Soldier: What I saw in Gaza will define our future - Haaretz
'The truly surprising thing is the quickness with which everything looks normal and reasonable. After a few hours, you find yourself trying hard to be impressed by the magnitude of the destruction, muttering to yourself sentences like "This is madness," but the truth is that you get used to it pretty quickly.'
'It becomes banal, kitschy. Another heap of stones. Here was probably a building of an official institution, those were homes and this area... All the way to the horizon. To the sea. The eye moves along to a building that is still standing. "Why haven't they taken down this building?" my sister asks on WhatsApp
''..this is also not an indictment against the Israel Defense Forces. That has a place elsewhere, in editorials, in the International Criminal Court in The Hague, at universities in the United States, at the UN Security Council. The important thing is to reflect what is happening for the Israeli public. To bring things to the surface. So people won't say afterward that they didn't know..'
'.. The destruction is enormous, and it's here to stay. And this is what people need to know: This thing will not be erased in the next 100 years. No matter how hard Israel tries to make it disappear, to blur it, the destruction in Gaza will define our lives and our children's lives from now on. It's testimony of unbridled rampaging. A friend wrote on the wall of the operations room: "Quiet will be answered by quiet, Nova will be answered by Nakba." The army commanders have adopted this graffiti.
''To all of us, from those in the control room to the last of the fighters, it's clear that the government doesn't know a damn thing about how to proceed from here. There are no goals to advance to, no political ability to retreat..''Where's the line between understanding the "complexity" and blind obedience? When have you earned the right to refuse to take part in a war crime? That's less of interest. What's more of interest is when will the Israeli mainstream wake up, when will a leader arise who'll explain to the citizens what a terrible mess we're in, and who will be the first kippah-wearer to call me a traitor. Because before The Hague, before the American universities, before the condemnation in the Security Council, this is first and foremost an internal matter for us. And for 2 million Palestinians.'
From the Comments:
'The trouble is Haaretz can do outstanding Journalism but it's read by only 4.5% of the Israeli public. That's just too bad; but thanks for trying !'
'Haaretz is a newspaper of record. The accurate account of events that it provides to its readers today lays down the archive that future readers will come to when they try to understand how they got to where they are.'
'Let me make this clear, with no equivocation. Every single Israeli knows exactly what is happening in Gaza. There is barely a person here who doesn't have a family member, friend, or neighbour in Gaza over the past year. Social media here in Israel is flooded with video posts by soldiers. Everybody knows. And almost everybody approves, to one degree or another, with the slaughter, with the sheer vengeful brutality. Israeli society isn't uninformed. Israeli society isn't interested in Palestinian lives. It never has been. I am so happy that my daughter refused to serve in the IDF. Her conscience will remain clean.'
haaretz.com/opinion/2024-11-…