Chattanooga Times Free Press

ISRAEL’S TRAGEDY HITS HOME IN AMERICA

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I was supposed to leave Saturday night for Israel. But then Hamas terrorists launched a shocking raid, slaughteri­ng civilians, kidnapping dozens and showering the country with rockets.

Like thousands of American Jews, I have a child studying there. Friends have relatives residing in Tel Aviv. Friends and colleagues have children in the Israeli military. Synagogues have sister congregati­ons there.

So this internatio­nal horror is different for many, many Americans. The slaughter unfolding was not only a barbaric assault on the larger Jewish family but also on thousands of individual families in the United States and elsewhere in the Jewish diaspora. Making the terror all the more intense: The assault took place on Shabbat and over the Simhat Torah holiday during which religious Jews turn off phones, television and other electronic­s. We outside of Israel could not reach our loved ones in the country.

Instead, we texted, called and emailed one another, searching for scraps of informatio­n.

“The Unthinkabl­e: Who Survives When Disaster Strikes — and Why,” by Post contributi­ng columnist Amanda Ripley, documents the range of psychologi­cal reactions to disasters, chief among them the urge to believe everything is normal — even in the face of overwhelmi­ng evidence to the contrary. Maybe we should still go. Well, maybe we’ll just stay in Jerusalem. Well, maybe … And so it goes until you truly process the horror and grasp that is unfolding.

Suddenly, specifics matter. A lot. Exactly where are the kibbutzim that were invaded? Where precisely are the rockets falling? How far from my loved one’s school or home? Which specific airlines are still flying and where can you go? Like Jews over the centuries, the question becomes: How can we get anywhere safely?

The images we see have been compared to the 1973 Yom Kippur War or the 1948 Arab attack on the new state of Israel. But worse, they rekindle Jews’ collective memories from the Middle Ages to The Pale to Germany, when pogroms and mass killings terrorized children and women targeted by murderous, rampaging forces. That feeling of helplessne­ss, of vulnerabil­ity, was what Israel was supposed to eradicate. No longer would Jews be at the mercy of other nations, their armies and police; a state of our own would allow us to protect ourselves. And when it did not, Jews in Israel and around the world are left reeling.

After Hamas is defeated, there will be a reckoning in Israel. Evidence of warnings to the Israeli government about insufficie­nt deterrence, recriminat­ions about putting a racist ideologue in the Defense Ministry post and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s misguided assault on democracy will all be reviewed. Careers will end.

This should, but likely will not, inject some sobriety into the Republican Party, which has held up U.S. military promotions and confirmati­ons and State Department postings; brought the House to a state of collapse under the weight of MAGA hysteria; carried water for Russia (an ally of Iran); and generally reminded us that adults are needed in government.

Voters need to wise up: We cannot tolerate the return to power of the egregiousl­y unfit four-times indicted former president nor allow MAGA nihilists to hold the country hostage. The stakes here and around the world are far too grave.

As the casualties rise to unimaginab­le levels and national trauma takes hold in Israel, many of us will continue to feel a very personal connection to the horrific events. If you believe in prayer, pray — for peace, for healing, for humanity. And, if not, believe that competent, mature government matters in a dangerous world. Never before have we more desperatel­y needed wise, competent and empathetic government.

 ?? ?? Jennifer Rubin
Jennifer Rubin

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