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Friday, June 25, 2010

Gilad Shalit: Our boy being held by Hamas

Israeli ambassador to the United States Michael Oren does a nice job of summing up what we all feel on the 4th anniversary of Gilad Shalit's abduction.
In a small Jerusalem café, I sat with Noam Shalit and tried to discuss his son, Gilad. I say tried because each time Noam, a soft-spoken, bespectacled man, began a sentence, the owner of the café rushed over with complimentary plates of humus, salads and desserts. Passersby, glimpsing Noam through the window, burst inside to embrace him. "We are with you," they cried. "We will get our Gilad home."

That our is the key to understanding the devotion that Israelis feel for Gilad Shalit. The Israel Defense Forces is a citizens' army in which most young men serve for a minimum of three years, followed by several decades of reserve duty. Young women serve for at least two. Our soldiers are literally our parents, our siblings, our children. Israel is also a small country with few if any degrees of separation between families. Even those who have never met the Shalits know someone who has. And all of us have loved ones—a brother, a son—who could suffer the same ordeal that Gilad began four years ago today.

...

The plight of Gilad Shalit poses painful dilemmas. Should Israel negotiate with Hamas, a terror organization sworn to its destruction, and unleash hundreds of terrorists, many of whom will quickly return to murdering? Or can Israel leave Gilad to languish alone indefinitely, prolonging his family's agony and undermining the faith in which other families send their children to battle?

There are no easy answers. Yet Israel has consistently sought to secure Gilad's freedom through the good offices of intermediaries, all the while striving to reconcile the nation's security needs with the time-honored Jewish principle of pidayon shivuyim, the redemption of prisoners.

The struggle to bring Gilad home has become a national passion for Israelis. His birthday and the anniversary of his abduction are both commemorated with dramatic public events. In one such rally, some 2,000 young people sailed a "freedom for Gilad" fleet of homemade rafts across the Sea of Galilee. Photographs of Gilad as a whimsical teenager loom from public walls and flutter on flags from car antennas. His name is emblazoned on bracelets popular among Israeli youth and the days of his captivity are displayed on a booth near the prime minister's residence.
Read it all.The truth is that God forbid it could happen to anyone here. Hamas does not limit itself to soldiers.

3 Comments:

At 8:23 PM, Blogger NormanF said...

Israel should stop making concessions to Hamas - which I oppose on principle - and start figuring out to rescue him... whether that means bringing home alive or dead to Israel. Hamas must not be allowed to exploit him for a propaganda victory.

What could go wrong indeed

 
At 10:37 PM, Blogger Juniper in the Desert said...

The Israeli gov. must exchange him for 1000 terrorists. They can always act against the terrorists later.

They MUST get Gilad Shalit home, how DARE they treat him as some sort of bargaining chip!

This situation diminishes us all!

 
At 5:11 PM, Blogger What is "Occupation" said...

It's time to enlist private enterprise...

A bounty on any Hamas member's head..

25 bucks a head...

Do what America did in the 1800's

 

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