Her
passion is tangible as she begs for support of an organization bringing
together the families of terror victims from among Palestinians and
Israelis who “have chosen a path to reconciliation”.
Can you be a caring person and still oppose what Parents Circle represents?
Yes, and a year ago we expressed our sense of the divergence between their rhetoric and reality in “Behind the facade at Parents Circle, messages that are deeply disturbing to bereaved families”.
We noted than, and repeat now, that Damelin’s call appears to be addressed to Israelis alone.
Her “cycle” is a singularly Israeli responsibility – the Palestinian
Arab and Israeli Jewish members of Parents Circle are united in
endorsing Palestinian victimhood and telling Israelis that the conflict
is our fault. The Palestinians were left out when Robi Damelin wrote:
“Israel is fast becoming the pariah of the world… we are losing our
moral fiber”. In her worldview, the moral burden is entirely on one
side.
No Israeli needs to be reminded of where our collective concerns are right now: three boys, snatched by unknown people pursuing a malevolent strategy.
For decades, Palestinians have turned
hostage-takers and the murderers of Israeli civilians into heroes and
legends. The demand of the Palestinian political leadership, echoed in
Robi Damelin’s cry, is that the terrorists now in prison ought to be
walking free. She and they improbably suggest this is how peace is made.
Then there’s the fact that the Parents Circle
piece fails to mention terror even once. It is simply not on their
agenda but since terrorism is central to the bereavement of so many
Israeli families, its absence is worth noting.
In stark contrast, the Israeli reality,
hammered home by the empty beds in three ordinary Israeli homes, is that
terrorists are very much the problem. Yes, we realizestopping them by force will not in itself bring the reconciliation which Parents Circle says it seeks. But not stopping terrorists means we may not be around when reconciliation comes — if it comes. Nor will our children.
Israelis talk about peace a great deal, and
mean it when they say they are ready for painful compromise if it brings
peace. Yet at Parents Circle they say something quite different about
us when they address non-Israelis.
It’s a core Parents Circle message, as we noted last July, that the good work of Parents Circle constitutes “an alternative to hatred and revenge”. That
phrase occurs repeatedly in their documents. We now understand that the
hatred and revenge, for which Parents Circle offer “an alternative”,
are what they tell the world the rest of us Israelis feel.
Parents Circle’s very generous financial
supporters, including the US and a number of European governments, are
told they are funding an alternative to ‘hateful’, ‘vengeful’ viewpoints
of bereaved families like mine.
It’s a portrayal we find deeply repugnant. It is also quite untrue.
We wonder whether the Parents Circle people hold any views about the moral fibre of any party other than Israel in the blood-soaked Middle East.
And when Damelin describes Israel as “fast becoming the pariah of the world”, does she have an opinion about what the Gazans are fast becoming
when they spend their scarce resources to train their own pre-teen
children in the art of throwing hand-grenades and carrying out knifings?
Parents Circle has claimed consistently over
the years to hold “a thousand” presentations annually at some
unspecified mix of Israeli and Palestinian Arab schools, addressing a
fairly constant “25,000” students. If this is accurate, it means twenty
assemblies a week, 52 weeks per year and no time off for religious
holidays or summer break. Might it be that this is oversold in the
organization’s marketing?
Parents Circle activists do speak in Israeli
schools. When they do, from the reports we have seen, their message is
heavily political, made more powerful and palatable because the speakers
are a seemingly-balanced Israeli and Arab pair. (That factor
also helps them get past Israeli Ministry of Education guidelines.) That
these pairs are given essentially unfettered access to rooms filled
with Israeli pre-army high schoolers, and thus able to convey a message
that undermines the case for Israel, is a concern for those Israelis who
know about it.
And if in fact they are speaking regularly in
front of Arab school groups, as their marketing materials strongly
imply, then we have two questions. (a) Why is there little to no
evidence of this on their website and in their materials. And (b): What
message do they deliver to those audiences? Does it advance peace, reconciliation and (especially) tolerance? How well does that work inside PA-controlled schools? About Hamas schools we won’t ask, for reasons every reader understands.
If we could reach the audiences whom Parents Circle addresses, we would tell people about our daughter Malki and her beautiful life. We
would tell them that Malki did not die because of the “occupation” or a
disagreement on narratives. She was murdered for being Jewish by unrepentant Palestinian terrorists who declare proudly that they meant it and are glad they did it.
We can and should discuss real peace options
based on mutual understanding and eventual reconciliation with the
Palestinian Arabs along with the rest of the Arab world. But first we
must secure our families and our communities. To this, bitter experience
teaches, there is no alternative.
Read more: First, understand the war and the grief | Arnold Roth | Ops & Blogs | The Times of Israel http://blogs.timesofisrael.com/first-understand-the-war-and-the-grief/#ixzz35l7TSZmA
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