Featured Post

Free The Hostages! Bring Them Home!

(this is a featured post and will stay at the top for the foreseeable future.. scroll down for new posts) -------------------------------...

Feb 9, 2025

Gaza and Israel Reborn: The Day After

Gaza and Israel Reborn: The Day After

By Dr. Harold Goldmeier

Harold Goldmeier teaches international university students at Touro College Jerusalem. He is an award-winning entrepreneur who received the Governor’s Award (Illinois) for family investment programs in the workplace from the Commission on the Status of Women. He was a Research and Teaching Fellow at Harvard, worked for four governors, and recently sold his business in Chicago. He is a managing partner of an investment firm, a business management consultant, and a public speaker on business, social, and public policy issues.

 

We recommend reading Asher Ostrin's new biography, SOVIET JEWRY REBORN, A Personal Journey (Gefen Publishing, 2024). The book is a pathway to answering the question dominating the international political landscape: What happens in Gaza The Day After?

  

“The Day After” has evolved from a question to a meme. It refers to the end of the October War when Hamas will be eradicated from Gaza. No, they won’t disappear. The Palestinian Liberation Movement across the Middle East, wherever Palestinians and their descendants live, will seek self-determination and a nation-state of their own. The Viet Cong proved the power of nationalism in our lifetime, against all odds, ultimately defeating the Chinese, French, and U.S. military powerhouses. Ostrin tells the story of  Soviet Jews oppressed over generations who kept alive their Jewish identity at the risk of torture, expulsion, relocation, and death.

 

His story “is about a large number of Jews who were thought to have been lost for eternity to the Jewish people but who, when a confluence of events made it possible for them to assert their identity, did so in a way that proved generations of experts wrong.” Ostrin was among the boots on the ground traipsing through Eastern Europe’s and Russia’s villages and cities for decades on behalf of the American Joint Distribution Committee.

 

These outsiders raised the physical and social standards of living among Jews. Knowing Jews survived and thrived outside the pale of settlement kept Jewish identity and resistance alive. “Soviet efforts to wipe out Jewish life and erase any vestige of Jewish identity had not been successful as was widely believed… JDC serviced Jews in eleven of the twenty-six secret cities in Russia.” When President Regan convinced Mikhail Gorbachev to “tear down that wall,” Regan freed more Jews than Moses. The Jewish memory keepers were given the sobriquet of “refusniks.” Ostrin tells their stories over 271 pages.

 

Like it or not, Israelis have to stop declaring there are no Palestinian people. A century-old body of literature conveys the persistence of the Palestinian memory despite rule by Ottomans, British, and Israelis. Ostrin employs creative non-fiction telling individual and family stories. Soviet Jewry was reborn by attaching to Jewish traditions and community building; they were freed through political action. Palestinians have tried for 100 years to build a state with guns; they are called terrorists instead of refusniks. Watching videos of Hamas’s shows of machismo during the release of October 7 Israeli hostages it appears the Palestinians have not learned any lessons.

 

The Day After is the title of a 1983 movie. People go about their daily lives when nuclear bombs drop on a small town in Kansas. Residents must cope the day after to survive a nuclear winter. Parts of Gaza resemble images of a war-ravaged wasteland with thousands killed and injured. The day after, Gazans and Israelis have to make choices to ensure their identity and be reborn. The JDC learned in rebuilding communities that food deliveries were not the end but “a means for creating community.”

 

Israel began changing the day after October 7. The Holocaust never ended for Jews. October 7, 2023, was the latest burst of violent Jew-hatred and savagery by creatures out to erase the Jewish People. One long war against the Jews rages with hardly an intermission. It rages on from the open gates of concentration camps to an unending War of Independence. Tactics changed to terror attacks and missiles aimed at city centers. The barbaric violence on October 7 shattered the relative peace and good life on quiet kibbutzim and at a fun-filled music festival. Israel changed that day. Israel has to decide what the new Israel will look like.

 

Post October 7, Israel’s public is

  • Less trusting of IDF leadership, the cornerstone of the social contract;
  • Many doubt politicians are working in the public’s best interests or their sectarian own;  
  • Doubts rage if Israel is any longer or can be a lasting democracy;
  • Dissatisfaction abounds for the politicians who self-describe as Mr. Security when for years rockets and bombs sent Israelis into shelters;  
  • Dismay at best characterizes the Israeli's mindset that leaders take no accountability, and have no shame ought to trigger resignations;
  • Faith in religious leaders dives as they bicker over how much money they can squeeze from the treasury, hide from military service, and blackmail colleagues for power positions in the government;
  • The public’s anger was energized and evidenced by mass street demonstrations which have continued daily for 16 months;
  • IAF pilots threatening to ground their aircraft;
  • Reservists refused to serve after repeated call-ups;
  • Family and friends of Hamas kidnapped hostages are invading and excoriating Knesset members in cabinet committee meetings and outside private homes;
  • Domestic media and an angry public are furious with politicians and military leaders for allegedly betraying the hallmark of transparency, denying each other’s facts, impugning motives, fraying patriotism, and undermining a free press.

 

Israelis will have to dig deep to maintain their dynamic character. Their social norms are progressive, the economy robust, and Israeli culture peppy. This conglomeration of Jewish nationalities, races, and ethnicities makes Israel the poster child for diversity, equality, and inclusion. But it must resolve its conflicts with Palestinians and its conflicting policies inimical to Israel's status as a Jewish state and a democracy. The country is straining under the weight of it all. The nation feels rudderless.

 

Asher Ostrin’s memoir offers guidance to nation-builders. He warns to not rely on governments or old generation leaders. It is self-deluding. Soviet Russia “had a large army, nuclear weapons, near-total control of the lives of its citizens….” Yet, the Soviet Union disintegrated. Do not be complacent. “The arc of Soviet history and its aftermath” bent in the direction of repression and sacrifice of its youth. Shape your history, identity, and culture. Ostrin concludes from his life-long community development experiences, “And that is the true miracle of (Jewry’s) rebirth.”    

 

Gaza's civilian survivors must choose between acting as barbarians or Samaritans. They might have an opportunity to build a peace-loving community with the help of the world’s richest nations. Europe and Asia-Pacific were reborn.

 

Mark Twain said, “History doesn’t repeat itself, but it often Rhymes.” Egypt and Israel made peace. Syria and Israel had no more war after 1973. Jordan and Israel learned to co-exist. There was Oslo and now there is the Abraham Accords. Not every Jewish community in Eastern Europe and Russia kept memories alive and observed traditions. The elderly yearn for what was, not what could be. Gazans and Israelis are among the youngest populations in the world’s census. The hope is the day after young men and women will become plow sharers, not soldiers.

 

page2image62369152page2image56049408page2image45285120

Soviet Jewry reborn, A Personal Journey Asher Ostrin Gefen Publishing, 2024 228 pages; $30

 

 



------------------------------------------------------
Reach thousands of readers with your ad by advertising on Life in Israel
------------------------------------------------------

4 comments:

  1. "as a Jewish state and a democracy"

    ReplyDelete
  2. Brilliant analysis and very interesting comparison. I only pray that the years and years and years of Palistinian indoctrination and love of Death over Life can somehow be changed. In my lifetime? Not sure.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Soviet Union didn't disintegrate. The Oligarchs decided to grab their fiefdoms when they saw they could.

    "Gazan's will have to choose". They are just pawns of Hamas and other Arab countries.

    Vietnam wanted their own country and remove outsiders. Hamas wants to destroy another country more than have their own. And many Arabs countries are happy to let them try.

    Maybe Trump will actually get somewhere. Let's see if he starts saying the most Gazans are Egyptians anyways. That might catch on.

    'All' it will take is for a Saudis and maybe Qatar to get on board that it is time to end the armed conflict against Israel and let Israel actually get rid of Hamas.

    Make no mistake - this is all in Hashem's hands. Highly doubtful that even the Mossad's or CIA's millions of scenario options didn't include Trump's plan.

    ReplyDelete
  4. There is no comparison with the Jews in the Soviet Union with the Gazans in,...Gaza.

    The Gazan population is 99.9% Muslim with its own government, schools, mosques, etc. , all drenched with eliminating Israel/Jews, not living warily beside them as Jordan and Egypt so unhappily finally do--for the moment at least.
    Hamas is a home grown population whose philosophy towards Jews the Gazans totally support eg, Hamas tunnels under hospitals, hatred of Israel/Jews taught in schools, mosques, ad nauseum.
    The Soviet Jews, on the other hand, were a relatively tiny minority in a country who tolerated them at best.

    ReplyDelete

Related Posts

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...