Why Jerusalem
Matters
ByBen Shapiro
@benshapiro
May 16, 2018
This week, the Trump administration inaugurated the new
American embassy in Jerusalem. The celebration in Israel was palpable; the
embassy move came amidst the national celebration of the 70th anniversary of
the creation of the state. The streets filled with Jews of all sorts, cheering
and dancing.
Meanwhile, on the Gaza border, Hamas broadened its
monthlong campaign to break down the Israel border, staging border
"protests" attended by thousands -- including terrorists who have
used the supposed protests as a staging point for violent attacks on Israeli
troops and territory. Palestinian terrorists have caused mass chaos, throwing
Molotov cocktails at troops, attempting to rush the border, flinging explosives
and tying incendiaries to kites in an attempt to set Israeli territory alight.
The Israeli Defense Forces have responded with restraint. Despite this, a few
dozen Palestinians have been killed, not the hundreds or thousands Hamas would
presumably prefer.
But even as Yahya Sinwar, leader of Hamas in Gaza,
suggested that "more than 100,000 people could storm the fence"
between Israel and Gaza, and as 23-year-old Mohammed Mansoura announced,
"We are excited to storm and get inside ... to kill, throw stones,"
the media covered the slow-rolling terror assault as a form of peaceful
protest. A New York Times headline read "Israeli Troops Kill Dozens of
Palestinian Protesters." A Wall Street Journal headline reads "Scores
Killed, Thousands Injured as Palestinians Protest US Embassy Opening In Jerusalem."
Never mind that the riots had been going on for weeks
preceding the embassy opening. Never mind that Hamas and the Palestinian
Authority could quickly and permanently end all violence simply by stopping the
violence. The real issue, according to the press, is President Trump and his
Israeli friends.
What drives the leftist press's coverage? Simply put,
antipathy to the West. Israel is seen as an outpost of colonialism by leftists,
and has been since the 1967 war. Then-President Barack Obama expressed the view
well in his 2009 speech in Cairo, suggesting that Israel's rationale relied on
its "tragic history" that "culminated in an unprecedented
Holocaust." In this view, the Palestinians were shunted aside in favor of
providing national reparations to Jews; the Jews took their Western ways into
the heart of a foreign region.
This isn't true. The living proof of that is Israel's
eternal connection to Jerusalem. That's why both radical Muslims (including the
Palestinian leadership) and the far left deny Israel's historic bond with its
homeland and hope desperately to stop public recognition of that bond. If
Israel exists because Jewish connection pre-existed everything else, then
Israel isn't a new outpost of the West; it's the oldest center of the West.
That's why Trump's announcement is important: It's a recognition that the West
was founded on Jerusalem, rather than the other way around.
Peace will come when everyone recognizes what Trump has
recognized: The Jewish connection to Jerusalem is unbreakable. And peace will
come when Israel's enemies realize that violence can't change that underlying
fact.
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