Ask Haviv Anything - Episode 31: The century-old harbinger of October 7, a conversation with Yardena Schwartz

Episode Date: July 27, 2025

Welcome to a special episode of Ask Haviv Anything. This episode was a live conversation with author Yardena Schwartz taped last week at Martha's Vineyard and hosted by Chabad on the Vineyard.Plea...se note: Patreon subscribers have asked us to address the dramatic pivot in the IDF's strategy in Gaza and the question of widespread hunger there. We're now working on such an episode to provide an analysis and overview of what's happening and what it means. As always, if you have suggestions for topics, please join our Patreon at https://www.patreon.com/AskHavivAnythingThe conversation with Yardena covers her book Ghosts of a Holy War about the 1929 Hebron massacre. We discuss the events of that year, what it tells us about the next century of Israeli-Palestinian fighting, and the startling parallels to October 7.This episode's sponsor asked to remain anonymous but dedicated the episode to his Slovak Jewish Holocaust-survivor grandparents who survived Auschwitz, Mauthausen and other camps and moved to Israel at the founding of the state.If you would like to sponsor an episode, please email us at haviv@askhavivanything.com⁠.Musical intro by Adam Ben Amitai.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:04 Hi, everybody. Welcome to a special episode of Ask Chaviv Anything. This episode is actually a live conversation recorded last week with Yardena Schwartz, author, journalist, which we taped at Martha's Vineyard at a special event hosted by Chabad on the Vineyard. Thank you so much to Rabbi Tzvi El Perowitz for having us. I've received a lot of requests from our Patreon supporters. I want to say this right now. It's important for an episode on God. Gaza on the latest developments and what it means, the dramatic pivot of the Israeli military effort and the question of famine in Gaza. And this is something that I've talked about, expressed opinions about, been cited by many people who then came out and talked about it.
Starting point is 00:00:51 We're going to dig into it. We're working on an analysis that is hopefully going to be very useful and really try and give a sense of where things are going, where the Israelis are at, what this very dramatic pivot actually means for the war, for Gazans, for Israelis, for the soldiers, for the future of Hamas, for the future of the Israeli-Palestinian relationship. As always, if you have suggestions for topics,
Starting point is 00:01:16 if there's something that you would like us to tackle, we look to our Patreon subscribers for suggestions of those episode topics that we then pick up and run with. So join us. It helps support the podcast. This conversation with Yardena covers her book that came out last year called Ghosts of a Holy War, which is about the 1929 Hebron Massacre,
Starting point is 00:01:38 the parallels to October 7, including and especially in Arab discourse around the events, in the Jewish responses to the events, in the religious aspect of a great deal of what was going on, we explore this moment. She will describe it for us. We will have a back and forth about what it means and what we can learn from it. It's part of the Israeli-Palestinian encounter, conflict,
Starting point is 00:02:06 century of history that many people in the West have a difficult time seeing and addressing in a serious way. It's an important piece of the puzzle. It reflects. It showcases an important piece of the puzzle that we're going to try and raise in that conversation. Before we get into the content of the episode, I want to tell you that this episode's sponsor asked to remain anonymous. first of all, thank you for your sponsorship, and he asked to dedicate this episode in honor of his Slovak Jewish grandparents who survived the Holocaust.
Starting point is 00:02:37 His Safda was sent to Auschwitz. At the selection line, she was separated from her family, she was beaten, leaving her blind in one eye. And that separation was the very reason she survived, and she was the only one to survive. Our sponsors, Sabah, was sent to various work camps, including Malthausen,
Starting point is 00:02:57 his first wife and daughter were murdered in the Holocaust. Those two survivors, Anna and Joseph, were Shiddhach or betrothed, and then married after the war. They had one child, a son they called Chaim, life. And they made Aliyah to Israel in 1948 when Chaim was 18 months old. That baby, despite hardships, they built a new life in a Moshev, which is a village in the south of Israel. and that baby, like everyone in his age group, literally grew up with the country. Thank you for that sponsorship. It helps a lot.
Starting point is 00:03:33 And thank you for that beautiful dedication. And let's get to it. Martha's Vineyard, conversation with journalists here, Dennis Schwartz, about her book, Ghosts of a Holy War on the 1939 Massacre in Hebron. Hello, everybody. Thank you so much for having us. Rabbi for the hospitality. I wanted to start us off with,
Starting point is 00:04:01 I'm just going to throw it to Yardena and introduce a little bit just this book and why this book is very significant and why this book, I think, tells us about that massacre in 1929, about a massacre 96 years ago. But that book traces a very particular arc. and it's an arc that teaches us, I think, a great deal about what happened on October 7, about the things that are not necessarily visible, obviously visible, certainly not part of the debate about October 7, about Gaza, about Israelis and Palestinians and the Western public discourse in the Western media.
Starting point is 00:04:38 And it's an arc without which, if you don't see it, you don't understand what is happening to us. 1929, August 23rd and 24th, 1929, in Chavron saw one of the worst pogroms outside of Europe that had happened to Jews. It was a program that was religious in nature, in intent, in purpose, in vocabulary, in experience. The pogromists themselves saw it as a religious experience. It included a lot of the features we saw on October 7. It included the murder of children in front of family. It included rape. It included mutilation.
Starting point is 00:05:23 And these are very particular kinds of crimes. It is one thing to murder someone in a moment of passion. It is one thing to hurt someone out of hatred. But if you're doing humiliation crimes, if you're murdering in ways that are intended to dehumanize, there is a lot of research about rape, for example, generally about rape, not just rape in war. It's not a crime of libido. It's a crime of power. And that feature of October 7 was profoundly present in August 1929. And Erdena, you convincingly argue, I think, that it was part of a larger crisis of Islam and a larger
Starting point is 00:06:14 feature of the politicized Islam of the Palestinian national movement that was very much part of the need on October 7 to humiliate the Israelis and of the psychology on the Palestinian side of both carrying out October 7 and also supporting October 7 among the population. So let's get started with basically describe to us that event, that historical event. A lot of people have heard about it, What actually happened on August 23rd, 1929? So first, I should say, I began writing this book in 2019. And I never imagined that when I was writing about the massacre of 1929, that this would become so relevant. I was still writing my book on October 7th, 2023. and my intention was not to tie it to events of today in such a dramatic, horrific, haunting way.
Starting point is 00:07:18 But sadly, what we saw on October 7th was chillingly similar to what happened on August 24th, 1929 in Ghevron. And what happened that day was families, entire families, were locked inside their homes, hiding inside rooms beneath furniture, behind furniture, waiting as they heard rioters outside their homes, shouting Allahou Akbar, chanting Itpach al-Jhiyahud, murder the Jews, shouting Palestine is our land, the Jews are our dogs. They were led by Muslim clerics and Muslim teachers leading the mobs. There were about 3,000 men marching through the ancient Jewish quarter of Hevron, one of the most ancient Jewish communities in the world. Jews had lived in Chavron for thousands of years, even through exile. Hebron had always been home to at least a small presence of Jews.
Starting point is 00:08:17 And the reason they lived there was because Chavron is the burial place of the Jewish patriarchs and matriarchs. The tomb of the patriarchs and matriarchs is believed to house the bones of our forefathers and mothers. At that time, it was off limits to Jews because in the same time, seventh century, it became home to the Ibrahimi mosque. And at the time, the Jews living in Hebron lived as essentially second class citizens. Hebron was home to about 20,000 Muslims and about 800 Jews. And the Jews lived, many of them in the ghetto. It was known as the ghetto, it was the Jewish quarter. And those who lived outside of the ghetto lived in homes they rented from Arab landlords. And I say this because before the massacre on August 24th, 1929, the Jews living in Chavron,
Starting point is 00:09:10 the reason they were able to exist there and live there, just 800 Jews, amid 20,000 Arabs, is because they lived in peace and harmony. This wasn't just Jews living side by side with their Muslim neighbors. This was that they were friends. They owned businesses together. They rented their homes from Arab landlords. They drank coffee together. About half of the Jews living in Chavron.
Starting point is 00:09:32 were Arabic-speaking native Jews, Sfaridim, Mizrahim. And on August 24th, 1929, it was their neighbors who slaughtered them in their homes. 3,000 Muslim men out of a population of 20,000. So very large portion of the population participated in this massacre, including Arab policemen, since most of the policemen in Chavron were Arabs all except one who was Jewish. and the chief police officer in Chavron was British. This was during the British mandate. The British authorities had essentially ignored all the warning signs that told them that this riot.
Starting point is 00:10:14 Riots were going to break out in Jerusalem. They broke out a day before the massacre began in Chavron. But the day the riots reached Chavron, that was when we saw the climax of what had begun. in Jerusalem. And over the course of a week, 133 Jews were murdered across Palestine. Hundreds were wounded, but more than half of them were killed in Hevron. The place that had been a beacon of coexist in Palestine, among Jews, it was considered one of the safest places for Jews to live in Palestine to the point where in summers, Jews from Tel Aviv and Jerusalem would vacation in Hevron because it was in the mountains. It was, you know, a cooler climate. Imagining Jews,
Starting point is 00:10:59 in Tel Aviv today vacationing in Chavron is quite the mental, the, you know, the mental gymnastics there are really hard to imagine. It was the Martha's Vineyard, I would say, of the mountains of. Exactly. Yeah, so that day, the men, women, and children who were hiding in their homes, hoping that these riots wouldn't reach them. when rioters did break into their homes, the people often saw, you know, friends, neighbors, coworkers among the people coming to kill them.
Starting point is 00:11:38 67 unarmed men, women, and children were murdered that day in the most horrific of ways. Most of the people were mutilated. Women and teenage girls were raped before their fathers, husbands, children. Infants were slaughtered in their mothers. mother's arms. People are burnt alive and the police did nothing, if not participate in the massacre. It's important to note that more than 200 Jews, at least 200 Jews were saved that day by their Muslim neighbors. At least a dozen Arab families took Jews into their homes to hide them or stood guard outside of Jewish homes, preventing the mobs from entering those homes. And some of them
Starting point is 00:12:28 were stabbed in the process. But sadly, the Jewish community of Hevron was decimated and exiled from Hebron. So the British authorities evacuated them and told them never to return. And so from 1929 until 1967, when Israel conquered Heverroen from Jordan, which, which had been occupying Judean Samaria from 1948 until 1967. This was the first time that Jews had entered Hevron since 1929. There were some families who returned after 1929 against the orders of the British and actually against the wishes of the Zionist movement, which had not wanted them to go back because it felt they couldn't protect them.
Starting point is 00:13:13 The British, obviously, could not protect them. And the British were the only ones controlling Heveron at the time. And so the Jews who returned a year later, they soon had to leave again when riots broke out again in 1936. But this ancient Jewish quarter was destroyed. Ancient synagogues were looted and destroyed. There was this Jewish clinic called the Hadassah Clinic that for decades had served needy Arabs and Jews alike in Hevron. It provided them with free treatment in Hevron. And that too was destroyed. And the pharmacist who had worked there for 40 years. He was actually a Turkish Jew, you know, spoke Arabic. He had actually lost a leg because when he was treating a patient, he fell down some stairs. He too was slaughtered. And his daughter was raped. His wife was killed. I mean, when you talk about the way in which people were killed, it was absolutely just this, just the most horrific. methods of torture were used that day. And again, this was two decades before the state of Israel
Starting point is 00:14:27 was born. Jews at the time represented about 17% of the population. The population was less than one million people. And the language used that day was completely religious. The rioters were praising God, claiming to be acting in defense of Islam, in defense. of Al-Axa. And the reason they were was because the entire reason these riots broke out was because they followed an entire year of propaganda, a propaganda campaign led by the leader of Palestinian Muslims under British rule, the Grand Mufti, Hajamina Hussein, you might know that name. He began a campaign of propaganda about a year earlier in 1928, claiming that the Jews of Palestine were planning to conquer Al-Aqq Samar.
Starting point is 00:15:20 to rebuild the ancient Jewish temple in Jerusalem. And that campaign of propaganda was extremely successful. It was successful in distracting the Muslim population from the Grand Mufti's own failures and his own corruption and nepotism and misuse of funds that were meant for Muslim institutions because the Grand Mufti oversaw all Muslim holy sites in Palestine. He was essentially the equivalent of chief rabbi of Palestine, but the chief Muslim official in Palestine. And he had, you know, among his various misdeeds, he had funneled 70,000 British pounds away from Muslim holy sites and Sharia courts and Muslim schools into building his mansions in Jerusalem. He had established this hotel in Jerusalem, the palace hotel, atop a Muslim cemetery. He employed actually a member of the Haganah, interestingly enough.
Starting point is 00:16:20 And so he faced all kinds of criticism in the Arabic press and from rivals, political rivals. And once he began this campaign of disinformation surrounding Al-Axa and this supposed Jewish plot to destroy it, much of that criticism melted away. And in Hevron, one of the reasons they were able to convince Muslim leaders in Hebron were able to convince friends to turn on their neighbors was because, that propaganda campaign extended to the Ibrahimi Mosque, the Tomb of the Patriarchs in Hevron. So Muslim leaders in Hebron told worshippers in the mosques in Hevron that once the Jews conquered Al-Axa in Jerusalem, the Jews of Hevron were going to conquer Ibrahimi Mosque and turn it into a synagogue. Why does the story begin in 1929 for you?
Starting point is 00:17:15 And in the book you talk about it as the starting point, the year zero of, In 1920, you had the Nebimusa riots, religious a little bit in terms of the language, violence erupts. Hajamin leads a lot of it. In 1936, you have the beginning of the Great Revolt, which is when hundreds of Jews will die, thousands of Arabs will die. The British have to rush troops to the land. There's three years of terrible violence. What is special about 1929 that makes you say that that is where our story of the Israeli-Palestinian encounter, conflict should begin.
Starting point is 00:17:55 Well, 1929 wasn't the first time tensions had erupted in Palestine between Arabs and Jews. They had been simmering for years. As you mentioned, in 1920, there was the Nebimusa riots. But 1929 was the first mass casualty event of this conflict. And it's also when the forces that drive this conflict today, particularly Alaksa Mosque and this supposed Jewish plot, which continues today to destroy Al-Axa and rebuild the Jewish temple, this is when that disinformation campaign begins. And we see how it has continued to fuel violence for the last century. I mean, it's no coincidence that October 7th was called the Al-Axa
Starting point is 00:18:35 flood. It's no coincidence that Hamas presents itself as the defenders of Al-Axa against the Jews. Their logo, their icon is Al-Axa with guns in front of a lot. And they're a lot of, it. The entire resistance, if you listen to their own words, it's about protecting Al-Axa, liberating Al-Axa. When the Palestinian leaders talk about liberation, it's not a liberation in the sense that we know it in the West. It's a liberation of holy Muslim land from Jewish contamination. These aren't my word. These aren't their words. So that's really my next question, which is your book, that's your main thesis. Your main thesis traces this century-long arc
Starting point is 00:19:24 and argues that there's something at work here that isn't the usual run of discussion about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, at least in the West, that it's competing nationalisms, that it's an anti-colonial struggle, that it's overland. All of these paradigms, you suggest, they're not what the actual drivers of the violence, ever say they're dealing with.
Starting point is 00:19:50 There's certain ideological elite, certain, you know, diaspora intellectuals at Columbia University who describe it that way, but not the people driving the actual events in the land for a century. Al-Axa is in danger. The Jews are defilers. That's something we heard on October 7. That's something we heard in Chavron in 1929. Hajim means religious propaganda.
Starting point is 00:20:13 They called October 7 the Al-Axa flood. They called the violence of 1929. the Al-Burak Rebellion. Al-Burak is Muhammad's horse, who he places in the Sunni tradition at the Kota, at the Western Wall, and then goes onto the Temple Mount to where the shrine is,
Starting point is 00:20:31 the dome of the rock, and that is obviously above a boulder where he steps in a sense to heaven. That's his stepping stone for his ascension. And so there's also holiness to the Al-Burak wall, as it is called, in the Muslim tradition. That is the beginning of an arc in which the violent politics, those specifically religious violent politics, are fully formed.
Starting point is 00:20:56 And it hasn't changed. And even if you have other pieces of Palestinian politics, Fatah might speak sometimes in different language, it always seems to come back to this narrative of the Jewish defiling of the land and of the crisis of Islam, of Islam being pushed back. The problem isn't Jews, excuse me, the problem isn't more. Jewish nationalism, the problem is Islam losing ground in the need to reconsecrate that Islamic land. That was a question. I'm sorry. No, and I'll take it from there. I mean, it's also the beginning or an early spark of the rejectionism that has characterized the Palestinian movement for the last century, the rejection of living together in equality.
Starting point is 00:21:45 So there was coexistence before 1929, but coexistence as long as Jews were second-class citizens, as long as Jews were kept out of places like the Tomb of the Patriarchs, as long as Jews didn't have a role in leadership, for instance, in Chavro. And there was just one Jew on city council, one Jewish police officer, even that was pushing it. there was this allergic reaction to this idea that under the British, Jews would become equal citizens. Jews would be allowed to immigrate into Palestine because under the Ottoman Empire, before the British took over, before the British mandate of Palestine, under Ottoman rule of Palestine, there were quotas on Jewish immigration. Jews were restricted from purchasing land. Jews were already the majority in Jerusalem, and yet they were restricted from purchasing land, even. even in Jewish quarters. So there was this rejection of any notion of Jewish power. And that was very evident in 1929 with these cries of Palestine is our land, the Jews are
Starting point is 00:23:02 our dogs. You know, there was this rejection of this idea that Jews would have any kind of equality in Palestine and a rejection of a shared future. So the Grand Mufti, after inciting these riots, he was able to keep the powerful positions that the British had actually appointed him to. And he became even more powerful. And after inciting the riots that characterized the revolts that began in 1936, the British began to have negotiations with Jewish leadership in Palestine to figure out what could be done. The British had already decided they wanted out of Palestine, but they didn't know how they would get out. And they began to talk about potentially a two-state solution.
Starting point is 00:23:46 This was the first time they didn't call it that. But they talked about dividing the land between an independent Arab state and independent Jewish state with self-governance. And the Jewish leadership wasn't totally thrilled by the idea because it would give just 20% to the Jews and something like 80% to the Arabs. but they were excited that this was even just, you know, being spoken about, some kind of independence in the land of Israel for the first time in 2000 years. Meanwhile, the Grand Mufti was adamantly opposed not just to the idea of two states, but to the idea that the 400,000 Jews then living in Palestine would even be able to live there. He said when the British asked him in 1936, what should be done with the Jews now living here, he said we can get to that later once we get to self-governance. Arab self-governance. And they said, well, can they stay? And he said no. And that was his first rejection, of course, in 1947, he and every other Arab leader rejected the UN partition
Starting point is 00:24:48 plan. You know, this is all to say that if this conflict was truly about land and who gets to live where, this conflict would have been solved years ago, decades ago. 2000. There was a two-state offer that was rejected with no alternative. 2008, even more generous offer rejected out of hand by Abbas. You know, this notion that settlements, however problematic they may be, and we can talk about that, this idea that settlements are the key obstacle to peace is a fallacy. I mean, there were less than 200,000 settlers living in the West Bank in 2000 when Arafat rejected the two-state solution. Today, there were. more than nearly 500,000.
Starting point is 00:25:37 So it just shows that, you know, sharing this land is not an option for one side of the equation. And, you know, maybe that's true that today Israel is led by a government that also doesn't want a two-state solution. But that is relatively recent that set. So you take time in the book describing the murderers themselves. talking about the murders as a religious spiritual experience. And to me, that was a kind of linchpin of a window of understanding. Something else is happening here. You will read the New York Times, for example, for 50 years and not see this thing.
Starting point is 00:26:27 Now, there are many things happening in Palestinian society, many things happening in Israeli society, many pieces to this narrative and how they understand their history and their future and what is happening to them. But there is a piece of it that is what this book is about that is almost completely missing from the Western debate, Western discussion, Western observation of this conflict, and without which almost nothing makes sense. One of the real powerful questions for me after October 7, and I experienced this as a young soldier in the Second Intifada, was I basically, My platoon was in a checkpoint in the Northern West Bank where a suicide bomber blew up and his car blew up. And it was multiple, I don't know, few dozens of kilos of TNT in the car. It was something like five bus bombings worth of TNT blew up in that car at that checkpoint. So that's a very successful day if you're a soldier at that checkpoint in the middle of the second Intifada.
Starting point is 00:27:23 I remember my 19-year-old self asking, what the hell are they thinking? What are they going to accomplish? They're going to blow up a school bus in Jerusalem. Then what? what happens then? What do they actually suspect is then going to come? Why would this make sense to them? And that sent me on a journey. And I suddenly learned from Palestinian writers about the Algerian example that eight years of terrorism kicked the French out after 130 years. And Arafat genuinely thought that's what was going to happen in the Second Intifada.
Starting point is 00:27:51 And I learned about, but then there's this element, this deep religious arc. And in the West, it's totally missing. It's totally invisible. And if you bring it up, they think you're propagandizing. But it's almost all Hamas. ever talked about for 40 years since its founding in 1987. And it's all they talked about in 1929. And it's most of what they talked about in the Second Intifada, including, by the way, secular nationalists in Fatah, for example. This is a profound peace. And so my question is,
Starting point is 00:28:25 why can't Westerners see this? And I just, I really, this is not an argument about, lo, look at everything screwed up on the Palestinian side. There are many things on the Palestinian side, they're not this. There's many things moving, all these moving pieces all at once. This is a huge one according to them. Why can't a Westerner look at this and see it for what it is? Or even just see that it is before they then try to understand it. So, as you know, the second intifada is known in Arabic as the Alaksa intifada. I mean, the second intifada wasn't about globalized the intifada and shaking. off the occupation. This was defending Al-Axa. It's called the Al-Axan Intifada because what sparked it was
Starting point is 00:29:10 Sharon's visit to the Temple Mount that awakened these fears of a Jewish takeover of Al-Axa, despite the fact that Al-Axah has been in control of Israel since 1967, and we still haven't destroyed it yet, and never will. And this reverence of martyrdom, and terrorism within the educational system in Palestinian society and Palestinian media and leadership, not just in Hamas, but also in Fatah. You know, there's a reason there's the martyrs fund. When you talk about it, you're right. You're considered a propagandist or an Islamophobic, but these are the facts.
Starting point is 00:29:59 When there are reports in the EU about how problematic, the education system is in Palestinian society, whether it's in the UNRWA schools or Palestinian schools run by the PA. It is a fact that children are being taught to aspire to become martyrs. They're being taught that the greatest way to glorify their people is to become martyrs. In the entirely religious mode of thought, not as Marxist, you know, revolutionaries in Vietnam. entirely Islamic religious modes. That is the discourse. That is the vocabulary.
Starting point is 00:30:40 And it is there for a century now. And it is incredibly difficult to have a conversation about it in the West. And I think the reason why it's difficult to have a conversation about it in the West is because so many news organizations will not cover it.
Starting point is 00:30:53 Not only will they not cover it when I was reporting from Israel for a decade for publications like Time, the New York Times, the economists, when I would put pieces like this in my stories about, you know, from their own words, from their own mouths, whether it was Hamas or Palestinians I interviewed in the West Bank or in Jerusalem, those elements of my stories were almost always edited out. And in 2021, I did an investigative piece for foreign policy about the Palestinian education system and how it is tantamount to child abuse, what they're teaching children and how I interviewed. school children as young as seven, nine showing me what they were learning and they were literally
Starting point is 00:31:40 pictures of terrorists portrayed as heroes of their people. And it's really impossible to imagine foreign policy magazine publishing that story today. There's this willful denial, voluntary ignorance. I don't know what you want to call it. but this denial of what they're telling us, what they're doing. And this idea that if we just reflect our own issues, our own struggles onto this conflict over there, that will somehow make it easier to understand. But in reality, it's made it impossible to understand because we're looking at it through the lens, through a Western lens, through a lens of, you know, racism in America. so many writers on Palestine in this country try to imagine that what's happening in Israel and Gaza and the West Bank is exactly like, you know, the African American experience.
Starting point is 00:32:46 And it is just not. It's just not the case. And I think one of the reasons why, aside from the American tendency to do that, to kind of just look at other countries through our own land, and imagine that they're just like America is also this, the fact that in the West, we haven't had religious wars for centuries. You know, holy wars are over for us. But they are not over in the Middle East. That's evident in Syria.
Starting point is 00:33:17 It's evident all over the Middle East, not just the Israel, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. And yet this decision within the legacy media for which I I once wrote, the decision to ignore that is helping to fuel this conflict and dooming us to another century of massacres. Because when you can't understand a conflict, it is never going to be resolved. And finally, this is my last question that I want to try and sift her. And then we're going to open it up to your questions. Speeches, questions go wild. The 1920 Nepi Musa riots convinced the Jews that they are unprotected, and they founded the Haganah. But the Haganah was this very loose voluntary network, basically, of people. And then in 1929, by the way, the riots, Chavron was the big massacre,
Starting point is 00:34:14 but there was also a smaller massacre in Svat, and there was in, I think, in Motsah, and as you said, in Jerusalem. And British officers in Svath, for example, literally walked away when they saw the crowd coming. And so the Jews watched the British leave, and they had, I don't think a single gun in the entire Jewish community of Safed. And they were massacred right there in front of the British. Hebron, the British police officer was literally on his horse as teenage Jews were slaughtered, clinging to his horse trying to get him to help. And he only fired his gun when the rioters turned on him.
Starting point is 00:34:49 Yeah. And that experience of the Haganan not being enough in its state at the time. And the British being totally undependable in the most dire situation. created a new mobilization for the Haganah and something I never knew and learned for the very first time and had never had known so little about I never even knew it was interesting question, which was after 1929, the Haganah was no longer purely Ashkenazi, which I want you to get into. Talk to us about that, and I should just say in 1936 to 39, that arc, that violence, the great revolt, the, the, British need the Haganah's help to suppress the violence. And so they actually start giving the Haganah proper military training and weapons. The Jewish response is a unity. The Jewish response is a bolstering of strength and capability, a bolstering of boldness, and a coalescing into a
Starting point is 00:35:48 state that could defend itself by 1948. And that's the Jewish response to the sense that this violence wasn't about something the Jews were doing. It was much, much more fundamental than that. So tell us a little bit about that Jewish response. So prior to 1929, Zionism was not a dominating, unifying, rallying force in Palestine. It was actually highly controversial. It was almost exclusively an Ashkenazi movement. You mean among the Jews? Secular. Among the Jews.
Starting point is 00:36:19 Yeah. So Hebron, one of the reasons why Hebron became the epicenter of the riots and the face of the riots of Palestine. of 1929 was because this wasn't a community of Zionists. The Jews of Hebron were pious, religious Jews living a quiet existence centered around the Torah. Two dozen of the victims were Yeshiva students, including the protagonist of my book, which I probably shouldn't have said. Sorry, spoiler. A young man named David from Memphis, Tennessee opens her book. It's very accessible, is what I'm saying. But he was, yeah, he was not, he was not Zionist. Anti-Zionist. He went to study in the Yeshiva, not anything else. He is one of the people
Starting point is 00:37:04 massacred that day. Yeah. So one of the reasons it was so galvanizing for the old Yashuv, which was not Zionist at that point, was because they had believed that the return of the Jewish masses to Zion should only be achieved through the will of God, the arrival of the Messiah. This is not something that should be done by man, certainly not by secular. European Jews just coming over. Yeah, exactly. And the fact that the Jews of Hebron, these non-Zionist, pious Jews,
Starting point is 00:37:41 were the ones who paid the heaviest price and the fact that the British were completely unreliable. They couldn't rely on any foreign power to protect them. The Jews who had opposed Zionism until 1929, many of them realized that Zionism was their only hope that if they were going to live in land of Israel, even if they were religious and disagreed with the secular leaders of the Zionist movement at the time, they needed Zionism. They needed a Jewish state. They needed their own army to protect them. And this is when the Haganah went from being an almost exclusively Ashkenazi operation to
Starting point is 00:38:21 to having Sfardi Mizrahi Jews who were much more traditional, until then very suspicious of the secular European Zionists. This is when many Spartan and Mizrahi began to join the Haganah, and Haganah became a much stronger, more centralized fighting force because they realized that they were completely inequipped and unprepared for what happened in 1929. And it also sparked a rebellion within the Haganah, because the Haganah, their motto was restraint, defense only. The Haganah was not about preemptive attacks, retaliatory attacks.
Starting point is 00:39:03 And so after 1929, we saw the emergence of the Irgun, which was started by dissenting factions within the Haganah, who believed that we shouldn't just be about defending communities. No, we need to preempt attacks. We need to carry out retaliatory attacks to prevent further attacks. And so the Zionist movement was strengthened by these riots. And it's just one example of many in which these violent acts, which are meant to extinguish the Jewish power, Jewish strength, Jewish unity, have the opposite effect. And we've seen that on October 7th to devastating consequences. I should say that this holy war is not between Islam and Judaism. It's between those who weaponize religion and glorify violence.
Starting point is 00:39:56 And I think that's really important to remember. And you see that in the 200 Jews who were saved by their Muslim neighbors in 1929. Hundreds, if not thousands of Jewish Israelis were saved by Muslim Israelis in October 7th, whether it was Bedouins in southern Israel who risked their lives to save Israelis fleeing the Nova Massacre, Muslim men who were working at the Nova Massacre, sorry, at the Nova Festival. Many of them were killed. Some were taken hostage to Gaza. And, you know, there is a very clear source of this incitement. And I think there has a bit enough attention on eradicating that incitement and doing more to end the child abuse that is the Palestinian education system.
Starting point is 00:40:50 And I think that, you know, maybe it's easier for international leaders or peacemakers to just force people to the table to negotiate. But you can't negotiate anything when the foundation isn't there for those leaders to say yes and tell their people, yes, I just negotiated with the enemy. If they're being told that Jews have no right to live in this land, if they're being told that there's no, Jewish history in this land, why should they want to share this land? But that is what they're being taught. And so long as that is not a target of all peace efforts of changing that foundation so that they can say yes when the next Tuesday, if we ever, I mean, I feel silly. Even talking about a two state solution right now because all polls show that both sides aren't truly interested in, and, you know, the possibility isn't there right now. But I do believe.
Starting point is 00:41:50 that at the end of the day, self-determination for both sides is something that is the only way we will see an end to these endless cycles of violence. Just outed her as a secret lefty. You were all witnesses. Let's take questions. You are, I just want to say, there is a recording. It's going on a podcast. Yes, over here, Harvey. You can't resolve a conflict unless you understand it implies that you can resolve it if you do understand it. Do you think that's true? Do you think you can resolve it? Your statement, just to repeat, your statement that you can't resolve a conflict if you don't understand it implies that you can if you do.
Starting point is 00:42:32 Do you think you can resolve this conflict if you do understand it? I, Your Donna Schwartz, cannot solve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. But I do think that those in power who have the resources. and the time and the desire to see peace in Israel, Palestine, should and need to focus their efforts on the true sources of the conflict, which are the disinformation, the incitement, the exploitation of religion. I think that it's at least worth seeing what focusing on those things and empowering the moderates, empowering those in Palestinian society who do want. peace because there are plenty of Israelis and Jews around the world who would be happy to share this land and even if it means evicting Jews from their homes, which obviously we did in Gaza, you can see what happened there. But again, that was because the foundation wasn't there
Starting point is 00:43:31 to actually see peace. But if a leadership, a Palestinian leadership emerges, which does acknowledge Jewish sovereignty over at least some part of the historic Jewish homeland and there are Palestinians who do. There are Palestinian leaders who have not been empowered the way they should be by international leaders and by NGOs and human rights organizations. Many Palestinians who do speak out for a peace of enforced to flee the country for the sake of speaking out. And I think that so long as that is the case, there will never be a different kind of Palestinian leadership. And so I think that, if the people who want, who truly want peace to actually focus their efforts on empowering a different kind of Palestinian leadership, I think we could see different outcome.
Starting point is 00:44:27 I think the West has to start seriously understanding religion and learning about it again. And so in my podcast, we have, you know, one episode dedicated to this religious discourse because it's deep and it's profound. One episode is explicitly, here is the theological lineage of basically mostly Egyptian, geologians that produce Hamas and al-Qaeda. And you know what's interesting about them? That in 1860, the teachers who would teach a guy named Abdouh, who would teach, a guy named Rashid Rida, who is the teacher of Hassan al-Bana, the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood, which Hamas is the Muslim Brotherhood chapter established in Gaza, 1987, the great, great grandpa
Starting point is 00:45:04 of Hamas intellectually was a former who wanted Islam to build universities and to bring Islam into the modern age. And that turned into, in other words, learned this both. both the strangeness of it, the fascinating, the depth of it, and also how it all went wrong, we have to start teaching about it. And so, you know, what can I do about it? I can make a podcast episode. But Westerners really need to begin to understand.
Starting point is 00:45:27 This is deep, serious religion. And also, it's why nothing can ever move forward. There will always be this deep, serious religion in some corner of Palestinian politics coming in to destroy it for everybody else. Over here. Yes, Alan. I know the name of somebody here. With all due respect, I fundamentally. disagree with both of you. I don't think this is about religion. I think religion is a cover for
Starting point is 00:45:51 hatred. And the evidence of that comes from a lot of sources. Number one, the Saudis are more religious than anybody in the world, and they're prepared to make peace because it's in their economic interest to do so. This is going to sound surprising. But the guy who wrote probably the second best book on this after you is Benjamin Nattanoe's father, who proved that the Inquisition had nothing to do with religion, that the Inquisition was all about anti-Jewish racism and anti-Semitism and was the prelude to the Holocaust. And so I think even if we were to persuade all the religious people in the world to change their religious views and become more accommodating, the deep, deep, deep profound hatred of the Jew is at the core of all this.
Starting point is 00:46:38 And we have to address that problem rather than the cover, which is the religious problem. one more little point, and that is that the problem for all of this, the superficial problem, was caused by a Jewish guy named Samuels, who was the High Commissioner of Palestine for Britain, and he came and he picked the Grand Mufti. He was the one who selected the leader of the Arab people. They didn't call themselves Palestinians, the Arab people, and he gave the Grand Mufti, who had nothing to do with the religion. I guarantee you the Grand Mufti doesn't believe in God.
Starting point is 00:47:14 didn't believe in God. The Grand Mufti was purely a Hitler-hating politician, and he knew how to use religion in the same way Hitler knew how to use nationalism. And I think we're falling for it when we give them too much credit for having these based on truly religious beliefs. I'm sorry to be a naysayer here, but that's my view. Well, you're right. It is absolutely about hatred, but it's a hatred fueled by a hatred fueled by religion. And I say that because the hatred of Jews within a certain brand of Islam has to do
Starting point is 00:47:54 with the fact that Judaism is the bedrock of Islam. If you look at Islam, I mean, Abraham is perceived as a prophet in Islam, which is why the Ibrahimian mosque and the tomb of the patriarchs, the temple mount, there's a reason why Al-Axa was built atop the temple mount. There was no hatred worse than the Catholic hatred toward the Jews. Jews, never. I mean, Islamic hatred was nothing compared to Catholic hatred toward the Jews, the Inquisition, the pogroms, and all that. And that changed overnight. The Pope said, no, come on, they're the father religion. Yeah, they're the Abraham. You turn that positively. Religion can be exploited and manipulated and change. The devil quote scripture and the devil can
Starting point is 00:48:38 quote Quran. I respectfully, and with great trepidation, I just want to say, I'll tell you, I think I disagree because, yes, a preexisting, almost primordial hatred drove the violence and drove the couching of that violence in religious terms. That primordial preexisting hatred is originally religious. And you're not, you're not just right about Catholicism. That is what it is. You know, anti-Semitism is born in one place and one moment. And all anti-Semitism since is a copy. that uses that one anti-Semitism and is a branch of it. And that moment is early Christianity.
Starting point is 00:49:20 The Jews produce this other religion. This other religion says they are the fulfillment of the Jewish Ark of redemption. And the Jews don't accept that fulfillment of that arc. And so they call into question the validity of that redemption of Christ. And that is how Augustine, St. Augustine himself, the great saint of love, writes, the Jews must be oppressed for all time as a message to my people, my people being Christians that the Jews did not accept Christ and therefore must be oppressed. This is a man who doesn't want to oppress anyone on earth except the Jews because of that rejection of Christ. And that secularizes in Marxism but doesn't actually the Jews for early Christianity, when the People's Crusade or going down the Rhine River, you might have heard if anybody here is a big fan of the free press. I've talked about this on the free press.
Starting point is 00:50:07 So I apologize if you heard this before. But when the People's Crusade, the First Crusade is the Zeroth Crusade. The crusade before the First Crusade is 40,000 peasants marching down the Rhine River to the Holy Land to save the Holy Land. The first Muslim army, they encounter of Selju Cavalry massacres them 20 kilometers into Muslim territory. But before they get completely massacred and wiped out by the first Muslim army, they encounter, they kill probably a third of all the Jews of the Rhine. And as they're killing them, we have these diaries, we have these testimonies of Catholics and of Jews. They tell them it is because you rejected Christ. for all of Christianity, the fact that Christianity depends on the Jews and doesn't, is the source of, and the Pope didn't one day turn it off, the Holocaust made it embarrassing.
Starting point is 00:50:52 And therefore the Pope then declared, oh, by the way, you're our older brother in Vatican II and even parallel covenant. You can even go to heaven as a Jew because God doesn't lie in the first covenant, even if there's a better second one. But that's all because of the Holocaust and not anything else. And when you read the Koran as a text, as a historical text, it's about, it's the memory of Muhammad by the people who came later. When you read the Quran as a historical text, you discover that there's exactly the same arc. At the beginning of Islam of Muhammad's mission,
Starting point is 00:51:22 he wants the Jews to convert. And so he institutes in Islam all of this Jewish stuff. You fast, we fast. You prayed in one direction. We pray in that direction. We're basically you, but, you know, true and better. And then at the end, the Jews have not convermed. And then you get in the Korandi statements about massacring them and about murdering them and about at the end of time, every tree and every rock will tell us a Jew is hiding behind me.
Starting point is 00:51:46 And Luther, at the founding of Protestantism, he begins by talking about, you know why the Jews aren't Christian? Because we hate them and we oppress them. Maybe we didn't oppress them so much. They'd all convert. And by the end of his career, he is advocating doing to Jews what the Nazis claimed to be doing to Jews. Not what the Nazis actually did to Jews, but what they claimed to do to Jews. Concentration calves and ripping them out of their communities and destroying them socially so that they would forcibly convert. And so it's always, always been one thing. And that thing is the Jews stand in the way of the
Starting point is 00:52:14 redemption of the world because they reject the great truth. And by the way, if you go to the Columbia University campus, what are the Jews doing? Why is everything Palestine? Everything's not Palestine. What they mean is everything is Zionism. And what they mean by everything is Zionism is standing in the way of the redemption of the world in our great ideological Marxist vision that we all know is true. And the Jews won't do it. Zionism is the distillation of all bad things that we have learned to hate about the West. And that idea that the Jew stands in the way of the redemption of the world, that's all anti-Semitism ever was. And it's born in religion. And yes, so they borrow this thing, dress it up. He was this corrupt, probably deeply unbelieving, horrific guy. He, by the way,
Starting point is 00:52:53 murdered Palestinian political factions who opposed him in the Great Revolt in 37, et cetera, the Nostrishibis. But so you're absolutely right. But also before that step that you mentioned, there was, the religious step. Okay. I think we all agree. Yeah. I just want to note for for podcasters who maybe can't see you, I just got Alan Dershowitz to say he agrees to my argument. Is it important? Okay, we'll go over here. Yes. This is the last question. I apologize. But you still have to sit down out of politeness. Yes. The military strategy in the Gaza war now is pretty much to prioritize a military victory over freeing the hostages, although freeing the hostages is a huge priority as well. My question is not about strategy or which strategy you think is right or you favor.
Starting point is 00:53:56 It's about the meaning to Israeli society because most Israelis that I speak to say that they have, the release of the hostages has to be privileged over absolutely everything else, including military victory over Hamas. And when I ask why, they say, because that's who we are, that's Israeli society. So what does it mean going forward for Israeli society that, in fact, a military victory has pretty much been prioritized? That's a great question. I think that you're right.
Starting point is 00:54:42 This isn't just anecdotal from your conversations. It's reflected in nearly every poll of Israelis going back nearly a year. A vast majority of Israelis, not just on the left, if whatever is left of the left, want this war to end in exchange for the release of the hostages. And that is why there is so much anger at the government for claiming to, and telling Israelis that this military, that the military force is going to free the hostages when Israelis have seen that, in fact,
Starting point is 00:55:19 the military force has, in many occasions, led to the death of hostages at the hands of Hamas, of course, because Hamas has told the captors to kill hostages if they hear the IDF approaching. And, you know, this sense among Israelis, that we are all together is one of the most beautiful things of Israeli society.
Starting point is 00:55:43 You know, it's a family. And when family is left behind, you feel debilitated. And I think the reason why so many Israelis haven't been able to move on from October 7th, an Israeli society has not moved on from October 7th is not because Hamas is still standing.
Starting point is 00:55:59 I mean, that's also obviously a huge problem. But the fact that there are still hostages in Gaza and, you know, that so many have died, there as a result of this war continuing and this war not ending in exchange for the lease of the hostages, which at the end of the day, Hamas for all, I have nothing positive to say about Hamas. But at the end of the day, Hamas has offered to release the hostages in exchange for the end of the war. Of course, then you have the conversation about, well, how can you end the war with Hamas still standing? And then you need to go back to the early
Starting point is 00:56:36 days of the war when there was talk about regime change. I think in the aftermath of October 7th, most Israelis expected that there would be regime change in Gaza, not just a two-year-long war to kill every last Hamas fighter, which is, you know, most Israelis believe now that that won't be possible. And, you know, I think that there are a lot of missed opportunities to empower some kind of alternative governing force that could fill the vacuum. because so long as there is no alternative to Hamas, Hamas is going to stand. That's what a lot of Israelis feel. I should just say, when you ask Israelis, do you want to destroy Hamas? The answer is yes. And when you say to them, if Hamas remains in Gaza, will we be fighting another war in Gaza in five years?
Starting point is 00:57:20 The answer of most of Israelis is yes. And so you say to them, so why would you want to end the war now? And that follow-up question is when you hear this thing that breaks my heart, for Gazans, for God's sake, and also for Israelis, and also for the hostages. and that is they don't trust this Israeli government to know how to do it. When you see 70% of Israelis saying we're pulling, we have to pull out of Gaza, it's done, it can't be it, we can't get any more. If they don't think their government can win, then you cut your losses, get your people out. And yeah, our one job between now and the war five years from now is to not let them kidnap anybody.
Starting point is 00:57:55 That's what you hear at protest. That's what you hear when you ask Israelis who want to pull out. By the way, some of them deepen the from the right, some of them having spent 250 days fighting Hamas in Gaza. And so Israeli society is having this conversation that some of you might know, if you heard me talk about this, that I blame on our government. I mean, our government has managed to not speak to the Israelis, not, you don't know what the strategy is in Gaza. The Trump administration is having trouble understanding what the Israeli strategy is in Gaza. I'm going to tell you a dark secret. Don't tell anybody outside of this room, this tent, that neither does any Israeli. What the hell is
Starting point is 00:58:29 the strategy in Gaza? Now, I think that I, based on some military action, experts that I talk to and read and kind of understand and try to describe to people what I think the Israeli government thinks, but nobody's doing the work of actually telling anybody. And so it's a loss of trust that prevents Israelis from believing that that's possible. But I should also say, maybe we should end the war and take those hostages and let Hamas retake Gaza. Maybe that's, maybe that's the best scenario possible, maybe because this government can't succeed in the actual war and maybe it's a whole new kind of war that nobody would succeed in. But just understand the costs, not to Israel. If Hamas retakes Gaza, nobody knows how to rebuild Gaza. And Hamas will never do
Starting point is 00:59:15 anything in Gaza except plan the next war. And so there is no one on this earth who actually cares about Gazans who wants Hamas to win this. There are a whole lot of people who want Hamas to win this. Not one of them because they care about Gazans. Because there's two opposite trajectories. Leave the Israelis completely out of it. If I didn't care anything about any Israeli, if Hamas stays in Gaza, Gaza stays a ruin, and Gaza doesn't ever have that new day, and Gaza doesn't get rebuilt, and nobody can send money into a bank of Canada Gaza, and nothing better happens. So it is an irony of history, because history is ironic and God has a sense of humor, that the worst thing Israel could do for Gaza now is leave Hamas there. Thank you so much for joining us.
Starting point is 00:59:58 Thank you for being here. Thank you.

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