Picture courtesy Arutz Sheva
Look at this
picture. What do you see? Eight children; or is it seven? Can you tell?
What are
they doing? Well, the four on the right look like they’ve started to race. You
can even tell by their body positions that this isn’t going to be a jog; it’s
an all-out sprint. The others, meanwhile, look like late-starters. They’re
already behind. The boy closest to you, wearing a green shirt, appears to have
decided to drop his bike to join the race.
Will he be
last to finish?
Who’s last
in this picture, that boy in green—or the boy on the far left? It’s hard to
tell. The angle of the photo doesn’t allow an accurate assessment.
Will it
matter whose last? No, because no one is keeping score— not for this race.
Look again
at the boy in green. Notice how exaggerated his right arm motion seems. His
body position suggests urgency. Is he trying not to fall, is he simply accelerating
as quickly as possible—or both? He certainly seems to be in a hurry. Shouldn’t
someone have given him a fairer start?
You might
say that because this picture comes to you from Israel, this is how Israeli
boys play—unorganized, random and perhaps unfairly; that sounds so Israeli,
doesn’t it?
Look at the
boy on the far right. Do you recognize that body language? It’s the body
position of someone who is serious about starting a sprint.
I do not
know a lot about this picture. But I know more than you—a lot more.
For example,
I know that this race will last only fifteen seconds from beginning to end. I
know that none of these boys, at the moment this picture was taken, was
thinking about winning: I can assure you that none of these boys was concerned
about being last or first.
Look at the
picture again—at that boy in green. I don’t know him. But I think I’m pretty
correct to tell you that he hasn’t jumped off his bike like that because he’s
convinced he can beat his friends despite his late start. I believe that at
this moment, he isn’t even thinking at all. Look at that arm motion. Do you
think he’s running as if his life depends upon it?
You can tell
from this picture that the boys have just, perhaps two seconds earlier, begun
to run. They are well-trained. They are accelerating to full speed as quickly
as they can; you can see that in their body positions. You see, they know that,
at this moment, the race is no longer a fifteen-second race; it is now only a
thirteen-second race.
They’ve got
less than thirteen seconds to reach that building you see in the backround.
They are
probably not thinking about what will happen next. They’re running too fast to
think. They’re just focused on one thing: that building.
These are
boys playing in one of Israel’s southern cities. They are young. They are
probably Jewish. They are not adults. They are not government workers. They are not soldiers. They are civilians—just
children.
It’s how Jewish
children play in southern Israel. Yes, they live in what you call the holy
land. But in southern Israel, they are not considered holy. They are not even considered
children. They are dehumanized military targets.
Therefore,
they run. They run fast because they know what you don’t: they could all be
dead in less than thirteen seconds. They are indeed children. But they run
because they know they might not be children much longer.
Look again
at the picture. These boys run for their lives because, in the middle of their
play, a siren has begun to wail—a loud, unnerving ear-splitting (even
frightening) wail. They understand the meaning of that wail: once that siren
sounds, they have fifteen seconds before an incoming rocket, fired by Jew-hating
Muslims in Gaza, hits the ground. No one knows where the rocket is. No one knows
where it will land. No one stops to look up, to see if he can spot the rocket’s
trajectory. There’s no time.
Look at the
boys: they know not to tarry. They know exactly
why they run. They also know what Muslims
say about them: all Jews, including
children at play, are military targets.
It must be
true. The UN has never objected when Hamas calls Jewish children ‘targets’.
Some of you
say that if Israel gave up land-for-peace, these boys wouldn’t have to run like
this. But you would be wrong. These boys run precisely because Israel surrendered
nearby Gaza to Muslims. Before the Jewish pull-out, there were few rockets. Children could play safely.
Take a final
look at the picture. This is how Jewish children play when Jews surrender land
for peace.
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