We Charge Genocide: The Shofar Calls Us to Account on Rosh Hashanah | Truthout

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We Charge Genocide: The Shofar Calls Us to Account on Rosh Hashanah

Brant Rosen

In the Jewish new year, we must confront the carnage that Zionism has wrought.
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We Charge Genocide: The Shofar Calls Us to Account on Rosh Hashanah

In the Jewish new year, we must confront the carnage that Zionism has wrought.
Every year at Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish new year, synagogues across the world 
sound the shofar, a ram’s horn that represents the signature moment of the 
holiday.
Over the centuries, Jewish commentators have offered a variety of explanations 
for this ritual. Moses Maimonides famously called it a wake-up call to personal 
atonement; others view it as a call to action or a tribute to God’s power. This 
new year, however, I believe one reason stands out among all others. Today, we 
sound the shofar as a call to moral accountability
At Rosh Hashanah, we begin the holiest season of the year for the Jewish 
community: the 10 Days of Awe, which conclude on Yom Kippur (the Day of 
Atonement). Over the next ten days, we will be challenged to break open the 
shells of inertia and complacency that have built up over the past year. The 
shofar is sounded on Rosh Hashanah to herald the inauguration of a deep, 
collective soul searching: to look deep within, to face honestly what must be 
faced, if we are to truly begin our new year anew.
I cannot remember a Rosh Hashanah when the collective moral stakes were any 
higher for the American Jewish community than this year. I would even go as far 
as to say it may be the most morally consequential High Holiday season of our 
lifetimes. As we begin this new year, the shofar calls us to account for a 
genocide, ongoing even as we speak, perpetrated by a nation acting in the name 
of the Jewish people.
How can we begin to fathom a moral accounting of the genocide being waged in 
our names? Over 41,000 Palestinians killed in Gaza to date and over 95,000 
injured, the majority of whom are women and children, according to official 
reports. According to one estimate, the ultimate death toll may already be 
closer to 200,000.
Whole extended families, entire Palestinian bloodlines, have been wiped out 
completely. Much of Gaza has been literally reduced to a human graveyard, with 
scores of bodies buried beneath the rubble of destroyed and bulldozed homes. 
Neighborhoods and regions have been literally wiped off the map.
Gaza’s infrastructure and health care system has been decimated. According to 
the UN, an “intentional and targeted starvation campaign” has led to widespread 
famine and disease throughout the Gaza strip. Polio has now broken out, and 
relief workers are struggling to deliver vaccines to children as bombs and 
missiles fall around them.
Health care workers, humanitarian workers and journalists are being killed, 
injured and imprisoned in massive numbers. Human rights agencies have 
documented widespread torture and abuse of prisoners, including sexual abuse, 
throughout a network of torture camps.
Please note that this unspeakable litany is not a review of the past year. It 
is a description of a nightmare that continues in this very moment, with no end 
in sight.
As we contemplate this inhuman status quo, it occurs to me that this Rosh 
Hashanah, the broken sound of the shofar is more than a mere call to 
accounting. It is a broken wail of grief — and a desperate moral challenge. 
This year the shofar calls out to us in no uncertain terms: We Charge Genocide.
This is not a point upon which we can equivocate. Not today. On this day, we 
face what must be faced and say out loud what must be said. To argue this point 
now would frankly be a sacrilege.
>From a purely legal point of view, a myriad of academic and legal experts have 
>long since confirmed the charge of genocide. As far back as October, Holocaust 
>and genocide scholar Raz Segal has called Israel’s actions in Gaza “a textbook 
>case of genocide.” On October 18, almost 800 scholars, lawyers and 
>practitioners called on “all relevant UN bodies … as well as the Office of the 
>Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court to immediately intervene … to 
>protect the Palestinian population from genocide.” More recently, Omer Bartov, 
>a respected historian of Holocaust and genocide studies at Brown University, 
>accused Israel of “systematic war crimes, crimes against humanity and 
>genocidal actions.”
But beyond the legal arguments, there is a critical, moral imperative behind 
this claim. For many Jews, it’s impossible to imagine — let alone say out loud 
— that a Jewish state, founded in the wake of the Holocaust, could possibly be 
perpetrating a genocide.
I understand the pain behind this refusal. I know it confronts many Jews with 
an unimaginable prospect: to accept that we have become our own worst 
nightmare. But if we cannot admit the truth on this of all days, then why 
bother gathering for Rosh Hashanah in the first place? To dither on this point 
would make a sham of a festival we dare to call the holiest season of the year.
Not long ago I had a long conversation with my dear friend and colleague Rachel 
Beitarie, director of the Israeli organization Zochrot. Rachel is among the 
precious few Israeli activists who are in unabashed solidarity with 
Palestinians. Among other things, she spoke about what it was like to be an 
Israeli activist for Palestinian liberation who grew up on a kibbutz near the 
Gaza border, who personally knew Israelis who were killed and taken hostage on 
October 7.
During our recent conversation, Rachel and I talked in particular about how 
Israel metabolizes the traumatic memory of the Holocaust as a way to 
rationalize its genocidal violence in Gaza. In a follow-up letter after our 
conversation, Rachel wrote the following words to me:
As years go by and most Holocaust survivors are no longer with us, the 
identification and reliving of the trauma of former genocide seem to only grow, 
in direct relation to the crimes committed under the excuse of the right to 
defend ourselves and “prevent a second Holocaust.”
Because of this unrelenting propaganda, the linkage of the Hamas attack of 
October 7 to the Holocaust, was made immediately, even though it was logically 
bogus. ​​It was understandable at first, especially from people — many of my 
friends and acquaintances among them — who personally experienced the horrors 
of that day, waiting for help that took many hours to come.
Having grown up in Israel, exposed as we are to retraumatizing Holocaust 
education, the associative connection was almost inevitable. Soon however, it 
became clear that this linkage was being overblown and manipulated to justify 
the annihilation of Gaza; to justify, dare I say it, another Holocaust.
Many outside Israel have made the linkage between October 7 and the Holocaust 
as well. Almost immediately in fact, the terrible massacres of that day were 
openly characterized as “the single worst massacre of Jews since the 
Holocaust.” As Rachel pointed out, the two events have nothing to do with each 
other whatsoever. Still, it is indeed painfully poignant to consider that this 
mass killing occurred in a state founded in the wake of the Holocaust in order 
to safeguard Jewish lives once and for all.
As we start to reckon with the terrible events of October 7, I would suggest 
that the first step would be to admit that this date was not a starting point. 
If we are to truly and honestly commemorate this anniversary, we must 
understand it in the context of the ongoing violence and injustice known as the 
Nakba — a nightmare that began decades ago and is still ongoing.
As Israel’s violence in Gaza escalated during the final months of 2023, the 
board of my congregation, Tzedek Chicago, had numerous conversations about 
whether or not to issue a congregational statement. As an anti-Zionist 
congregation that has been very active in the Palestine solidarity movement, we 
felt we had a unique voice to offer on this issue. And so, in December 2023, we 
released a statement entitled, “In Gaza, Israel is Revealing the True Face of 
Zionism.” Here’s an excerpt:
We … know there was a crucial, underlying context to [the] horrible violence 
[of October 7]. We assert without reservation that to contextualize is not to 
condone. On the contrary, we must contextualize these events if we are to truly 
understand them — and find a better way forward.
The violence of October 7 did not occur in a vacuum. It was a brutal response 
to a regime of structural violence that has oppressed Palestinians for decades. 
At the root of this oppression is Zionism: a colonial movement that seeks to 
establish and maintain a Jewish majority nation-state in historic Palestine.
While Israel was founded in the traumatic wake of the Holocaust to create 
safety and security for the Jewish people, it was a state founded on the backs 
of another people, ultimately endangering the safety and security of Jews and 
Palestinians alike. Israel was established through what Palestinians refer to 
as the Nakba: the ethnic cleansing of 750,000 Palestinians from their homes in 
1948. And since that time, Israel has subjected Palestinians to a regime of 
Jewish supremacy in order to maintain its demographic majority in the land.
This ongoing Nakba is the essential context for understanding the horrifying 
violence of the past three months. Indeed, since October 7, Israeli politicians 
have been terrifyingly open about their intentions, making it clear that the 
ultimate end goal of their military assault is to ethnically cleanse Gaza of 
its 2.2 million Palestinian residents. One prominent member of the Israeli 
government put it quite plainly: “We are now rolling out the Gaza Nakba. Gaza 
Nakba 2023. That’s how it’ll end.” More recently, Prime Minister Netanyahu was 
reported as saying that he is actively working to transfer Palestinians out of 
Gaza. The problem, he said, “is which countries will take them.”
Israeli leaders are being true to their word: we are witnessing the 
continuation of the Nakba in real time. As in 1948, Palestinians are being 
driven from their homes through force of arms. As in 1948, families are being 
forced to march long distances with hastily-collected possessions on their 
backs. As in 1948, entire regions are being razed to the ground, ensuring that 
they will have no homes to return to. As in 1948, Israel is actively 
engineering the wholesale transfer of an entire population of people.
It is now eight months since we released that statement, and I believe it is 
more accurate than ever. In her letter to me, Rachel observed the irony that 
more and more Israelis are now threatening a “second Nakba” when “until 
recently Israelis denied that the Nakba ever happened.” Now however, many 
Israelis are using the term with unabashed vengeance. Through word and deed, 
Israel’s ultimate end game is becoming all too clear: It is the ethnic 
cleansing of Gaza.
This past August, in fact, the Israeli press revealed the presence of a 
government plan for Israel’s long term occupation of Gaza on “the day after.” 
According to the plan, as described in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz:
Israel will control the northern Gaza Strip and drive out the 300,000 
Palestinians still there. Major Gen. Giora Eiland, the war’s ideologue, 
proposes starving them to death, or exiling them, as a lever with which to 
defeat Hamas. The Israeli right envisions a Jewish settlement of the area, with 
vast real estate potential of convenient topography, a sea view, and proximity 
to central Israel.… The southern Gaza Strip will be left for Hamas, which will 
have to care for the destitute residents under Israeli siege, even after the 
international community loses interest in the story and moves on to other 
crises.
In other words, a “real time Nakba” is being discussed openly in Israeli 
political and academic circles. More recently, on September 15, professor Uzi 
Rabi, a prominent researcher at Tel Aviv University, actually said these words 
in a radio interview: “Remove the entire civilian population from the north, 
and whoever remains there will be lawfully sentenced as a terrorist and 
subjected to a process of starvation or extermination.”
Indeed, from the very beginning of this genocide, Israeli leaders and 
politicians have been all too transparent about their intentions. Just as the 
founders of the Zionist movement themselves, from Theodor Herzl to David 
Ben-Gurion promoted the “transfer” of the native Palestinian population to make 
way for a majority Jewish state. Then, as now, we must take these leaders at 
their word. We must take them very seriously. We can never say we didn’t know.
More than ever before, this High Holiday season calls for Jewish communities to 
reckon seriously with what Zionism has wrought. Not only in Gaza, but 
throughout the West Bank, where violence and ethnic cleansing is running 
rampant, and in Lebanon, which is now experiencing its own carnage and 
displacement, bringing the entire region ever deeper into war.
How could it be otherwise? This is what comes of an ideology and movement that 
from the beginning viewed Jewish safety as zero sum; in which our security can 
only be achieved at the expense of others, empowerment gained through the sheer 
power of superior military technology, stronger weapons and higher walls.
And finally, this High Holiday season, we must take this opportunity to ask 
ourselves collectively: Where have we fallen short? This is a critical 
question, particularly for those of us who have been active in the Palestine 
solidarity movement.
If this is indeed the season for hard truths, we must face the fact that 
despite all our efforts this past year, we failed to stop a genocide. For all 
our calls for ceasefire, on street corners and in the halls of city 
governments, for all of the mass protests and acts of civil disobedience, for 
all of the courageous student activism, a ceasefire seems farther away than 
ever at the moment.
This is not to say that there has not been genuine progress this past year. But 
how do we measure these successes against the mass killing that has occurred 
and continues to occur every single day?
Sumaya Awad of the Adalah Justice Project offered a powerful challenge on this 
point at the Socialism 2024 conference in Chicago last month:
We know that there has been a massive shift in the United States around 
Palestine. We have seen poll after poll show that the majority of Americans 
support an arms embargo, the majority of Americans don’t want to support 
Israel, are critical of Israel and yet we haven’t seen that translate into the 
mass action we need.
Despite this massive shift, we grapple with the fact that this shift came at 
the expense of how many lives lost? How many people murdered? Who paid the 
price for these people to shift? And it’s not to say that this shift is not 
tremendous and incredible and good — it is all of those things, but we must 
also grapple with the fact that lives are being lost on the daily. And that it 
is all by design and that it all can be stopped in basically a moment.
And I say all of this not to pity Palestinians, quite the opposite, nor that we 
must grieve more. Grief is necessary, but that’s not the answer. I say it all 
because … we have to keep asking ourselves — you have to ask yourselves — what 
am I doing with this knowledge? What am I doing with this education? How is it 
translating into action? How does it translate into action that does not preach 
to the choir, but preaches to those who are not yet where we need them to be?
And you have to have an answer to that question. Because a year from now, when 
you are back here, you have to have an answer. Don’t find yourself just asking 
the same question. Be ready to answer, what have I done in the last year?
I find these words deeply appropriate to the sacred imperative of this new 
year. A year from now, when we are back here, we will have to have an answer. 
We can’t find ourselves just asking the same question. We must be ready to 
answer: What did we do in the last year to bring this genocide to an end?
And years from now, when the history of this genocide is written, we will be 
asked: Did we speak out? And if so, what did we say? What did we risk?
For now, that book is still open, even if every new page is becoming 
increasingly unbearable to read. Even if the world would rather move on to 
another story.
We all have a part to play in bringing this genocide to an end soon, in our own 
day. How will we write ourselves into this book when it is finally recorded?
May we all play our part in bringing this book of the genocide to a finish. May 
it come to an end soon, in our own day. And when it does, may we come to 
understand it was only part of a larger story — an even greater book that will 
conclude with these glorious words: “Then Palestine was finally free, from the 
river to the sea.”
Brant Rosen is the rabbi of congregation Tzedek Chicago and co-founder of the 
Jewish Voice for Peace Rabbinical Council.

  


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