Op-Ed
Below is an Op-Ed I plan to submit to BU's newspaper in hopes of giving Israel some positive attention during such a difficult time. Keep in mind it has to be 500 words or less - I could honestly write endlessly about this topic, so I tried to keep it short and sweet.
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Last week I was overcome
with anxiety. As hundreds of rockets descended into civilian populations in
southern and central Israel, I lay restlessly in my safe bed in Stuvi 2 – 6,000
miles away from physical danger. Yet, my country was under attack, and the pain
felt very near. Each rocket fired was a personal attack on my family in Tel
Aviv; on my dozens of friends serving in the IDF; on the Jewish people.
What was I to do but support
my country in its acts of self-defense? I stuck an
Israeli flag in my backpack and walked down Com Ave. I attended Students for
Justice in Palestine’s rally to dance and sing and show the world that Israel’s
spirit will never die.
To my shock, some people called me a “racist.” I
suppose they believed I was singing and dancing to support apartheid, ethnic
cleansing, and the genocide of the Palestinian people. But the opposite is true.
My dream is to see two sovereign states - an Israeli and Palestinian state -
exist side by side, separated not by fences but by backyards. I believe that
all human lives are equal.
Yet the harsh reality is that Hamas, the elected
governing body in Gaza, is dedicated to the destruction of the Jewish state –
and will even put its own civilians in harms way to do so. These are the facts.
In the context of this conflict, though, I am not
writing as a critic, but as a person who
has seen so much goodness sprout from the tiny, misunderstood country of
Israel.
Before matriculating at BU, I volunteered, studied,
and traveled in Israel for nine months. During the first trimester, I worked at
a foster home in a small town in Israel’s desert. It was there that I met and
befriended two Palestinian children from Gaza. The two Israelis who owned the
home took in these children for no other reason than to give them a safe home.
Such acts of kindness are not rarities. They are seen
throughout Israel—in Hadassah hospital, in the integrated school Yad B’Yad, and in various other Israeli
institutions. Unfortunately, these hopeful stories don’t make it through to
mainstream media. When there’s no conflict, no blood – the world is silent.
And so nobody knows about Save A Child’s Heart, an Israeli nonprofit that performs free open-heart
surgery to Israelis, Palestinian, and African children. But I’ve played with
these recovering children. I’ve seen their parents weep tears of gratitude together.
Perhaps the world needs to see these tears to wake
up and realize that Israel is so much more than a war zone. It is a vibrant
democracy in which Israeli-Arabs serve in the parliament, on the Supreme Court,
and in the foreign ministry. It is the only
country in the Middle East that provides legal, anti-discrimination protection
for its homosexual citizens. It is the brain behind cell phone technology; a spiritual
hub for three monotheistic religions; and it is the homeland and refuge for the
continuously persecuted Jewish people.
So whether my future places me in Israel or Boston,
New York or San Francisco, I will continue to support Israel with justice,
morality, and faith as my guiding lights.
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