The following is an
op-ed that I wrote, which appears in the June 6, 2018 edition of the Jewish
Exponent, in which I examine the recent protests at the Gaza fence:
The Red Herring at the Gaza Fence
June 6, 2018
By N. Aaron Troodler
Peaceful protests have historically been catalysts for
effectuating change.
Whether it be in the areas of social justice, racial
equality or so many other critical issues, the act of the masses collectively
raising their voices and making themselves heard in a non-violent fashion has
helped bring about extraordinary and revolutionary adjustments to what had been
the status quo. When used properly, peaceful protests have the power to shape
history.
When Rosa Parks courageously refused to relinquish her seat
on a Montgomery, Ala., bus to a white passenger in December 1955, it triggered
a wave of civil disobedience and peaceful protests against segregation that led
to the integration of the city’s bus system.
It was the precursor to a nationwide movement for civil
rights in the United States that reached a crescendo when on Aug. 28, 1963,
Martin Luther King Jr. told a crowd of a quarter of a million people near the
Lincoln Memorial that he had a grand dream.
In March 1913, more than 5,000 intrepid women proudly
marched in Washington, D.C., in an effort to achieve gender parity in political
participation. Seven years later, the 19th Amendment to the Constitution was born and women were
granted the right to vote.
In response to the British mandate that Indians were
prohibited from collecting or selling salt, Mahatma Gandhi famously led a
peaceful march over 240 miles to the Arabian Sea to collect salt from the
water. Seventeen years after Gandhi’s peaceful protest, India succeeded in
gaining independence from Britain.
More than 100,000 Estonians came together in 1988 to protest
the Soviet Union’s rule by playing music and singing for five nights in a show
of solidarity. Three years later, Estonia regained its independence.
I recall attending peaceful marches in New York City on
behalf of Soviet Jewry in response to the persecution of Jews in the Soviet
Union, whereby their ability to practice their Judaism was impaired and
imperiled. In December 1987, approximately 250,000 individuals marched on
Washington, D.C., in solidarity with Soviet Jewry just prior to a meeting
between President Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev. Shortly thereafter, Soviet Jews
began receiving permission to immigrate to Israel.
We can recognize civil disobedience and non-violent
protests, as we have seen them used effectively on numerous occasions.
Conversely, we know when something is not a peaceful demonstration, as our
world has certainly seen its share of violent protests.
The recent weekly protests by Palestinians at the fence
separating Gaza from Israel cannot be categorized as “peaceful,” despite
repeated attempts by Hamas to characterize them as such.
The very essence of the Hamas protests is contradictory.
While the Palestinians claimed to be protesting the ongoing hardships of Gazan
residents, they directed their ire at Israel, rather than Hamas, which is
primarily responsible for their suffering.
Hamas uses its power to strengthen itself, not the people of
Gaza. It repeatedly diverts financial resources to enhance its military operations
aimed at Israel, rather than improving the Gazan infrastructure and addressing
the people’s daily lives and basic needs.
The protesters impugn Israel, but it is Hamas’ enduring
efforts to destroy the Jewish state through rocket attacks, terror tunnels and
terrorism that led to Israel’s need to institute security measures to safeguard
its citizenry.
It was farcical when Ismail Haniya, Hamas’ political leader,
stood in front of a large banner displaying photos of King, Nelson Mandela and
Gandhi and proceeded to deem the Gazan protests “peaceful” and equate their
demonstrations with the peaceful efforts of the individuals depicted on the
poster behind him.
The image of Haniya in front of photos of these champions of
peace was repugnant.
Hamas’ attempt to suggest some parallel between these
pursuers of social justice and Hamas, a terrorist organization whose core
mission is killing Jews, is disingenuous and distasteful.
Hamas may claim its protests were non-violent, but the fact
is that Israeli soldiers were contending with kites from Gaza laden with
explosives, protesters hurling firebombs and rocks, and demonstrators who
stationed incendiary devices alongside the Gaza fence. We saw Hamas leaders use
inflammatory rhetoric to provoke the crowd, which led to them storming the
fence in an attempt to breach it and infiltrate Israel.
Those types of actions are more akin to incitement and a
declaration of war than to a peaceful protest.
In an emotional address to the U.N. Security Council,
Ambassador Nikki Haley unmistakably declared that Hamas bore the blame for the
Palestinian deaths and cited examples of the terrorist group’s incitement
relative to the protests.
Salah Al-Bardawil, a senior Hamas official, asserted that 50
of the Palestinians who lost their lives were actually members of Hamas. In
light of the overwhelming evidence, it would be negligent to maintain that the
casualties were innocent noncombatants. That is what Hamas wants the world to
believe, but the facts belie that postulation.
While the world focuses its attention on Israel’s response
to the demonstrations and debates the actions of the Israeli soldiers guarding
the fence, it regrettably overlooks the fact that the protests were
intrinsically violent in nature, despite assertions by Hamas to the contrary.
Through its repeated vows to annihilate Israel, Hamas has made it abundantly
clear that it is not interested in peace. The notion, therefore, that these
were “peaceful” protests is preposterous.
Civil disobedience inherently carries with it a degree of
civility. Sadly, the Gaza protests were completely devoid of civility and
bereft of any semblance of peacefulness. They were merely a smoke screen by
Hamas intended to fool the world into thinking that it suddenly eschewed its
terrorist ways and violent tendencies.
Let’s hope the world is not duped by this shameless public
relations ploy by a terrorist organization whose primary objective is Israel’s
destruction.
Aaron Troodler is the
principal of Red Apple Strategies, LLC, a public relations and strategic
communications firm.
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