mourned More Than 40,000 Palestinians
Sep 5, 2024
Israel mourns the six hostages who were killed. The
world also mourns them. Their names, their pictures, their life stories and
their families led news broadcasts in Israel and around the world. Hersh
Goldberg-Polin and Eden Yerushalmi became celebrities against their will, in
their captivity and in their death. The world cried for them – it's impossible
not to: six beautiful young people, who went through hell in captivity before
being brutally executed.
But our six
hostages are only the
tip of the story, a tiny fraction of the war's victims. Their becoming a global
story is understandable. Less understandable is the unbelievable contrast
between the wide coverage of their lives and deaths and the total disregard for
the similar fate of people their own age – as blameless and ingenuous and
beautiful as them, and just as much innocent victims – on the Palestinian side.
While the world is
shocked by the fate
of Gaza, it has never paid similar respect to the Palestinian victims. The
president of the United States does not call the relatives of fallen
Palestinians, not even if they, like the Goldberg-Polins, had American
citizenship. The United States has never called for the release of thousands of
Palestinian abductees that Israel has detained without trial. A young Israeli
woman who was killed at the Nova festival arouses more sympathy and compassion
in the world than a female teenage refugee from Jabalya. The Israeli is more
similar to "the world."
Everything has already been said about the overlooking
and concealment of Palestinian suffering in the Israeli public conversation,
and not enough has yet been said. The Palestinian killed in Gaza who had a
face, a name and a life story and whose killing shocked Israel has not yet been
born.
The 17,000 children killed in the Strip since the war
began also had hopes and dreams and families that were destroyed by their
deaths. They hold no interest for a majority of Israelis; a minority even
rejoices in their deaths. In the world beyond Israel they are seen as terrible
victims, but even there they usually have neither names nor faces.
Israelis' hearts are with the Israeli victims. Nothing
could be more understandable or human. But national lamentation on such a scale
for six hostages, amid total disregard for the tens of thousands of Palestinian
victims, is sick and immoral: dehumanization
without a hint of humanity for
the victims – not even for the children who were killed; for children who are
displaced, orphaned, sick, starving or had limbs amputated.
There are tens of thousands of such children within an
hour's drive from Tel Aviv, and we are entirely indifferent to them. Israel has
sent aid missions to the Philippines. The more Israel cries over its hostages
and its dead, the more evident the inconceivable gap between its national grief
and its complete apathy to the Palestinian victims becomes.
It's not difficult to imagine how Gazans feel in the
face of the world, which was rocked by six dead Israeli hostages while losing
interest with alarming speed in 40,000 dead Palestinians. Also, when they talk
about abductees, they only talk about the Israeli hostages.
What about the hundreds and thousands of Palestinian
abductees from the Gaza Strip and the West Bank; the so-called administrative
detainees, held without trial; the "unlawful combatants" and the
innocent laborers who were captured, and whose number no one even reports? Some
of them, at minimum, are held in
hellish conditions. They
too have worried families who have no idea what has happened to them for 10
months; they too are denied visits from the International Committee of the Red
Cross.
This week Sheren Falah Saab did a superlative
job telling the
story of one Palestinian in Gaza, Mohammad "Medo" Halimy, a 19-year-old
TikToker who was killed when he went to charge his phone. The article was a ray
of light in the darkness. A dead Palestinian in Gaza with a name and a face,
thanks to TikTok and Falah Saab.
The story of Medo causes a lump in the throat, no less
than the video of Eden Yerushalmi that Hamas released this week. Is it even
permitted to say this in today's Israel?
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