The following is my latest column in The
Jewish Link of New Jersey, in which I discuss the international community’s
relative silence about the recent wave of terror in Israel and its failure to
try and end Palestinian incitement by holding the Palestinian Authority and
Hamas responsible for their continued encouragement of violence against Israelis:
A
TSUNAMI OF TERROR
By: N. Aaron Troodler, Esq.
It
was a gruesome murder that shocked us all. The horrific image of a man and
woman, a father and mother, a husband and wife being gunned down in their car
by terrorists as four of their young children watched from the back seat is
forever ingrained in our hearts and minds. As we learned about the brutal
terrorist attack that claimed the lives of Rabbi Eitam and Naama Henkin and
instantly made their six children orphans, we mourned their tragic loss and grieved
for their family. Little did we know that this heinous act of terror was just
the beginning.
The
ghastly attack on the Henkin family was followed by a wave of terror that swept
through Israel. There were multiple stabbings in the Old City of Jerusalem,
including one in which two men were killed, while the wife and infant child of
one of the victims were injured. There was the man who was stabbed in Petach
Tikvah, the Israeli soldiers who were stabbed in Kiryat Gat and Afula, and the
man who was stabbed in Hebron. There was the terrorist who attacked people with
a screwdriver in Tel Aviv. There were numerous stone-throwing incidents and
firebomb attacks around the country. The attacks may have varied in their
execution, but they were equally vicious.
I cannot help but think that if this outbreak of
terrorism occurred in a country other than Israel, we would have heard
unequivocal and unqualified condemnation from the international community.
Instead, the widespread calls for a cessation of the violence that should have
been ubiquitous have been conspicuously muted. The international outrage that
one would expect in the wake of the terror attacks against Israelis that have
become all too prevalent is curiously absent.
The
fact that people have become somewhat immune to the terrorist attacks that take
place fairly regularly in Israel is troubling. The complacency that pervades
after “yet another terrorist attack” is extremely disconcerting. It is almost
as if it takes a stark reminder in the form of a particularly horrific attack
that shocks the conscience, such as the Henkin murder, to jolt us and remind us
of the lasting impact that each terrorist attack has on our nation’s psyche. It
is akin to the unforgettable massacre in Itamar in March 2011, in which five
members of the Fogel family, including three young children and their parents,
were slaughtered by terrorists as they slept.
The
reality is that the victims in each of these terror attacks were targeted
solely because they were Jewish. I am not quite sure how and when targeting and
killing Jews became an accepted practice, but it must stop. The international
community, whose relative silence in the wake of the terrorist attacks has been
deafening, needs to intercede and take swift action against the Palestinian
Authority and Hamas in an effort to curb the violence and end the incitement.
Those who encourage and endorse terrorism aimed at Jews are as culpable as the
murderers who carry out the acts of terror.
As
the parent of a daughter who lives in Israel, the rising tide of terrorism concerns
me not just on a communal level, but on a personal level as well. When I spoke
to my daughter at the end of a day that saw multiple terrorist attacks
throughout Israel, I mentioned to her that she should make sure to be aware of
her surroundings and to travel safely. Although she acknowledged my concern by
telling me that she is always careful, she also noted that if something is
going to happen, it is going to happen regardless and there is not much that
can be done about it. She then proceeded to inform me that she was in Tel Aviv
at the time when a 19-year-old Palestinian attacked passerby near the city’s Azrieli
mall and described me how she felt when she saw the police helicopters hovering
over the scene of the stabbing attack.
I
yearn for the day when I no longer have to remind my daughter in Israel to
travel safely. In order for that day to come, the barbaric acts of terror against
Israelis must cease. Wake up world…this deadly tsunami of terror is not going
to recede on its own. When it comes to halting the incitement and ending the
violence, the intervention of the international community is critical and long
overdue. It is time to act before an already tenuous situation spirals further
out of control. The lives of innocent people and the future of the State of
Israel depend on it.
N. Aaron Troodler is an attorney and
principal of Paul Revere Public Relations, a public relations and political
consulting firm. Visit him on the Web at TroodlersTake.blogspot.com,
www.PaulReverePR.com, or www.JewishWorldPR.com. You can also follow him on
Twitter: @troodler
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