“Have we not all one father? hath not one God created us? why then doth every one of us despise his brother, violating the covenant of our fathers?”
Malachi 1: 10; from today’s Mass reading.
I am wimping out if I do not take a clear stand on the current mess in Gaza. In most conflicts, contrary to the common cowardly and self-interested nostrum, one side is essentially right and the other wrong.
The Palestinians under Hamas began the present conflict, in particularly heinous and unprovoked fashion. Right is on the side of Israel.
One might protest that Israel is a “colonial settler state.” The Palestinian Arabs have a longstanding grievance: that their ancestral lands were taken over by Jews, largely coming from other countries.
I ask myself: How would I feel if I felt myself obliged to move because some other group had made my hometown inhospitable to me?
And I answer, I have had that experience. It causes me grief. I grew up partly in Montreal as an Anglophone. My family had roots there. Over time, Quebec has become inhospitable to Anglophones, and many have felt obliged to leave. It became hard for Anglophones to find a job. It would be difficult to get schooling in English for my children.
Yet it does not seem to me to justify war or random murder. One picks up stakes and moves on; as have so many immigrants who come to Canada.
I also had to leave Gananoque, my second home town. I did not want to. But I could not complete my education there, and could not get a job.
Most people are used to having to pull up stakes and move on. And that is really all that is being asked of the Arabs.
The Arabs—a culture actually founded on mobility.
And Palestinian Arabs have many opportunities near to hand; they are not some distinct ethnic group. Lands in which their own language is spoken and their religion established. Moving on to Cairo or the Persian Gulf for opportunities would seem natural in other circumstances. I myself moved to the Persian Gulf for opportunities.
So, other than antisemitism, I do not see the problem.
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