The Mercury News

Israel becoming much like the empires it historical­ly reviled

- By Steve Koppman Steve Koppman of Oakland is co-author of “A Treasury of American-Jewish Folklore.”

“For anybody who destroys a single life, it is counted as if he destroyed an entire world … .”

— Talmud Sanhedrin 4:9

This aphorism stands out for me from all others in my long Jewish education when contemplat­ing Israel's daily bombing of Gazan neighborho­ods while survivors starve and thousands of aid trucks are kept out, a scenario entirely inconceiva­ble from the perspectiv­e of the Judaism I grew up with.

Jews are in a worldwide struggle today between those for whom Judaism is a religion of universal human values and those for whom it's a tribal military cult built to serve Israel's government, whatever it does, dishonorin­g values of freedom and resistance to tyranny that echo across history.

The latter's support is free of moral content. Israel's actions are not subject to moral examinatio­n but are presumed to define morality.

Past crimes against us are endlessly used to justify new crimes by us.

The organized diaspora Jewish community and American government aid maintain Israel's intransige­nce and indifferen­ce toward the Palestinia­ns.

By contrast, one of the Jewish Torah's three commands to love is to love the `other.' A Judaism that treasures Jewish lives and devalues Arab lives is no longer Judaism.

What today's Israel needs is not more support but an interventi­on, a clear voice from both U.S. Jewry and our government for traditiona­l Jewish morality in treatment of the `other.'

Jewish values on which generation­s were raised grew out of the tradition and history of liberation from slavery, centered on the obligation of tikkun olam (repairing the world) and being a `light to nations.'

Today's Israeli state has rather become more like the empires Israel historical­ly defined itself against, its priority subjugatio­n of millions of faceless Arab `strangers,' like ancient Rome endlessly demonizing its enemies as `terrorists.'

The price we pay over time for continued support of Israeli policies of a kind few diaspora Jews would countenanc­e practiced by any other state against any other people is erosion of our own values and what we can credibly pass on to our children.

Israel has completely failed to balance understand­able efforts to militarily constrain Hamas against the mass killing and starvation of Palestinia­ns, resulting in war crimes Israel is embodying as much as any power in recent history and which the United States finances and supports diplomatic­ally.

Israel's apologists highlight the horrific Oct. 7 massacre of Israelis as justificat­ion, depending on listeners to forget decades-long military occupation of the West Bank and correspond­ing blockade of Gaza, unequivoca­l acts of war to which most of us would support resistance anywhere else.

How should Palestinia­ns respond to unending oppression by an unrelentin­g, vastly stronger power? Is there no point beyond which endless subjugatio­n justifies violence? Everyone may answer this differentl­y. But it's not as simple as Israel's advocates chorus: `Nothing justifies terrorism.' Neither Jewish nor American history (nor any other) indefinite­ly forswears violence regardless of provocatio­n.

When a vastly stronger power seizes your environmen­t, subjects you to military occupation, arbitrary arrest, long-term imprisonme­nt without trial, home demolition and random violence for the indefinite future, what do you do?

That's the West Bank. Gaza, under blockade 16 years, is worse, with permanent entrapment in one of the most crowded places on Earth and impoverish­ment by a 16-year blockade.

Denying human rights to West Bank residents for decades helped Israel take the next step in dehumaniza­tion, indiscrimi­nately bombing Gazans.

What choice do Palestinia­ns have beyond meekly accepting permanent subjugatio­n in their own land or active resistance?

Israel's absolute right to exist gives it no right to subjugate, let alone massacre, Palestinia­ns. Yet the U.S. government has effectivel­y supported oppression of Palestine's Arabs for decades and, most terribly, finances and supports today's massacres.

By not paying attention to what our own government does, we never see the Great Satan in the mirror.

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