Many people argue that Israeli atrocities against Palestinians reflect the ideology of Netanyahu & the far-right, and that we shouldn't blame Israel as a whole.
So to clarify: ethnic cleansing has been going on since Israel's birth in 1948—regardless of who led the country
1/15
During the civil war that led to the establishment of the state of Israel and 700,000 Palestinians refugees (Nakba), ethnic cleansing was ordered directly by Ben Gurion, Israel's founding father and a leader of the left-wing Mapai party.
It was also Ben Gurion who ordered the IDF to poison water wells and spread typhoid bacteria in Arab villages and cities—a clear act of biological warfare.
Still not a far-right extremist: just the left-wing founding father of Israel.
For half a century, Israel has expanded settlements in the West Bank at a steady pace, no matter who was in power.
On this graph, we literally cannot see any drop in the speed of expansion during left-wing (84-86, 92-96, 99-01) or centrist (06-09) prime ministers.
4/15
It's worth repeating: since Israel started building settlements in the West Bank, every single Israeli government—no matter its political inclination—expanded settlements.
Netanyahu and the Israeli far-right are merely following in the footsteps of their predecessors.
5/15
The separation barrier in the West Bank took decades and many successive governments to build.
The approval of the route (which effectively annexed huge amounts of Palestinian land) and the construction were done by centrist and "regular" right-wing governments.
6/15
The regime of apartheid in the West Bank (segregated roads, military checkpoints, separate judicial systems for Jews & Arabs, etc) was built over decades, by all Israeli successive governments.
This chart by @YeshDin shows the bureaucracy of a 50-year long occupation.
7/15
The isolation of Gaza was also in the making long before the far-right came to power.
The first barrier was built in 1995, a full 12 years before Hamas took control of the strip. Israel started blockading Gaza as collective punishment in the 1990s.
After Netanyahu's 2015 re-election @YousefMunayyer said Bibi's win was good for Palestinians as he doesn't pretend to seek peace, prompting global pressure on Israel. But the Israeli left creates "a perception of change" without ever delivering.
Things have definitely worsened since the messianic far-right came to power: settler violence (with Israeli army protection) and land grabs are bolder and more intense than ever before.
But ethnic cleansing was always there. It was just not as blatant.
11/15
As a Jew who lived in Israel & has plenty of Zionist friends & relatives, I understand why we want to blame Netanyahu and the Israeli far-right: we want to believe that Israel isn’t inherently bad; that the one and only "Jewish" state couldn't oppress another people.
12/15
We want to believe that the Jewish people isn't capable of it. We've suffered too much & for too long to reproduce onto others what was done onto us. We like to believe it's only a minority—Netanyahu and the far-right—so we can keep the idea of our beloved Israel untainted
13/15
But hard historical facts don't lie: there is no specific government or political party that can be blamed. It is the state of Israel as a whole that has engaged, for the past 75 years, in ethnic cleansing, dispossession, and extreme violence against Palestinians.
14/15
Once we accept that it's not a government but Israel as a whole, we can start seeing that boycotts and sanctions aren't meant to threaten the Jewish people. They are necessary tools to pressure Israel to end the occupation.
15/15
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“We pretend to be innocent victims. Of course the Arabs attacked us. Since they have no armies, they could not obey the rules of war. They perpetrated all the barbaric acts that are characteristic of a colonial revolt.”
This was written in 1929. By a Zionist.
1/19
The full version of this thread is available on @_VashtiMedia :
A violent uprising broke out in Palestine in 1929. Unlike the localized clashes since 1880s when Zionists started settling Palestine, the 1929 violence spread across the whole country.
To most people, the idea of killing dozens, perhaps hundreds, of innocent civilians to free 4 hostages is absurd. How could anyone who has any respect for life celebrate such an operation?
Here are the mental gymnastics that allow so many Israelis to justify so much killing:
1/
Justification #1:
We can't trust the number of deaths, they are released by Hamas and Hamas cannot be trusted.
2/
Justification #2:
Even if the number of people killed in the operation was true (but its not true because Hamas), most of those killed were probably terrorists.
3/
On Oct 7th, my Israeli cousin was camping close to areas attacked by Hamas. The thought of her being kidnapped, or worse, still haunts me. A college acquaintance lost family in the attacks of his kibbutz.
But I don’t write much about the victims of Oct 7th or the hostages.
1/17
The full version of this thread is available on my blog for easier reading:
My mom isn't the only one asking this: critics of the student protests claim that calling for a ceasefire without calling for a release of the hostages is a double standard or even antisemitic, that the movement is not interested in human rights or in safety for all.
Once again, the issue is portrayed as a bunch of extremists who took over Israel.
This is not untrue, but it hides the fact that before these extremists were anywhere near power, Israel was already systematically dispossessing, colonizing, and brutalizing Palestinians.
1/10
Every Israeli I know hates Netanyahu, Israel's messianic far right, settlements, and settlers. And I mean HATES them.
But Israeli society is still overwhelmingly supportive of the war.
2/10
A poll by Tel Aviv University between Oct 23-28 asked Israelis whether the IDF was using too much or too little firepower in Gaza.
Only 2% of Jews said the IDF used too much firepower. 58% said Israel used too little firepower in Gaza.
1. He introduces the post by saying he was on campus "before the police dispersed the encampment". As we all know, the police didn't "disperse" the encampment. They violently attacked the encampment, and used armed force to dislodge students, injuring many.
Framing the events like that it was a walk in the park, without mentioning the incredible violence unleashed by the police (which had helicopters, dozens of cars, hundreds of officers, riot control gears, rubber bullet rifles and flashbangs) is pretty telling.
Since October 7th, I've joined protests, fundraising events for Gaza, and students on campuses.
As a Jew and someone who has a ton of friends and family in Israel, I want to share some thoughts on claims of antisemitism in the movement and student encampments:
1/29
The full version of this thread is available on my blog for easier reading:
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We see on social media and in the news reports of antisemitic chants, overt support for Hamas, and other distressing reports. No question that some of these reports are true. I watched myself a video of a small group of protesters chant "burn Tel Aviv to the ground".
3/29