12 November 2023

October 7th


I listened to an interview with Rachel Maddow, host of the MSNBC The Rachel Maddow Show on her research on the rise of antisemitism and she explained this:

When people tell you that a minority group are evil and they’re the reason things are bad, they are saying that some people among us are dangerous and these people shouldn’t be part of our democracy with rights to vote. We need someone to protect us from these people. So, its not just about telling us who to hate, it’s about undoing democracy and Maddow says we shouldn’t stand for it. It’s a powerful video.

This certainly fits with what we’ve seen with Anti-Asian hate and LGBTQ-hate – there are many narratives explaining why they’re ‘dangerous’ and shouldn’t have the same rights as everyone. Essentially, they shouldn’t be part of our democracy.

Now we’re seeing the rise of antisemitism and the same narrative holds. This topic is large, the events unfolding in the Middle East complicated and well beyond the scope of my small article. Further, I lack the expertise to talk about the history and lack the military expertise to talk about the war. I will write about only one thing: the October 7th slaughter in Israel.

Over three thousand young people gathered to dance at the Supernova Sukkot in the desert, approximately 5 km from the Gaza Strip and near Kibbutz Re’im with a population of around 430.

The rave was billed as a celebration of "friends, love and infinite freedom” and attendees were prohibited from bringing weapons including guns and sharp objects. Sound like the kind of thing many young people we know, including our own children, would attend.

In the morning, Hamas came at the attendees from all directions, killing at least 260 people and abducting dozens as hostages. The massacre and hostage taking continued at nearby Kibbutz Re’im and in the end, over one thousand were slaughtered and hundreds taken hostage.

Hamas insurgents recorded their own deeds with GoPro cameras and that, combined with surveillance footage, has been aired to many including seasoned journalists who found the footage so gruesome that many had to leave.

"The worst part was the glee," Sabrina Maddeaux, a political columnist for the National Post, wrote in a piece published Monday, describing the apparent joy Hamas fighters took in their rampage across communities and at a music festival in southern Israel last month. Reporters described seeing images of burned babies and children, along with other indescribably graphic scenes.

There are still over 200 hostages in the hands of Hamas. We have seen a woman hostage naked and beaten on a truck paraded through Gaza. The terrorists have a baby who is 10 months old.

We have seen videos of people denying that these events happened and we’ve seen photos of the kidnapped torn down as ‘propaganda’. For those who wonder how people can deny the Holocaust, we’re seeing the denial in real time today.

There will also be people who may not deny these events but only want to talk about the ‘lead up’ to them and the war that followed them. There is no ‘lead up’ to justify this brutality, nor can you justify brutality by referring to any actions that followed it that were unknown at the time.

As Maddow said, this is identifying some minority as bad, dangerous and unfit to have democratic rights – human rights – whether it’s citizens of Israel or Jewish citizens of other countries.

On this Memorial Day 2023, when we honour those who fought for and preserved our democracy, I wanted to write a small article about the big events of October 7th, 2023. In a democracy, all of us are equal, can vote and participate in the shaping our society and our world. If we exclude certain groups from these universal human rights whether it be those far away in Israel or Jewish citizens at home, we demolish the foundation of our democracy.

15 comments:

  1. Could not be better said, Mary. After those who came before fought a war to stamp out naziism, I can't believe we're going through this again.

    The woman we consider our family doctor revealed she and her husband are liquidating their assets in case Jews have to flee Florida… or the USA. Who would have believed it's come to this?

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  2. Thank you so much, Leigh. I agree - these are frightening times for Jewish citizens in all countries. A poignant comment I heard was, "Where can we go to be safe?" This is the crux of Oct. 7th: Hamas terrorists unleashing horrors and yet many in the world ignoring or denying the events. It is truly unbelievable.

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  3. Mary, I am perplexed and frightened by exactly what you say in your last two sentences of the comment above. And yes - it chills me. You say it so well - we are seeing denial in real time. My dad, who was in Holland in '45 with the RCAF, saw some of the horrors then. How can it have come to this?

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  4. Oops - that was Melodie above

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  5. Good blog, Mary. Keep them coming.

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    1. Thank you so much for reading and for the encouragement.

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  6. Elizabeth Dearborn12 November, 2023 14:22

    I've never understood how some people can actually believe the Holocaust didn't happen. My family isn't Jewish, but my late mother's best friend was a Jewish lady who was born in what was then Czechoslovakia & when she got to Germany, she was put into a concentration camp. Got the number tattooed on her arm & everything, was released & lived in Estonia for some time, then came here. She received a monetary Holocaust settlement, & didn't have children, so she left money to my mother in her will & now my sisters & I have some unknown amount of Holocaust money!

    Also my late father-in-law, who was Polish, was in Auschwitz for a short time but it was long enough that a guard who disliked him, hit his kneecap with a rifle butt & shattered it. He never got reconstructive surgery & had to walk with one straight leg the rest of his life.

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    1. Holy shite, Elizabeth. What a family history.

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    2. Thank you for these stories.

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  7. I'll never understand Holocaust deniers - but it's about the same mentality as white Christian nationalists who deny that Jesus was Jewish, or people who say LGBQT are grooming children (ahem, the biggest groomers are straight pedophiles, and always have been). Just determined to "purify" the world, i.e., make everyone like them, so they can feel "safe" - but they always find a new victim. God help us all.

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    1. Yes. We need all the help we can get these days...

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  8. Mary, I just spent the weekend visiting my granddaughter, who's a student at Cornell, and she's been confused and distressed by the extreme views on campus that deny the complexities of the situation. The McGuffin is the plight of the Palestinian people, created by the British in 1948 in their best deus ex machina style, though nobody's talking about that. The white hats and the black hats (pick your side) are the left, defending and even glorifying terrorism (a Cornell history professor makes a speech saying he finds Hamas's actions "exhilarating" and students rally to save his job), and the whole kaleidoscopic global Jewish people lumped together not only with the response to terrorism but to all Netanyahu's policies (remember he's not only responsible for the problematic proliferation of settlements but was prepared to destroy Israelis' freedom of speech and right to criticize the government before this happened.) Since debate is the essence of Jewishness—remember we're the people who argue with God—that makes Netanyahu a bad Jew. But only the Jews would get trashed for hitting back at such hideous acts of terrorism. My granddaughter was so relieved to hear an analysis that defined some of the nuances and made sense, because she isn't hearing it anywhere else. As she says, for her it's "both easier and harder," because her 50% Jewish DNA doesn't show; anti-Semites see the Asian American side and talk freely in front of her. And, she says, "these are people I usually agree with."

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  9. Sorry, my name went in but not a comment. Your granddaughter sounds wonderful. Nuance is exactly what's missing. War is awful. I hope that most of us can mourn the victims of Oct. 7 and also mourn those innocents in Palestine who are dying needlessly now - all are victims of Hamas. Why people can't keep at least two thoughts in mind at the same time - let alone many more as this situation demands - is beyond me.

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