Why Palestinians in Israel, like me, keep marching to protect our land
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Ultra-orthodox men studying at a yeshiva in Israel.
 
Dina Kraft  
Dina Kraft
 
 
Israel's deadly strike on a World Central Kitchen aid convoy Monday, killing seven of its workers, many of them foreigners, is sparking a new level of outrage in Washington and around the world. R. David Harden, former USAID mission director to the West Bank and Gaza, argues that it should not be seen as another unfortunate tragedy in a brutal war, but a moment that will have strategic and immediate consequences for Israel's war against Hamas.

Amira Hass spoke to Gazans who rail against Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar and the decision to go to war on October 7. They say many people fear that Hamas will punish them for speaking out, and blame the Arab media for looking the other way when someone criticizes the group.

Last weekend, Palestinians marked Land Day, which commemorates the six unarmed protesters against land expropriations killed by Israeli forces in 1976. Nagham Zbeedat, who grew up attending the protests writes that Palestinians on both sides of the Green Line are still living its legacy, and this year, with dangerous dreams by some of an Israeli reoccupation of Gaza, the day is more relevant than ever.

Anshel Pfeffer explains why despite most Israelis' having no faith in Netanyahu, the current wave of anti-government protests is yet to see mass numbers in the streets. Dahlia Scheindlin warns that meanwhile, the Bible-infused nationalists in power are consolidating plans to resettle Gaza, following a well-worn Israeli playbook. She asks: Who, or what, can stop them?

Another matter feeding domestic discontent is the emotional subject of exemptions from the army for ultra-Orthodox yeshiva students. Rivka Neriya Ben-Shahar, who is religious herself, writes that it's precisely because Torah study is so dear to her that she wants to preserve it. To do so, she advocates for a new model that would shatter the paradigm of tens of thousands of men studying in yeshivas, receiving plentiful state benefits but not joining the workforce or the IDF, especially now, in the aftermath of October 7 and the ongoing war.

In the U.S., Joe Lieberman died last week at 82. Matthew E. Berger writes that after narrowly losing his White House bid as Al Gore's vice presidential nominee, Lieberman saw himself as the Democratic heir apparent in 2004, as did his proud mother. But although he got further than any Jewish politician had before, or since, American Jews didn't flock to his side.
 
 
 
 
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Marchers commemorating Land Day in the streets of Sakhnin, Israel Saturday.
 
 
Why Palestinians in Israel, Like Me, Keep Marching to Protect Our Land
Nagham Zbeedat | 03.04.2024
 
 
 
 
 
Chef and restaurant owner Jose Andres speaking in Washington DC, in August 2019.
 
 
Could Chef Jose Andres Now Shape the Course of Israel's War in Gaza?
R. David Harden | 03.04.2024
 
 
 
 
 
הפגנה מחוץ לכנסת 2.4.24
 
 
Why the Latest anti-Netanyahu Protests Have Not Yet Become a Mass Movement
Anshel Pfeffer | 03.04.2024
 
 
 
 
 
Israeli policemen try to forcibly remove ultra-Orthodox Jewish protesters assembling for a protest against their conscription into the Israeli armed forces, in Jerusalem last week.
 
 
Israel Has More Full-time Torah Students Than Ever in Jewish History. It's Intolerable
Rivka Neriya Ben-Shahar | 03.04.2024
 
 
 
 
 
Former U.S. Senator Joe Lieberman speaking at an event in Albania in 2019.
 
 
Joe Lieberman Captured Jewish Americans' Imagination, but Not Their Votes
Matthew E. Berger | 03.04.2024
 
 
 
 
 
A demonstration by right-wing settlers, the annexationist vanguard, protesting against the entry of humanitarian aid into Gaza, in February.
 
 
War First, Then Annexation: Is Israel Preparing to Permanently Occupy Gaza?
Dahlia Scheindlin | 03.04.2024
 
 
 
 
 
Palestinians gathering for food in Jabalya in northern Gaza late last month.
 
 
'People Are Cursing Sinwar': Gazans Opposing Hamas Are Sure They're the Majority
Amira Hass | 03.04.2024
 
 
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