The Volokh Conspiracy
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Mission to Israel Part X: Closing Thoughts
[This is the tenth, and final post in my series on my mission to Israel. You can read Parts I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII, VIII, and IX.]
Our mission to Israel was on July 9 through 11. It took me nearly six weeks to publish the ten posts in this series. But it did not take me nearly that long to write them. I wrote most of the first five installments on the twelve-hour flight back from Israel. These initial posts, which focused on the legal issues, came out naturally. I could approach them somewhat objectively, and offer pointed criticisms of the Israeli legal system. But the second batch of posts took a different path.
The final installments focused on the human cost: the hostages, the surveillance footage, the kibbutz, and the music festival. With the exception of the surveillance footage, I was able to document with photographs and videos almost everything that I saw. I promptly uploaded these media to YouTube and the Volokh Conspiracy, but I didn't hit "publish." Instead, I sat on them. I waited. I needed time to reflect. Never before in my life had I been exposed to such profound suffering and trauma. And it was difficult to translate into words what I felt. I am not one to have writer block, but these posts--especially the one on the surveillance footage--were among the hardest things I have had to write. After finishing the surveillance post, I had to watch a funny movie just to clear my mind. That sort-of worked, for a short while.
I was writing, in part, to help me parse through the confusing and confounding situations I witnessed. That's how I think--I write. I was also writing to help others make sense of what they have not seen. I did not think that my writings would persuade anyone on the Israel-Gaza issue. That was not my intent, and I made no effort at advocacy. My goal was simply to relate what I had seen. As the months and years from October 7 pass, and as memories fade, these posts will remain as my personal remembrance of that horrific day.
I also do not pretend that I have any insights about the path away from the current conflict. If anyone tells you they know how to solve things, don't listen to them. Even if a "ceasefire" is reached, and some or most or all of the remaining hostages are freed, the underlying grounds for war remain. The hostilities can re-emerge at any time. To quote Gitlow v. New York, "A single revolutionary spark may kindle a fire that, smouldering for a time, may burst into a sweeping and destructive conflagration."
All I can do is take a step back and reflect on the millenia-long history of the Jewish people in Israel. The period between 1948, when Israel declared independence, and 2024, is but a mere blip. We are barely eight decades removed from the Holocaust. Nothing is fixed in stone. And I no longer take for granted that Jews will always be welcome in America.
I hope to visit Israel again with my family. I do not know when that will be.
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And yet, most American "Jews" will vote for the Democrat, no matter how bad they are, because their priorities are ensuring that women can kill their unborn babies and that their gay husbands can ejaculate unprotected into another man's rectum.
A wonderful and moving series, and one that does not make the mistake of treating the “Palestinian” point of view as non-malicious.
I have one suggestion for the author, and that is that he should upload his videos onto platforms such as BitChute or Rumble, which will not delete them (or him) for political dissent. Because YouTube likely will. An even better choice is Locals.com, which hosts both video and text content.
Israel’s not just for “Members Only” I heard some borderline famous semi-historical figure was born there some 2000+ years ago, its like Amurica would be if we were restricted to Manhattan and Long Goy-land and had 50 million Injuns wanting their land back(if they’d only put that $23 of Wampum in a good No load Mutual fund) C’mon (man!) your Surpreme Being was Born, Died, and came back(right) there, you’ll remember it way more than that rip off “Ark Adventure”
Frank
Per my DNA analysis, I do not have a drop of Jewish blood but grieve for Jews. From the about 3,500 years ago to the present there has been no real rest from the continual hate and persecution. To have a Jewish American state:
"I no longer take for granted that Jews will always be welcome in America"
is a shame but take heart--Most Americans still care and as a Constitutional lawyer, you know the Freedom to exercise religion still stands. (Smith v Employment Division not withstanding).
I no longer take for granted that Jews will always be welcome in America.
I suspect that during your lifetime Jews will always be more welcome in the US than in Israel...