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Commentary: How the pro-Palestinian movement is becoming a war against Jews

richmond.com 2024/7/15
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Pro-Palestinian student protestors wave a Palestinian flag as they gather on the front steps of Hamilton Hall at Columbia University in New York City on April 30.

Dateline Israel, Oct. 7, 2023: We know all too well the barbarism inflicted by Hamas terrorists upon innocent Israelis on that date. How more than 1,200 Israelis of all ages and genders, including hundreds of teenagers attending a peace concert, were brutally tortured and murdered. How 250 were taken hostage. How the terrorists joyfully filmed their brutality. Not since its War of Independence has Israel suffered so great a loss; not since the Holocaust have the Jewish people suffered so great a loss in a single day.

Tommy P. Baer (copy)
Tommy P. Baer

Dateline United States, some nine months later: Also not since the Holocaust have the safety and security of the Jewish people been so threatened. The escalation of antisemitism that also poses a threat to our national character as a free and inclusive society enshrined so eloquently in our founding documents is real, troubling and dangerous. Decisive action and moral leadership is required to confront this scourge. A society that fails to condemn such acts of hate and bigotry is a failed society and must bear responsibility for the consequences of its inaction. Elie Wiesel, Holocaust survivor and Nobel Peace laureate, defined indifference as “the most insidious danger of all.”

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The marginalization of Jewish students and the abridgement of their religious freedom, in colleges and high schools across the country by their fellow students, aided and abetted in many instances by their professors, teachers and permissive administrators, cannot be attributed solely to Israel’s retaliation against Hamas. Israel’s response was fodder for those with a preexisting anti-Israel bias, which has morphed from anti-Israel sentiments to anti-Zionism to Jew-hatred; and the pro-Palestinian movement has morphed into pro-Hamas and thus a war against the Jews.

The recent vicious attack by neo-Nazi thugs against Jews outside a synagogue in Los Angeles is but one such example of violence. Chants of “From the river to sea, Palestine will be free” are words of incitement calling for genocide, and are not entitled to free speech protection. Demands by antisemitic goons that Zionists identify themselves is not free speech, but hate speech.

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Rabbi Sherry Grinsteiner leads Congregation Or Atid on Patterson Avenue. As pro-Palestine protesters march through Richmond’s streets calling for a “globalized intifada,” she said she has never been more afraid for herself, her children and the future of her community. 

The Middle East issues are complex, borne of a complex history, constantly subjecting Israel to shifting standards of scrutiny. Self-defense is conflated with aggression, retaliation is conflated with genocide. However, the atrocities committed on Oct. 7 require no providing of context. There is no ambiguity, no nuance. Only terror.

Much has been reported and written of the horrors of that day. Readers are challenged to distinguish between fact and fiction, truth and propaganda, information and misinformation. So it is with an article published in the Richmond Times-Dispatch on June 16 (“Actually, no. There is just the one Richmond”) written by members of an organization calling itself Richmond Jews for a Free Palestine.

The authors could have achieved a degree of credibility by simply calling for a cease-fire, the release of all hostages, the end of Hamas control of Gaza, and the rebuilding of Gaza under a more enlightened government. They did none of that. With only a passing reference to the events of Oct. 7, the authors have gone far beyond any legitimate criticism of Israel in the conduct of the war.

In a litany of half-truths and historical omissions, the authors have equated the hostages held in Gaza with the terrorists held in Israeli jails; callously accused the Israelis of using the Holocaust as the justification for the war in Gaza; and most egregiously have accused Israel of “ethnic cleansing;” all with expressing their pride in marching “alongside our Palestinian friends at protests” and without a single mention of Hamas culpability. Not one. It gives credence to the adage that just because it is in writing doesn’t mean that it is sanctified.

Calls for peace and the end of suffering in the region should be embraced by all parties to the conflict. But peace will only come, as said by Golda Meir, Israel’s former prime minister, when the Arabs love their children as much as they hate Jews.

Gallery: Protesters and police clash on VCU campus

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VCU police officers line up after arriving at a pro-Palestinian demonstration in front of the James Branch Cabell Library, intending to clear the protestors from Monroe Park.
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A member of Studio Two Three screens prints posters that say “free Palestine” in front of the James Branch Cabell Library on Monday.
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VCU students watch out of the window of the James Branch Cabell Library while police and demonstrators face-off during a pro-Palestinian demonstration Monday.
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VCU students demonstrating in support of Palestine are reflected in the window of the James Branch Cabell Library on Monday.
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VCU police make an arrest during a pro-Palestinian demonstration in front of the James Branch Cabell Library on Monday. There were 13 people arrested at the protest, including six VCU students.
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Pro-Palestine demonstrators stand behind a makeshift barrier in front of James Branch Cabell Library on VCU’s campus, Monday, April 29, 2024.
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Pro-Palestine protesters and Virginia State Police troopers clash in front of VCU's James Branch Cabell Library on April 29. Police arrived at the protest at around 8:30 p.m. to clear an encampment established by the demonstrators.
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A pro-Palestine demonstrator yells in front of James Branch Cabell Library on Monday. Protestors were chanting things like "free, free Palestine" to share their message.
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Richmond resident Maddie, washes chemical agents out of her eyes during a pro-Palestine demonstration in front of James Branch Cabell Library on VCU’s campus Monday.
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Pro-Palestine demonstrators hold up a wooden sign in front of James Branch Cabell Library on VCU’s campus Monday.
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Student organizer Sereen Haddad holds a bull horn during a pro-Palestine demonstration in front of James Branch Cabell Library on Monday. Haddad has been very active in organizing pro-Palestine protests since the war started.
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A VCU Police officer stands in line during a pro-Palestine demonstration in front of James Branch Cabell Library on VCU’s campus, Monday, April 29, 2024.
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VCU grad student Cameron Williams holds up a sign in James Branch Cabell Library that reads, "weird how violence starts when the police show up" while pro-Palestine demonstrators and law enforcement officers clash on VCU’s campus Monday.
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Pro-Palestine demonstrators construct a tent for the encampment in front of James Branch Cabell Library on Monday.
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A person attempting to film demonstrators is blocked from doing so in front of the rally at James Branch Cabell Library on VCU’s campus on Monday.
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