The New York Times recently ran an article, “Screams Without Words”, detailing the sexual atrocities committed by Hamas and other Palestinian men when they crossed into Israel on October 7 and slaughtered approximately twelve hundred, mostly Israelis. The article is the result of weeks of research, considering videos, live testimony, and the evidence left behind. Although the Times is withholding some of the more gruesome details, what is provided is beyond horrifying: women gang raped while at the same time being butchered; breasts cut off and tossed around like footballs; nails and bullets driven into genitals; and so much more.
And any suggestion this was an isolated incident is contradicted by the multiple reports from multiple locations, signalling an horrific fusion of hatred of Jews and hatred of women. This isn’t all that surprising if you understand Hamas’ view of the role of women in society. They are valued only because they produce men. Nor is it surprising when you consider the behaviour of other, similar Muslim fundamentalist groups, like ISIS, that, given power, stripped away centuries of progress advancing the rights of women, while also forcing Yazidi women into sexual slavery.
If there was any doubt before October 7 what the fate of Jews and other non Muslims in Israel would be if Hamas were to succeed, it is gone now. Take Hamas at its word. Read its Charter. It’s all there, every hateful, violent, anti semitic, homophobic belief from the Dark Ages to the present day.
And in the face of this misogynist savagery, how does the world react and, more significantly, how do the defenders of women’s rights on the left react? By and large, with silence or, at best, equivocation. Where is the outrage when it is so justly warranted? Where are the international bodies whose duty it is to protect human rights and, specifically, women’s rights? After the initial silence, the rote, pro forma statements emerged, most qualified by a “but”, clearly seeking to not offend Israel’s critics or contradict the victimhood narrative so popular in so-called progressive circles.
I rarely watch the CBC but, on Christmas Day, because the other channels had replaced their news coverage with seasonal programming, I briefly tuned in to CBC News-world. The reporting on the conflict between Israel and Hamas consisted entirely of an interview with a professor from some university in London, England. It was clear from his name and accent that he was either an Arab or an Iranian. It was bad enough he spent not a second acknowledging the role Hamas played in starting the war or in fomenting so much violence leading up to it, or the repeated failures of Palestinian leadership to grasp opportunities for peace and Palestinian statehood, but the interviewer did nothing but lob softball questions at him providing further license for his diatribe against Israel and Jewish people. This from Canada’s public broadcaster!
Others have commented on the lack of balance in the news coverage and in the phenomenon of younger people, often of a progressive bent, to strongly side with Hamas in this conflict. Although I say “side with Hamas”, I have no doubt they would insist they were siding with the Palestinians, hiding behind the fiction the two are separable. If you were paying attention when you started this blog, you will have seen my description of “Hamas and other Palestinian men” as the perpetrators of the monstrous crimes on October 7, because once the barriers were breached, Palestinian men not officially part of Hamas, joined in the carnage.
All of this leads me to the question: how can people who say they are committed to the rights and dignity of women, and of gay and lesbian people, indeed of human rights generally, so easily and even gleefully align themselves with Hamas? I agree with those who feel that antisemitism has a lot to do with it and yet, when it comes to younger western people, it doesn’t feel sufficient or, perhaps even correct, to lay all the blame at conscious or unconscious antisemitism. Actually, I think something larger is at play here and it affects many more people than Jews.
Over the past few decades the so called “anti colonialism/occupier” narrative has gained traction in western societies. It’s a reaction against several centuries of colonial exploitation by mostly western European nations, exploitation that included slavery, but its focus on European colonialism excludes similar behaviours by many societies and countries in the long history of mankind. Of course, with some exceptions, European colonialism is more recent than other examples of conquest, mass murder, slavery and exploitation visited by one group of humans upon another, and that makes it easier to identify it as the object for vilification, particularly because most of the wealthiest and most successful countries in the world today are the former colonial powers or their creations. One outcome of this is a mantra that denigrates Western societies and, particularly, so-called “white people” in those societies. Any conflict between people of colour and white people doesn’t require careful analysis and thought, just a visceral genuflection of support for the underdogs, always people of colour.
A terrible irony of history is that Jews, despite millennia of persecution and discrimination, are lumped into the “white people” group. And that means they are stigmatized as “settler/occupiers” where any conflict with others makes them the villain. Of course this isn’t confined to Jewish people and Israel. Many of today’s critics of Israel also refer to my own country, Canada, as the “so called country of Canada” and even lapse into the cultural appropriation of the term “Turtle Island” to describe all of North America (at least north of Mexico).
Aside from the immediate hate crimes we see being perpetrated in the name of this naive ideology, why does all this matter? It matters because, implicit in it, is a devaluing of the many good things Western Civilization has bequeathed to mankind, not the least of which is respect for human rights and, particularly, the rights of women and gay and lesbian people. In the long history of mankind, the West has behaved no worse than all the other rampant ideologies, beliefs and religions and, in some key respects, has behaved much better.
I think what offends me most about the defenders of Hamas in the West is their hypocrisy, their willful blindness to the appalling behaviour of Hamas and similar organizations and nations. That, and their intellectual laziness, their inability or unwillingness to delve into the detail and facts which, if pursued rigorously, would force them to confront the extraordinary contradictions in their world view. But that would require effort, something in seeming short supply in certain circles these days.
Just sayin,
GH
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