Lovers of Palestine! Share with all your might!
Do not remain indifferent in the face of terrible suffering.Suffering exists in hunger, but also beyond it. As time passes, more and more young people in the West are losing hope. They protest and encounter the harsh faces of cold, unfeeling officials who send them away with no answers. Even the embassies of Arab nations have closed their doors to you. Egypt, once hoping to lead the Arab world in the struggle against the enemy, has become like a withered leaf. Revolutions did not help — corruption consumed every good part, and power returned to its usual place.
What is left for us to do?
“The more they afflicted him, the more he multiplied and spread” (Exodus).
God planted this law within them, and we do not have the power to undo it.
We could, of course, continue pouring our rage upon them, but they are already commanded in their own Torah:
“Pour out Your wrath on the nations that do not know You.”
The more we come with evil, the more we receive greater evil in return.Raise a great outcry that will drive our sons and daughters to madness?
Boycott the enemy?
They are not the story here, and we must understand that
They are devouring themselves from within, polluting their land, and absurdly — still growing from it, advancing and developing.
Very few people there in Zion truly succeed.
Most Jews live with a constant sense of dissatisfaction. That’s why they’re always fighting one another.
So don’t rejoice, my brother. Don’t celebrate, my sister.
This story is not working in our favor.
Death will not help here — it only unites them further.
So what am I suggesting? Should we stop hating the Zionists?
No. I’m not radical. I’m simply suggesting we separate emotion from the reality on the ground.
We’re dealing with very difficult people.
This war has caused them divine chaos — from which the gates of hell have opened upon the sons and daughters of Gaza.
These gates will never close completely.
This is a nation that has been destroyed and exiled twice already, each time because of a fatal mistake — they tried to fight for the Temple of their God without understanding that what God truly wants from them is justice for the orphan and the widow.
He did not ask for sacrifices or offerings.
That was Moses’ initiative — for in his innocence, the prophet believed the people were at his spiritual level.
Moses is a man who killed someone in the name of justice, then fled for his life and spent many years in continuous soul-searching.
I’m writing the story of Moses in Midian these days, and someday I will publish it.
I invite you to follow me — I promise to keep you posted when it’s released.
In the meantime, I invite you to read a humble book I wrote — about the life of a Palestinian immigrant who doesn’t quite know what to do with all that he knows, and all that he doesn’t — and will never — know.