Pablo Torre Finds Out - Bring Hersh Home: Why a Soccer Super-Fan Taken Hostage by Hamas Is Still a 'Ray of Hope' in Israel

Episode Date: December 12, 2023

Hersh Goldberg-Polin was devoted to an Israeli football club fighting for peace. Supporters of its rival include far-right Israeli politicians like a national-security minister hellbent on war — and... a racist mob. If you want help understanding the Israel-Hamas conflict, Hersh's abduction by terrorists is a window to the world. Correspondent Amos Barshad interviews his loved ones and finds a silver lining.(Read the companion article at The Lever)Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/R0IoouIfXNc Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:23 Amos Farshot, thank you for being here. Thank you for helping us report a story that is unlike any other story we have done on this show. I was hesitant to do this episode, not because I didn't think it was like genuinely, genuinely fascinating, but because I'm always mindful of the ways in which sometimes, you know, sports outlets, they just want to shoehorn sports into like the serious news story. Absolutely. And sometimes it just feels both flimsy and forced in terms of, of the connection that they're drawing.
Starting point is 00:00:55 This one, though, does not feel that way to me. I've reported on the way the sports and politics interact for a long time. And just for me, as someone trying to understand the news, you know, I've always felt like it's a way to get closer to the way people actually interact with the news. Yes. With this one, with Israel, and these soccer teams that we're going to talk about, it's just what was on my mind.
Starting point is 00:01:23 Okay. So this has been on my mind for a very long. long time now, this basic dilemma. What are we supposed to do on our show, which is technically a sports show, about the biggest story in the world? We are a newsroom, I say this tongue-in-cheekly sometimes, and I wanted to actually think about how we're supposed to touch the thing that pretty much nobody, if they don't have to, wants to touch in public. And I get why. This is the most generous version of this motive, I suppose, but lots of people just don't know enough. It is a complicated story. It is sad. It is controversial in the most obvious ways. And so I get it.
Starting point is 00:02:08 But I've been reading the work of Amos Barshad for more than a decade now. Amos is a writer who was at Grantland, The Washington Post, the New York Times Magazine, all these places. And he is now working for The Lever, an independent reader-supported news site, at levernews.com, where you can go read a companion version of the story that we assigned Amos to report for us here today. Because of all the topics he has covered, the one that stuck out to me, ever since I first read it, his reporting from there 10 years ago, was Israel. And specifically, it was about the Israeli government. And this administration, which is going to dictate which direction this current war goes next.
Starting point is 00:02:59 Yeah, so I want to set this scene here. When did you realize that the war between Israel and Hamas, which started, of course, with the terrorist attack on Israel by Hamas on October 7th, when did you realize that that was actually a sports story? Yeah, you know, at first the news was coming out and I was just trying to make sense of it and wasn't thinking at all about a way in for me. I have reported from Israel in the past, but I live here in New York and was just reading the news trying to understand. Hamas unleashed a ferocious attack over the weekend that seemed to come from everywhere,
Starting point is 00:03:35 reigning deadly rockets into residential streets and setting militant fighters across the Gaza border where they murdered and kidnapped Israeli civilians. Hamas is warning it will execute the hostages. It kidnapped over the weekend if Israel can. continues to retaliate in Gaza. You know, there are moments in this life, literally, when the pure unadolored evil is unleashed on this world. It was a few days after that that I saw a video clip.
Starting point is 00:04:09 A group of soccer fans ran through a hospital in Tel Aviv, and they are supporters of this team, Betar Jerusalem. Their supporters group is called La Familia, and they are a notorious organization in Israel. There's a minister that has in the past suggested declaring them a terrorist organization for various reasons. What happened was they had basically come across a rumor
Starting point is 00:04:33 that a Hamas fighter was being treated at this hospital in Tel Aviv, and they decided to take matters into their own hands. I did speak to a doctor, Jerome Klein, who works at the hospital Tel Aviv. They stormed the hospital on bikes, you know, young people. dress in black on motorcycle.
Starting point is 00:04:55 People might confuse them for a storm by the Hamas. At the time, there was no Hamas in the hospital. So they actually invaded the hospital and went from floor to floor to see if there are no terrorists. There was none. And the shouting went quickly from death. to the terrorists, quickly to, like, within a minute, death to Arabs. Within seconds, death to left-wing people, Jews.
Starting point is 00:05:43 I knew so little coming into this story that you've reported here about how fanatical some fans in Israel are about their soccer teams. So just explain Betar Jerusalem. Like, where do they fit into, like, the political. cultural landscape in Israel. This is the Israeli domestic soccer league, the top flight league that we're talking about, which is a relatively minor league.
Starting point is 00:06:07 And Betar Jerusalem is one of the traditional powerhouses of the league. It's also known as the team of the right wing. I want to actually understand how extreme this faction is. Like La Familia, you call them. That alone, I'm like, why are they called La Familia? Yeah, you know, spoken to a researcher, kind of an expert in La Familia, And she said that that's kind of what you'd assume.
Starting point is 00:06:33 They're trying to sound like, first of all, like they're from Europe. So the ultras. Right, like the hardcore, like European soccer fans. I'm sure we've all kind of seen footage of the guys who are bringing the flares, bringing the banners, leading the chants, the drums, you know, kind of associated with Italy and Spain. So they pick this name that kind of sounds to them, you know, Italian. Their politics are very, very clear.
Starting point is 00:06:59 there are other groups in the world in world soccer that, you know, flirt with the far right or borrow symbols. Like, these guys aren't flirting. They're running around chanting death to the Arabs. This is the Jewish state. I hate all the Arabs. Like, there's no confusion. But I want to go back to the time you spent about a decade ago in Israel. As you're reporting on Betar and La Familia in person, which seems horrifying to contemplate at this point.
Starting point is 00:07:28 but you, in that time, in that place, what did you see when it came to just their position in the political superstructure? 2013, I was in Israel reporting this story for Grantland. Beatar had signed some players that were Muslim. That led to the fans, specifically La Familia, to revolt. They were so angry by this that they set fire to the trophy room at the Beatar headquarters.
Starting point is 00:07:56 The confusing thing was that the team hadn't signed, you know, Israeli Arabs. They had signed two guys from Chechnya. Right. They're not, at least they're not Arabs. Exactly, exactly. Yeah, they think they're being cute or clever, threading the needle. La Familia, you know, effectively makes it very clear that they will not have this. Multiple owners over the years of Baitzar have tried to push back on Lafamalia,
Starting point is 00:08:27 have tried to push back on this radical fan base. does La Familia listen to what the team, it seems like they have their own pretty distinct agenda? Yeah, oh yeah, I mean, the 2013 was basically a huge victory for La Familia. They managed to get these guys to leave by the end of the next season to this date. There has not been an Arab or Muslim player at Batesar. So, you know, they're actually dictating, like, who can play and who can't, you know. It's not a subtle thing or some sort of a, you know, in the background kind of influence.
Starting point is 00:08:58 And so that influence, though, how has that functioned at a time when the political administration of the state of Israel has also been now leaning rightward, trending directionally in that way? I mean, yeah, to come back to what we first asked, you know, how is this a sports story? I mean, for me, this feels like a reflection of the right wing, the ruling coalition. politicians have for decades fronted as Beatar fans to, you know, to gain support, to gain voters. And as an example, here is the Prime Minister of Israel, Benjamin Nanyahu, declaring his allegiance to Beitur in front of this crowd of flag-waving, raucous fans. And I batairev, to tell you to tell you just two miling. Yala Beitr!
Starting point is 00:09:47 There's an implicit connection between certain elements of the Revan Coalition and La La Familia. You know, to me, La Familia have increasingly acted as the street fighters, you know, for the right wing. There's been many protests movements in the last few years in Israel. Most recently was a weekly protest movement against an attempt by the ruling right wing coalition to effectively neuter the Israeli Supreme Court. La Familia acted as like a counter-ballist. You know, they were kind of called upon to come out and be the counter-protesters. mostly that involved again chanting horrific things like death to Arabs and some funnier things like where are the hos of Antifa. Oh man, they're on Twitter? They're on Twitter too?
Starting point is 00:10:35 Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. They hate Antifa. You're describing a scene in which this soccer fan base has been conscripted to fight an explicitly political war basically. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And they, you know, they love it. I mean, this is great, you know, it puts them centrally in the conversation. and at the same time the right wing feel like they have support in the street, you know?
Starting point is 00:10:55 Right. But there is clear indications that La Familia is seen as kind of a strike force or like a little militia, you know, to call forward. And usually when they come out to the street, there's violence. The protesters are injured. Arab bystanders are injured. The person that is central to this story currently is the Minister of National Security, He Tamar Ben Gavir. Ben Gavir, a man one commentator dubbed the David Duke of Israel, is so extreme that he makes our very own Marjorie Taylor Green
Starting point is 00:11:29 and Carrie Lake and Doug Mastriano look like woke leftists. He is an openly racist, anti-Arab member of a far, far, far-right party that Netanyahu joined with to form his coalition. He's come in with this ruling right-wing coalition. He represents the most radical, strain of Jewish supremacy. His background is a defense lawyer for Jewish extremists. He believes in expanding the settler movement.
Starting point is 00:11:59 In public, he represents the extremist nature of this ruling coalition. And he is a self-described Betar fan, of course. In fact, here is Ben Gavir in the middle of a crowd of singing Betar fans on video, Arm and Arm. So he has seen soccer be this useful. I mean, I guess both a figurative but also, potentially a physical, literal cudgel, to do what to his enemies? Yeah, I mean, he has used it to become a populist figure to make himself seem like a man of the people in the old days.
Starting point is 00:12:40 Politicians used to go to the market in Jerusalem, you know, shake hands and kiss babies and do all that kind of stuff. And in the last few decades, you know, Teddy Stadium has become the center. Yeah, you go there and you put the scarf on and the Beatar supporters chant their anti-Arab chance and, you know, It's Marben Gvier as they're taking selfie. It's a familiar scene and it's an effective scene and it allows him to not even have to say the horrible things, right? It's like the people around him are saying the horrible things.
Starting point is 00:13:07 And just to establish how horrible these things are, in this scene, here, the fans are chanting, we are the most racist team in the country. It's literally what they're saying as translated. One notable incident with Ben Gavir and La Familia is that he's actually defending them on the national news. There's this contentious interview he was doing. kind of was being pushed on his embrace of La Familia,
Starting point is 00:13:35 and he kind of just snapped in this kind of echoes of Trump's famous comments after Charlottesville. But you also had people that were very fine people on both sides. And what he said was, in La Familia, there are officers in the IDF, and there are people who serve and who are moral and have high values. Please stop doing character assassination for the entire world. So, you know, this is the Minister of National Security going on national news.
Starting point is 00:14:02 to defend them, which I'm sure they left. And just to be very clear about this, their enemy, as they see it, is who? So their cross-city rival is called Ha'puel Jerusalem. Ha'puel is not historically a big club, but the fans are super devoted, small but passionate fan base. The interesting thing about them
Starting point is 00:14:27 is that they are explicitly a club that fights for coexistence, you know, Arab Jew of solidarity. It's a very, very different mentality and they actually share a stadium. You said they're sharing the same physical location. Yeah, exactly. Yeah, it's a funny thing to wrap your head around
Starting point is 00:14:43 the way that, you know, both these groups are beholden to their fans, but in very different ways. You know, Ha Puella is actually fan-owned. So this is a team that is populist in some structural ways then as well, historical ways as well as in terms of their ideology. Yeah, yeah, yeah, absolutely. Absolutely. I mean, there's a lot going on. So, yeah, so Hopwell Jerusalem is tied to the once-powerful trade union that is still exist in Israel, but it isn't quite as powerful. Hopwell means the worker, you know, they have the sickle and hammer in their slogan. It's all very explicit. And then at the same time, this current iteration of the club has created this community, literally, you know, direct democracy system, you know, fans that pay around $300 a year get voting rights on the, you know, on the board. The board appoints the CEO.
Starting point is 00:15:34 the CEO hires the manager and the coach. So, you know, ultimately, the fans aren't happy. You know, things are going to have to change. So I think it's a fascinating way to think about being a sports fan, you know, especially for me as an American sports fan. You know, I've loved the Celtics my whole life. And I've just given them my money, you know. Not quite as socialist.
Starting point is 00:15:50 Yes. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, unfortunately. I bought a lot of Paul Pierce T-shirts. So again, I want to be mindful of the ways in which I'm not oversimplifying this story, but you have painted a picture here, Amos, where two teams that share the same stadium are on two diametric sides of the aisle, ideologically, and also politically. Hapwell, I want to just personalize them here.
Starting point is 00:16:12 When you think of their fan base, is there a particular person that comes to mind? I think about a fan named Hirsch Goldberg-Pullin. He's 23, and he has supported them since he was like a kid, like a pre-teen. He grew up in the U.S. until he was seven. So grew up in American sports culture, was a White Sox fan. his mom says in part to spite his dad who was a Cubs fan. He moves to Jerusalem, I think he was seven or eight, and falls in love with this all-together different thing.
Starting point is 00:16:42 This is really Jerusalem soccer culture, this team, Hapuel. His friends describe him as just super, super passionate, always standing and singing. And he is a part of a supporters group that you could look at as kind of a parallel to La Familia. These are the guys who are the hardcore for Hapuel. I spoke to one of his friends that is in this supporters group. His name is Neria Smith.
Starting point is 00:17:12 We don't sit down and watch the game and, you know, like, each sunflower seeds or something like other fans. We sing and we clap and we dance and we try to, like, affect the game in our own way. Very explicitly, they believe in peace, coexistence, erudur solidarity, almost like a social outreach entity, you know. They love this team. That's what brings them together. And then within that, they go forward in all kinds of charitable acts.
Starting point is 00:17:48 What do they do? As a matter of, like, programs. If La Familia is over there setting things on fire and, you know, hurting people, what are Hirsch and his friends doing? Yeah, it's all super, you know, kind of classic do-goodery. Yeah. They held a tournament for people from Sudan that were, you know, effectively seeking asylum in Israel.
Starting point is 00:18:10 So this group actually organized a day where they bused them to Jerusalem, had Sudanese food and music, musicians, actual performers, and they held a tournament after a Jewish Arab school was torched in 2014 by a suspected Jewish extremist. You know, they held up a banner in the stadium in support of the school. They're not like an anti-occupation entity. They're not, they don't have solutions to the conflict and to the occupation, and they're not really suggested them, right? They're trying to like focus in on creating positivity in Jerusalem
Starting point is 00:18:42 and just trying to control what they can, you know? So, yeah, so Hirsch, within that context, is kind of like a classic, Abuel Fan, travels to away games on these bus rides that, you know, bring them back home in the middle of the night. I talked to his mom, Rachel, and she told me all about how he would just kind of finesse this with her. Oh my gosh.
Starting point is 00:19:01 We're so, we were like so American. He would say to us, he'd be in high school and he'd say, I've got to go to Naharia tonight. Now that's like on the bus, that's like four hours from our house. This is part of the beauty of when you're an immigrant. You can tell your parents anything and they actually believe you. He does always be like, this is the most important game, you know. You don't understand if we like get three points here, then this happens.
Starting point is 00:19:25 And she would be like, I don't understand what you're talking. I don't understand the calculus. But if you say that's right, you know, go ahead. And, you know, he'd like give her heart attacks because, you know, they'd be bus rise in the middle of the night. I mean, there was one time I remember that I woke up and it was like 3.30 in the morning on a school night. And he wasn't home. And I tried his phone and it went, you know, it indicated that the phone was dead. And I was really worried. And I tried calling the other boy he was with. And his phone was also dead.
Starting point is 00:19:53 And of course, what had happened was the bus had broken down on the way back. And none of them had any way to call any of their parents. And when he did come in, I was like, I had been sitting up waiting for him. And I was like, like hysterical. She referred to him as a teenager coming into what she said, it was non-sophisticated political awareness, which I think is a really nice phrase. And I think a lot of us can relate to that, being 15, 16, having like Che Guevara poster on our walls
Starting point is 00:20:21 without being able to explain why. And so he believes in something that he can't quite understand. He finds this club, and it's this perfect thing for him to just pour all his heart into. He becomes just like this really well-known fan. And, you know, everyone describes him. as cheery, happy, you know, and always shirtless. Loves to be shirtless, which is great.
Starting point is 00:20:45 Samas, I want to bring us into the day that it all started, this war, October 7th, because there were various attacks by Hamas along the border with Gaza. Where was Hirsch in all of that? You know, mass confusion, mass casualties. and in the middle of that, Hirsch was at a music festival, the Supernova Festival. That became the site of a mass shooting.
Starting point is 00:21:21 The site of the music festival where Hamas did mass slaughter of young people taking hostages. You're learning some more information about that dance party that was taking place near the border. You're talking about slaughter. You're talking about human people
Starting point is 00:21:39 who came face-to-face. shut up, stabbed, killed these people. Hundreds of civilians were killed, hunted down as they tried to flee the festival. So how to Hirsch's friends hear about this in the first place, in real time, as all this is unfolding? Nairia, his friend, told me that in the chaos of that day, you know, everyone from the fan group and the related pals were changing text messages, WhatsApp messages. It just started circulating. There was like frantic messaging back and forth that Hirsch is there. He's at the party that we realized he went there and trying to find out his whereabouts,
Starting point is 00:22:44 you know, calling people, trying to see who he was with and realizing that family hasn't heard from him. And this is real and this is happening. It took a while to understand that that's what happened because a lot of the people that, were kidnapped, they were, their status was first is missing. It took a while to understand that people were kidnapped to Gaza. He was hiding in a roadside bomb shelter with some 30 other people and terrorists came there and they shot into there. It's a very tight space and they threw something like eight or nine grenades. His best friend, his name is Daniel Shapila. He threw seven of the eight grenades that the Hamath terrorists threw into the bomb shelter.
Starting point is 00:23:32 He threw them out and he saved countless lives of people. And then the end, the eighth exploded on him and killed him. And there was also a fan. And he was Hershey's best friend. So we also remember him. So we should say here that Hirsch was severely injured by this grenade attack in this bunker, which we know in part because of cell phone video, first obtained by CNN, which shows Hirsch being loaded into a truck by gunmen and then being driven off to captivity.
Starting point is 00:24:13 Other gunmen shout as they bring survivors from the shelter. Come, come, they yell. Load them. That's Hirsch on the right with another hostage. His left hand and part of his arm is blown off. The bone sticks out. That video is the last visual proof that Hirsch's mom, Rachel, has of her son. And the last thing that Hirsch told his family came in the form of text messages that he said that same day, the day he was abducted.
Starting point is 00:24:45 The first text was, I love you. The second one said, I'm sorry. And today, as of this episode, Hirsch has been away from home for 66 days. This is Hirsch's mom, Rachel, again. I would obviously really like to know how my son is doing after losing his arm. And that was the wound that we saw, you know, when you're in a small room and grenades are going off and bullets are being fired. Yes, he lost his arm. I have no idea if he has internal bleeding, internal damage. I don't know how his hearing is.
Starting point is 00:25:26 I don't know how his sight is. she was very direct about you know what she's going through how how does she describe what she's feeling um yeah you know she's talking about she described almost like a physical pain you and i are talking right now and i seem probably pretty functional and normal but it's a lot of um it takes like all of my reserves to do it because it's like if you didn't see that someone's underneath me like twisting my ankle like backwards. Like that's what it feels like. Like it's actual physical pain at all pines.
Starting point is 00:26:04 And emotional, psychological, spiritual pain. It's every kind of pain all at once. It was nice for me to speak with her about Hershey's fandom, you know, and to hear all the positive stories, you know, all the joy that he has had with Upwell in his life. And that team, that fan team, that club, has come here to our house, has really just been, they have become family. The whole fan team had come out to support us with these huge banners and one of his best
Starting point is 00:26:40 friends said, gosh, when he gets home, he's going to really hate this. He's a lot like me. Like, we like to fly under the radar and now, you know, there's these enormous murals of his face, you know, that just say bring Hirsch home. and I said, you know what, I would love to handle that anger. Like, that would be amazing. Like, if I can have him home and he'd be disappointed that his face is all over Jerusalem, that I will handle, no problem.
Starting point is 00:27:08 I think that, you know, being kind of this community club, there's a natural way that you start spending the way in the community. There's murals in Jerusalem. And his parents, independent of that, have also, from the outside, looks to me like they've done everything they possibly can, you know, to press the right buttons, you know, to get this word out, to speak to politicians to the media.
Starting point is 00:27:31 The idea of what this team and club stand for, these ideas of peaceful coexistence, normalizing interaction through sports, it makes it feel like this painful, this painful moment that happened, that there's still hope. And in this time of intense, exquisite pain that I am in, To know that these people are fighting for him and all of them is like a tiny ray of hope for me.
Starting point is 00:28:07 There's still hope. It's hope that's battered and bruised and we're tender right now. But I'm thankful that I have gotten to know these young people and that they feel so committed to these values that the club and that the team promote. It's pretty amazing because to see a stadium of 45,000, 50,000 people, and the stadium announcer is talking about Hirsch, and his pictures on a big screen, and the team has published on Twitter, calls to bring him back and on Facebook, and they've been very involved.
Starting point is 00:28:46 And I think that that's the power of our solidarity and our connection that can be shown also during hard times. I try not to really think about where he is or what he is, happening because I think that that could go really scary, really fast. But when I have a moment of a happy daydream, I picture him playing soccer there. I do. I picture him playing soccer with some children there. I don't know who those children are if there are other hostages, if they're Palestinian kids.
Starting point is 00:29:19 I don't know who they are, but I do picture that. It's a good game for teaching patience. I'm willing to watch, but like, all right, it takes very long. time for something to happen. So maybe it's helping him somewhere, because it's that being able to sit there, like the fact that you could sit there for two hours and the score is zero one, that's actually like a Zen practice of patience. Maybe it's helping him.
Starting point is 00:29:51 Did you hear her sort of indulge the darkest fears that she might have, that Hirsch actually may not end up coming home. No, absolutely not. She's just manifesting that day, you know, when he comes back into her arms. That's all she was focused on. I also picture that he's probably really bummed out because he always liked being the goalie.
Starting point is 00:30:15 And I think one-handed goalie is probably not really totally fair. But I'm thinking when he gets back, we'll get him like a gigantic bionic arm and that that left hand is going to be even bigger than it should actually be and then one even better goalie. Rachel, his mom, speaking to us, to you. I mean, I can't imagine.
Starting point is 00:30:52 The nightmare that she is living, this through line in her son's life where he was this soccer super fan who was like sneaking out of the house, basically, to go watch this team. This team that has, as its whole mission statement, Arab-Jewish relations. And he ends up being one of the people
Starting point is 00:31:14 who are kidnapped here. And if I'm his mom, I don't know if my first instinct would be to be thankful for the team. Yeah. It almost feels like there's this incredibly cruel irony that Hirsch specifically was one of these people who was taken.
Starting point is 00:31:31 Hersh's story is both deeply moving, I hope, to everyone. But it's also just one sort of, small window into truly an unimaginable number of tragedies that are happening simultaneously. Yeah. Today, as we're speaking over 15,000 people have been killed in Gaza. You know, there are people buried alive. Those aren't even counted as the deaths yet.
Starting point is 00:31:56 And we're talking about Hirsch. And we're like highlighting his story. But just one, but one narrow window. Yeah, exactly. Into the story. I think that it's like a human truism that we, all kind of heard this cliche that one one death is a tragedy you know a million deaths is a statistic i worry you know that even as we're doing this that's where that's what we kind of get lost in
Starting point is 00:32:19 yes the stories of the people being killed in gaza you know each each and every one of them is a tragedy you know each and every one we spoke about this story as a way to talk about israel uh to talk about the political landscape in israel yes and we uh are fixating on this club and Hirsch is this basically fringe entity that is fighting for some little semblance of, you know, Arab Jewish solidarity. But the reality is that's not the country. The country is more in line with Ben Gvier, the Beatar, diehard. The national security minister, yeah. Yeah, exactly. Anyone paying attention to some of the comments that have come out of kind of his allies in the
Starting point is 00:33:09 Israeli far-right coalition would be, you know, would be horrified. In part, it's just the kind of flippant way in which they're talking about mass death, you know, talking about flattening Gaza, talking about crushing Gaza. But it's also just as an aside, the flippant way in which they're disregarding the hostages. Right. This is the Israeli ambassador to the United Nations saying as much on television. We expect the Red Cross. We expect all international organizations to focus on these hostages, and how they are treated and that they receive treatment according to international law. But it's not going to stop us, prevent us from doing what we need to do in order to secure the future of Israel.
Starting point is 00:33:53 People in Ben-Gvier's right-wing camp, you know, talk about we have to target Hamas mercilessly without taking into serious consideration the matter of the captives. You know, another minister has advocated for dropping an atomic bomb on Gaza. And, you know, when asked what about the hostages, said, I hope and pray for their return, but there are costs in war. Man. Back to Hirsch for a minute and the idea of when could he maybe come home. So this first phase of the hostage and negotiations was focused on women and children, and there was an idea that they could move towards another phase,
Starting point is 00:34:24 but the negotiations have broken down. Fighting has resumed Israel, of course, has withdrawn from negotiations in Qatar. Negotiations over the release of additional hostages in Gaza appear highly unlikely to resume anytime soon. Time is running out for those 130 or so remaining hostages inside Gaza. And one of the things that we're hearing from the families that they're so frustrated about is they feel like they understands the shape of a deal that will bring their loved ones home.
Starting point is 00:34:54 It involves releasing probably thousands of Palestinian militants from Israeli jails, and they are saying to the government, make that deal now bring our loved ones back. There is just a basic fact that some elements of of the Israeli government are prioritizing the war over releasing the hostages. As this was going on, as the idea of continuing the negotiations was in the air, Ben-Gvier released a statement, you know, saying, stopping the war equals breaking apart the government.
Starting point is 00:35:22 You know, that meant he was threatening to leave the coalition, the ruling coalition, which would likely trigger elections. You know, this is kind of like, you know, the most radical option that he could come up with. And he's using it, you know, he's threatening Netanyahu, the prime minister, that don't even think about trying to free more of these hostages, or I'll, you know, do the worst thing for you. When you hear, you know, the ceasefire has ended, the hostage negotiations are off, you know,
Starting point is 00:35:49 that didn't just happen, you know. Right. There are people involved that made that decision. There are prioritizing other things. And I also just want to be very transparent about, like, the decisions we make as a show. I often talk about how we have a newsroom here, and we do.
Starting point is 00:36:02 It's a small group of people that got to decide, like, what are we covering? And what are we there for not covering? Yeah. And we're a 50-minute show that is about sports technically. And so I do want to acknowledge that Hirsch's story and the story of Betar and Hoppewell, we chose that not just because it checks those boxes, but because this is now how I'm going to see what seems to be a very disturbing
Starting point is 00:36:26 and complicated political dynamic in Israel. Yeah. And now, just to put what I've learned to the test, it seems like in Ben Gavir, the National Security Movement, Minister Amos, we're going to get the Betar superfan having to decide, do I want to release prisoners and exchange them for hostages when those hostages are these Hapwell superfans like Hirsch, who are not my people in the political or philosophical sense. Yeah, I mean, you know, like we talked about, I've been reporting this for 10 years.
Starting point is 00:37:01 We've been reporting on a million for 10 years. This is not the only way or even the dominant way of looking at things, It is a way of looking at things. The teams echo the bigger picture. They aren't defining it. But through them, I think we can tell these human stories, which reflects the fans, the people in power, you know, this kind of mob mentality that exists with La Familia,
Starting point is 00:37:27 the way they influence events in their particular unique ways. And yeah, you know, to go from here, to try to keep reading, try to keep understanding, you know, why this is happening the way it's happening. Yeah, I hope it's of value in a small contained way. Yeah, yeah. And the next human story, again, that I want us to cover together, is the story of the goalie with the biotia. Oh, yeah, yeah. Superstar.
Starting point is 00:37:54 I want that scandal. I want the robotic arm goalie scandal. They can't tell him he can't play. No, exactly. You know, I'm worried tactically, they'll just, the, the, the opponent. opposing teams will just go to the other arm, won't they? I mean, he'll be all right, but he'll be found out fairly quickly. You know what?
Starting point is 00:38:12 I have a feeling that Rachel is going to have a solution to that. Yes, yeah, yeah, yeah. She's thinking five steps ahead. Oh, yeah, yeah. She hates soccer, but she's a mastermind of it. Yes, absolutely. Amos Farshad, thank you for sharing your reporting. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:38:26 Thank you very much. Thank you for having me. So I should point out at the end here that Batar and Hoppewell actually played last Wednesday at Teddy Stadium, the stadium that they share in Jerusalem, and Betar won 1-0. But by the very next day, which just happened to be the first day of Hanukkah, Hirsch's dad, John, the Cubs fan that we had mentioned earlier, who had inspired his son's contrarian baseball White Sox fandom, was unambiguous in his rooting interest, as he explained on the Instagram account titled Bring Hirsch Home.
Starting point is 00:39:20 So it's the holiday of Chanika now, and every day of Hanukkah, we're going to share a little snippet about Hirsch, corresponding to the number of what day it is of Chanika. Today's the first day. So, of course, Hershey's our first child, are one and early son, and there are lots of other ones and firsts that I could talk about. But if I'm honest, Hershey's real first love for many, many years has been, how Paul Jerusalem. And then a couple of days later, Hershey's sisters, Libyan Orly, followed up with some symbolism of their own. Today is day three of Karnatau, which is a significant number because we're three siblings. As you guys know, Hirsch is our older brother with three children. He has this thing where every time the three of us are together.
Starting point is 00:40:09 He was saying, oh, we're having an Arvukhatt Ahim, or Nisiyat Ahim, or Seraa,ahim, everything we're new together. He just adds that word. So we're just waiting for him to come back so we can have an Eremachim. like we love to have with him. We love him and miss him and hope it comes home every day. Hershey's family, including Rachel, the mom who spoke to us, is going to keep posting videos like this. And the hope is that there can be more hostages released
Starting point is 00:40:38 than that there can be another ceasefire. As unlikely as that might look right now, with the latest headlines indicating that the Palestinian death toll is rising, right alongside the number of rounds of tank. Amunition that America is selling to Betar Superfan, It's our Ben-Givir, and the Israeli government, which presumably celebrated that one-nill outcome that I had just referenced. But these teams, I do want to stress, are not the only lens to see this story through, as Amos said.
Starting point is 00:41:11 They are a lens, they are not the only one. And for that reason, I suppose it will be easier to not have tried to talk about any of this. but if you made it this far, listening, I think that means something too. This has been Pablo Torre finds out, a Metal Arc Media production. And I'll talk to you next time.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.