'You're a Nazi': Getting Attacked for Speaking Out Against Israel's War Crimes in Gaza
Jan 5, 2025
Etzel Haturki (At the Turk's) is a well-known shawarma
place in the central Israeli city of Or Yehuda, and there is nothing Turkish
about it: It looks simple, though the prices are not so cheap, with a host at
the entrance and long lines of customers who've come from near and far to
partake in their food. My son's army service brought him to the restaurant at
the time, and since then he loves eating there.
On Friday afternoon we went again, when a commotion
quickly flared. It began with loud curses and ended with a horrifying group
encircling our table. "If only you would choke on the food and die,"
it began, "why are you giving him food here," it continued, and
"if there weren't cameras here, I would break your face," for the
finish.
"Look who's eating here," the man called out
to the passersby, as they stood in a circle, looking at the devil who'd come to
town. The man came closer to the table, his fury rising, and violence was very
close. We left to the sounds of curses that accompanied us to the car,
"fuck the mother of anyone who eats with the Nazi," they shouted at
my son, too.
Not for the first time, and not for the last, it's
nothing new. But one phrase was thrown out there, more than once, that I'd
never heard before: "You're a Nazi because you care about the children in
Gaza."
In Or Yehuda, Nazism received a new definition: A Nazi
is someone who cares about the children of Gaza. At the time that the
starvation, siege, shortages, destruction, ethnic cleansing and genocide in
the Gaza Strip are
defined around the world as having Nazi characteristics, things in Or Yehuda
are the exact opposite.
A Nazi is someone who worries about the victim.
Whoever cares about the children in Gaza won't eat in Or Yehuda and will not
dare come close to Or Yehuda – a city with a street named after Yoni Netanyahu,
a restaurant named Mifgash Entebbe, and a street which was once named after the
mayor's lover.
Throughout this war I have run into violence and
threats less than usual. The arena has moved to "Netanyahu, Yes
or No" and the
battle to free the hostages. Television, even on the supposedly most
enlightened programs, never brings any alternative opinion or voice that
opposes the war crimes, and in doing so actually makes it easier of those
shocked by Israel's actions – a handful of opponents who this time are safer
from the fury of the masses, because their voice is silenced and excluded from
the debate. But this silencing
is dangerous.
We have never had a war here that did not have
opposition, at least in its most advanced and criminal stages. These wars
always started with wall-to-wall support, and even enthusiasm within the Jewish
community, until the cracks opened up and the questions arose.
The First Lebanon War is the best of all examples, but
also operations Cast Lead and Protective Edge in Gaza (in 2008 and 2014)
aroused opposition at some stage, and their voices were heard.
But not this time. This war, the longest the State of
Israel has ever known, is also the war with the greatest agreement over – at
least in the public debate about it.
The protesters want a hostage deal, the opponents want
a cease-fire, even the end of the war, but only for the good of the hostages
and the soldiers being killed.
The victims of
Gaza are not in
the discourse at all, and anyone who tries to mention them is a Nazi, at least
in Or Yehuda.
The brainwashing and blindness have reached
record-high levels we've never known before. The "sobering up" of our
many and finest – who are really so few, if any of them have sobered up at all
– has created an illusion according to which the dispute is deep and society is
more divided than ever.
But it's not at all split, Israel is united in its
absolute support for the IDF, even as the war crimes pile up, and Israel's
unlimited right after October 7 to do whatever it pleases in Gaza.
In practice, Israel has never been so united as at the
beginning of 2025, in spite of all the background noise and fake lamentations
over the "polarization of the people." We must never, ever upset this
wonderful new order. Anyone who tries to do so is a Nazi.
When we finally reached the car, my son and I, a
friendly young man came up to me and asked for a blessing. He said that someone
who doesn't respond to cursing and threats is considered to be someone with
exceptional qualities. He asked me to give him a blessing that he would soon
find a good wife, and I did. I was happy to help.
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