(written by Fiamma Nirenstein)
The orgy of blood on Oct. 7, 2023, and everything that followed should have inspired a dream of peace. For anyone with a conscience, the horror would be enough to say: “Never again.”
Yet that isn’t what happened. When you ask Israelis how they are, their
automatic “Fine, thank you” is no longer true; it’s merely a social convention.
Their souls remain shaken.
But across the divide, in the Palestinian territories, the picture is far more disturbing. According to a recent survey by the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research, 59% of Palestinians living under the Palestinian Authority—that is, in Judea and Samaria—believe that the decision to carry out the Oct. 7 massacre was “correct.” In Gaza, 44% agreed.
Even more shocking, 54% blame Israel for Palestinian suffering, while
only 14% blame Hamas. And so, we must ask: what peace are we talking about? The
one preached endlessly by the U.N., by Europe, and by French President Emmanuel
Macron — “two states for two peoples”? Not only does it lack realism; a
majority of Palestinians reject it outright.
The same survey shows that 40% of Palestinians believe an independent
state must come through armed struggle, not negotiation; in Gaza, 35% say the
same. These are not marginal numbers—they represent a society still enthralled
by the myth of “resistance,” not the idea of coexistence.
As Israeli journalist Amit Segal has noted, Shany Mor’s essay “Ecstasy and Amnesia” explains this phenomenon well: the intoxication of violence, the inability of parts of the Islamic world—and the Palestinian one in particular—to separate history from religious emotion.
The “ecstasy” of jihad was visible on Oct. 7, in videos of young men
calling their parents to boast about killing Jews with their own hands, and in
the mobs cheering as kidnapped Israeli girls were paraded through Gaza’s
streets.
Even academics in the West, such as Cornell’s Russell Rickford, revealed
the same moral sickness when he called the massacre “exhilarating.”
Arab–Palestinian wars have always followed this script: an initial
eruption of homicidal and suicidal ecstasy, followed by crushing defeat—the War
of Independence (1948), the Six Day War (1967), the Intifadas, and now the war
of Oct. 7. Yet from each failure, what remains in memory is the thrill of
violence, not the price of it.
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