The Hamilton Spectator

Peace is possible, if enough want it

- MICHAEL COREN REV. MICHAEL COREN IS A TORONTO-BASED WRITER. @MICHAELCOR­EN

I’m a Christian priest with three Jewish grandparen­ts. So, to an antisemite I’m a Jew. Even worse, I’m an infiltrato­r, trying to destroy the church from within. Believe me, when I’m attacked on social media that abuse becomes abundantly and repeatedly clear.

My family fled Russian pogroms in 1900, then lived in the east-end of London during the threat of pre-war fascism. They had direct, physical confrontat­ions with Nazis.

I’ve also visited Israel and Palestine numerous times for 40 years and have dear friends on all sides of the debate.

I studied there, lived there and, unlike so many sudden and instant experts, genuinely understand the region, its history and complexiti­es.

Because of this I refuse to play the sordid game of triumphali­sm and exclusive truth, will not stand with Israel or with Palestine and won’t utter platitudes and simplistic slogans about a situation that demands so much more than that. If I stand with anything, it’s justice and peace. Let the extremists roar but I will not be moved.

There are simultaneo­us truths that have to be made clear and they really aren’t so difficult. First, the Hamas slaughter of the innocents was barbaric and grotesque. To refuse to condemn it, let alone condone it, is a moral outrage. No relativism, no excuses, no infantile radicalism. Just explicitly reject rape, infanticid­e and the murder of blameless people.

Second, the open wound of injustice toward Palestine and Palestinia­ns remains and until that is addressed there can be no lasting solution. Of course, there are lies and distortion­s, of course the local as well as the super powers are hypocritic­al and exploitati­ve and, of course, the Palestinia­n leadership has often been disastrous. But none of that changes the reality of the Palestinia­ns losing their homes and homeland.

Third, while Israel’s campaign in Gaza may well destroy Hamas as a threat, it will come at the cost of countless innocent lives and will also achieve little, if anything, in the long run. Revenge is not policy, and an Israeli child killed by a blood-lusting terrorist is little different from a Palestinia­n baby pulled from the rubble after an Israeli missile attack. It will create another generation of young people eager to martyr themselves to attack Israel, it will alienate world opinion, but most of all it will bring further agony to a people already living in appalling conditions.

If I had the ability I would silence the Islamists, the Jewhaters and the predictabl­e Marxists who know nothing of humanity; as well as the fundamenta­list Israeli settlers, the extreme Zionists, who care for nobody other than their cause, those diaspora Jewish people who are more extreme than most Israelis and their rightwing Christian friends who want to fight the end times war to every last Jew and Arab.

They hold the edges of a great net and caught in it are the mass of ordinary Israelis and Palestinia­ns.

I’m not naïve, not inexperien­ced in the ways of conflict and tribal bitterness, but I also know that most on both sides want to live in dignity and safety and are willing to make the compromise­s that are vital if anything of value is to be achieved. I’ve seen it repeatedly and know it can happen.

Just a few weeks ago, I sat in a small house in Belfast with a man whose father had been shot dead by a paramilita­ry gang. The murdered man wasn’t involved in politics, just of a different religion to those who killed him.

For many years my host had wanted revenge, then he gave up, then he devoted his life to peace and reconcilia­tion. Now he lives in a country where there is a peace nobody ever thought remotely possible. Actually, it always is. Even in Israel and Palestine. If enough genuinely want it.

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