views essay commentary Vigilance Matters Ending The Silence On Abuse We must keep sight of Hamas’ destructive intention. A gainst the backdrop of Chanukah, the Jewish holiday celebrating religious freedom, Hamas showed once more why it’s an unadulterated terrorist organization committed to destroying Israel. The first Chanukah candle was lit Dec. 12. On Dec. 9, the Israel Defense Forces uncovered and blew up a Hamas tunnel snaking into southern Israel from Khan Younis in central Gaza. The IDF speculated it was a tunnel with purpose given the communi- cations equipment found inside, the Jewish news agency JTA reported. On Dec. 13, Shin Robert Sklar Bet, Israel’s domes- Contributing Editor tic security agency, announced it had foiled a Hamas plot to kidnap an Israeli soldier or settler from a bus stop near Nablus in the West Bank during Chanukah. Back in October, Israeli law enforcement arrested three West Bank Palestinians believed tied to the abduction plot. A gag order held announcement of the plot until the same day investiga- tors forwarded their findings to state prosecutors. These two incidents as well as stepped-up rocket attacks emanating from Gaza underscore the abrupt end to the relative calm along the Israel- Gaza border following a ceasefire in the 2014 Israel-Hamas war. CAPITALIZING There’s no mistaking that Hamas used U.S. President Donald Trump’s Dec. 6 rooted-in-reality acknowledg- ment that Jerusalem is Israel’s capital to reinforce a charter aim to obliter- ate the Jewish state. It’s folly to think Hamas could ever be a rational peace partner along with Fatah, the supposedly moderate Palestinian faction governing much of the West Bank, in pursuit of a two- state solution to the conflict between Israel and the Palestinian people. After demolishing the Khan Younis tunnel by deploying a new, sophis- ticated process, the IDF declared it would continue to “discover and destroy tunnels in order to defend and protect Israeli civilians.” The IDF insisted military might would be used only as a defense, not to escalate ten- sion along the Israel-Gaza border. The abduction plot was the work of a Hamas cell operating from a Palestinian village near Nablus. Shin It’s folly to think Hamas could ever be a rational peace partner along with Fatah in pursuit of a two-state solution. Bet teamed with the Israel Police and the IDF to disrupt the cell before three members, all in their 20s, could “disguise themselves as local Jewish residents and entice a victim to enter their vehicle,” according to Shin Bet. GAZA CONNECTIONS Meanwhile, at least 18 rockets have been launched from Gaza since Trump’s Jerusalem announcement. Israel’s Iron Dome anti-missile system is proving its worth. On Dec. 8, one of three rockets fired from Gaza damaged a kindergarten entryway in the southern Israeli town of Sderot. Another rocket landed on a residential street. The Iron Dome intercepted a third. No one was hurt by those rockets or by another round fired Dec. 17, but that doesn’t dimin- ish the danger. Israel’s retaliatory air strikes on terrorist military instal- lations in Gaza killed two Hamas operatives. Hamas’ long reach extended to New York City on Dec. 11. The sus- pect in a midtown Manhattan pipe bomb attack, a 27-year-old Brooklyn resident of Bangladeshi origin, told investigators he was inspired by the terrorist organization Islamic State. He also said he was enraged over an unspecified Israeli “incursion” into Hamas-led Gaza, CNN reported. The pipe bomb detonated prema- turely in an underground passage- way linking the Times Square sub- way station with the Port Authority Bus Terminal, injuring the attacker and three others. After Gaza-originating mortar shells eluded soldiers working in southern Israel on Nov. 30, Israeli tanks and planes targeted four Hamas positions in Gaza. No one was killed. Israel believes the mor- tar assault was in reaction to Israel’s Oct. 30 destruction of another Khan Younis terror tunnel. In that strike, the IDF killed 14 Palestinians, many part of the terrorist organization Islamic Jihad, Groups other than Hamas often fire rockets, but Israel justifiably attributes any terrorist activity inside Gaza to the organization rul- ing the coastal strip. ELUSIVE PEACE Hamas is a proxy of Iran, a state spon- sor of terror, so Trump’s Jerusalem pronouncement had no bearing on the Shiite Muslim organization. Like a jungle cat in hiding, Hamas was wait- ing for the opportunity to intensify the hunt against its perceived enemy: Zionism and its supporters. Meanwhile, Fatah not only boasts its own terrorist wing, Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, but also cites its disgust with Trump in a renewed push to seek Palestinian statehood via international channels such as the United Nations, not by direct, bilat- eral talks with Israel. Such talks represent the only authentic conduit for bringing Israeli-Palestinian recognition of the prospect of a Jewish state and a Palestinian state living side by side in peace with safe, secure borders. Dual recognition could set the stage for addressing such tougher, deeply entangled issues as borders, security, settlements, refugees, holy rights, water rights, longstanding claims and, yes, Jerusalem. It’ll take a cultural sea change not just in the de facto Palestinian capi- tals of Ramallah and Gaza City, but also in Jerusalem for the two-state solution to regain the traction it had in 2000, 2001 and 2008 when Israel and the U.S. made generous land offers in exchange for peace with the Palestinian Authority (P.A.). Israel must demonstrate a willing- ness to negotiate certain autonomous rights of rule in the Arab-dominated neighborhoods of the eastern sec- tor of Jerusalem. For their part, Palestinian leaders somehow must move beyond fixating on Donald Trump to realize a better of way of life can only emerge through a peace that resonates from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea. While the U.S. can still play the role of peace broker if Trump can deliver a strategic plan that convinces both Israel and the P.A. that compromise can be beneficial, it’s important to remember that Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Egypt, all largely Sunni Muslim with varying ties to Israel and the U.S., also have the capacity to intervene. • I n the last two months, the avalanche of stories about sexual abuse and harassment has touched virtually every sector of American society. The rev- elations about deeply troubling behavior on the part of politicians, journalists and figures in the entertain- ment world have trans- fixed the country. As more victims come forward to tell their sto- ries, the consequences have gone beyond the disgrace of some promi- nent individuals, the Jonathan S. end of careers and, in Tobin Alabama, a surprising election result. What began with a shock- ing story about movie mogul Harvey Weinstein has led to what may well be a crucial turning point in the way sexual misconduct is viewed. We are no longer in an era in which all forms of abuse — be it violent crime, abuse of minors as well as unwanted physical touching, abusive verbal com- ments and forms of pressure — that might have once been viewed as permissible if unpleasant behavior can be ignored or dismissed. Under these circumstances, it is only to be expected that some of these stories would involve the Jewish community. This week’s JNS feature by Elizabeth Kratz concerning alleged abuse carried out by a since-retired United Synagogue Youth (USY) director follows the same pattern of the rest of the #metoo scandals. (Read it at thejewishnews.com.) A powerful person used his position to carry out sexual abuse, in this case, against minors. The victims felt unable to step forward at the time, both because of the shame they were made to feel by the predator and also because they felt nobody in a position to do something about it would listen. Organizations that should have been on guard against abuse were, like the rest of society, not listening or indifferent about what was going on under their noses. The Conservative movement respon- sible for the USY program in question was not alone in this respect as such scandals have, in one form or another, touched other Jewish denominations. To its credit, the United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism appears now to have taken appropriate action, not only to sever any ties with alleged abusers, but also to ensure, as much as it is possible, that simi- lar misconduct doesn’t recur. This story is so similar to numerous continued on page 10 8 December 28 • 2017 jn