Imagine, wherever you live, there exists just beyond the border to your province an armed group of militants called H. Every so often, H gets upset because your nation’s government (which you may not have even voted for and may sorely want out of the picture) has built a couple of houses on some land beyond your nation’s opposite border where some folks culturally related to H live. In response, H starts shooting rockets all over the southern half of your nation.
Now, luckily, your nation has some helpful tech that can usually block these rockets. But they keep coming. Following a barrage of more than 4,000 rockets over the course of a week and deployment of explosive drone technology to evade your defense tech, your nation’s military goes after H militants, using intelligence to track the fighters to their hiding spots, which typically include (hopefully) empty schools, hospitals and PR houses. However, because these spots are commonly civilian, your nation’s army issues a one-hour warning before exploding the building in question.
When shrapnel from the explosion injures or tragically kills civilians, it is unarguably wrong. H realizes this, and so they house their weapons and fighters in these locations, knowing that, to the outside world, it will appear as though your nation invades their territory for no reason. Why? Because often, international news headlines and sometimes even entire articles don’t tend to mention H—instead making it appear as though your nation struck first.
Obviously, territorial encroachment is always difficult on those affected, even in the case of legal evictions. That said, H rarely attacks due only to territory encroachment. Commonly, they await the next opportunity to launch unprovoked attacks, sending innocents running through the streets to hide all night in bomb shelters. It’s a squabble between two governments that ropes in civilians on both sides.
It’s a squabble between two governments that ropes in civilians on both sides.
H clearly stands for Hamas, the entity in charge of the Gaza Strip that not only fires unprovoked on Israeli civilians but also uses much of its foreign aid to construct terror tunnels for further siege. Furthermore, when their rockets miss Israel, it’s typically because they misfire and instead endanger resident Gazans.
Hamas’s charter does not recognize any Jewish entity in the region that is now Palestine/Israel, including Israel proper. Their goal to “Free Palestine” calls to free Palestine of Jews under the guise of ousting Zionists. This means that all Jews not wishing to live in an Islamic state will be essentially cleansed from the region, including Jews whose families have been living there for centuries.
If you’re still with me, we move now to the ever-loaded topic of Zionism. By definition, Zionism just means a secure homeland in the region that comprises historical Judea. That does not mean Jews in this land cannot live alongside Palestinian Arabs, nor does that proposed homeland even have to include the West Bank or disputed Jerusalem territory. Indeed, Israel forcibly evicted all Jewish residents from the Gaza Strip back in 2005, showing that, in the face of pushback from neighboring Arab nations and multiple rejected peace deals following the British Mandate jumping ship to let us all battle it out, Zionism didn’t even have to include that land either. Therefore, the blanket statement circulating these days—that at its core, Zionism equals racism—doesn’t hold up perfectly. Not when such an entity can feasibly exist as any other nation, including as a home to many diverse peoples.
Okay, let’s take a breath. To clarify, unilateral settlements as well as air raids can cause significant destruction. An alternative might be solo sniper ground warfare to target militants with more discrimination in order to avoid civilian casualties. What’s more, we can all hope for a more progressive center-left administration to replace Likud in the Knesset this year, a goal of which would be enhanced Palestinian rights in Gaza and the Disputed Territories.
So, if you have read this far, once more, please do continue to mourn the innocents killed in this conflict. At the end of the day, no matter who shot first, people are still people. But please try to consider that, unlike any conflicts in the U.S. for the past two centuries and most in Europe for nearly the past century, humans on both sides of the Palestine/Israel war recognize and face the frequent threat of bomb sirens that come from a war on home turf.
But please try to consider that, unlike any conflicts in the U.S. for the past two centuries and most in Europe for nearly the past century, humans on both sides of the Palestine/Israel war recognize and face the frequent threat of bomb sirens that come from a war on home turf.
The main reason this nuance matters to diaspora Jews is that regardless of plenty of Jews worldwide having no connection to Israel, the number of attacks against Jews around the globe has dramatically surged since the latest Palestine/Israel violence spike began. The running narrative of Jews as oppressors has even reached tech giants, with one high-profile employee claiming that Jews have an insatiable appetite for war—not Israel, Jews—in a blog statement that wasn’t called into question until 14 years after its release.
Many of us are starting to worry, because while those living in Diaspora have next to no say in Israeli politics, plenty of diaspora Jews are taking the fall for this. It is, quite frankly, frightening. So, believe us when we say that you can decry the loss of innocent Palestinian lives, and at the same time, allow us to express fear over the mounting narrative that ties our very identity to violence and the next great conspiracy.
Sarah Katz is an author, UC Berkeley alumna in Middle Eastern Studies, and cyber security analyst.
A Message for Non-Jewish Friends on the Israel-Palestine Violence over Sheikh Jarrah
Sarah Katz
Imagine, wherever you live, there exists just beyond the border to your province an armed group of militants called H. Every so often, H gets upset because your nation’s government (which you may not have even voted for and may sorely want out of the picture) has built a couple of houses on some land beyond your nation’s opposite border where some folks culturally related to H live. In response, H starts shooting rockets all over the southern half of your nation.
Now, luckily, your nation has some helpful tech that can usually block these rockets. But they keep coming. Following a barrage of more than 4,000 rockets over the course of a week and deployment of explosive drone technology to evade your defense tech, your nation’s military goes after H militants, using intelligence to track the fighters to their hiding spots, which typically include (hopefully) empty schools, hospitals and PR houses. However, because these spots are commonly civilian, your nation’s army issues a one-hour warning before exploding the building in question.
When shrapnel from the explosion injures or tragically kills civilians, it is unarguably wrong. H realizes this, and so they house their weapons and fighters in these locations, knowing that, to the outside world, it will appear as though your nation invades their territory for no reason. Why? Because often, international news headlines and sometimes even entire articles don’t tend to mention H—instead making it appear as though your nation struck first.
Obviously, territorial encroachment is always difficult on those affected, even in the case of legal evictions. That said, H rarely attacks due only to territory encroachment. Commonly, they await the next opportunity to launch unprovoked attacks, sending innocents running through the streets to hide all night in bomb shelters. It’s a squabble between two governments that ropes in civilians on both sides.
H clearly stands for Hamas, the entity in charge of the Gaza Strip that not only fires unprovoked on Israeli civilians but also uses much of its foreign aid to construct terror tunnels for further siege. Furthermore, when their rockets miss Israel, it’s typically because they misfire and instead endanger resident Gazans.
Hamas’s charter does not recognize any Jewish entity in the region that is now Palestine/Israel, including Israel proper. Their goal to “Free Palestine” calls to free Palestine of Jews under the guise of ousting Zionists. This means that all Jews not wishing to live in an Islamic state will be essentially cleansed from the region, including Jews whose families have been living there for centuries.
If you’re still with me, we move now to the ever-loaded topic of Zionism. By definition, Zionism just means a secure homeland in the region that comprises historical Judea. That does not mean Jews in this land cannot live alongside Palestinian Arabs, nor does that proposed homeland even have to include the West Bank or disputed Jerusalem territory. Indeed, Israel forcibly evicted all Jewish residents from the Gaza Strip back in 2005, showing that, in the face of pushback from neighboring Arab nations and multiple rejected peace deals following the British Mandate jumping ship to let us all battle it out, Zionism didn’t even have to include that land either. Therefore, the blanket statement circulating these days—that at its core, Zionism equals racism—doesn’t hold up perfectly. Not when such an entity can feasibly exist as any other nation, including as a home to many diverse peoples.
Okay, let’s take a breath. To clarify, unilateral settlements as well as air raids can cause significant destruction. An alternative might be solo sniper ground warfare to target militants with more discrimination in order to avoid civilian casualties. What’s more, we can all hope for a more progressive center-left administration to replace Likud in the Knesset this year, a goal of which would be enhanced Palestinian rights in Gaza and the Disputed Territories.
So, if you have read this far, once more, please do continue to mourn the innocents killed in this conflict. At the end of the day, no matter who shot first, people are still people. But please try to consider that, unlike any conflicts in the U.S. for the past two centuries and most in Europe for nearly the past century, humans on both sides of the Palestine/Israel war recognize and face the frequent threat of bomb sirens that come from a war on home turf.
The main reason this nuance matters to diaspora Jews is that regardless of plenty of Jews worldwide having no connection to Israel, the number of attacks against Jews around the globe has dramatically surged since the latest Palestine/Israel violence spike began. The running narrative of Jews as oppressors has even reached tech giants, with one high-profile employee claiming that Jews have an insatiable appetite for war—not Israel, Jews—in a blog statement that wasn’t called into question until 14 years after its release.
Many of us are starting to worry, because while those living in Diaspora have next to no say in Israeli politics, plenty of diaspora Jews are taking the fall for this. It is, quite frankly, frightening. So, believe us when we say that you can decry the loss of innocent Palestinian lives, and at the same time, allow us to express fear over the mounting narrative that ties our very identity to violence and the next great conspiracy.
Sarah Katz is an author, UC Berkeley alumna in Middle Eastern Studies, and cyber security analyst.
Did you enjoy this article?
You'll love our roundtable.
Editor's Picks
Israel and the Internet Wars – A Professional Social Media Review
The Invisible Student: A Tale of Homelessness at UCLA and USC
What Ever Happened to the LA Times?
Who Are the Jews On Joe Biden’s Cabinet?
You’re Not a Bad Jewish Mom If Your Kid Wants Santa Claus to Come to Your House
No Labels: The Group Fighting for the Political Center
Latest Articles
Between Munich and Vietnam
Europe’s Sanctions Are a Strategic Blow to the Settlement Enterprise – and to Israel
A Nod from the Judges
Christians, Jews and America
Jerusalem Day Exposed a Growing Political Divide in Israel
Finding Love, From Inglewood to Jerusalem
Shavuot: The Middle Child of Jewish Festivals
The festival of Shavuot provides a well-placed opportunity to contemplate the choices we make on our Jewish journeys and how they will impact the next generation.
Hollywood’s ‘Rushmore’ Celebrates ‘Seinfeld’
Could four Jews agree on the four best “Seinfeld” episodes? Will “The Soup Nazi” make the cut?
From Poisoned Wells to ‘Rape Dogs’: The Medieval Logic Behind Modern Anti-Israel Lies
Blood libels were never about evidence. They were about moral conditioning – preparing societies to see Jews as uniquely sinister, corrupting and deserving of suspicion.
Jewish Californians Gather in Sacramento to Turn Concern into Action
The summit’s emotional center remained the lobbying itself: ordinary Californians leaving hotel conference rooms behind to walk directly into the offices where state policy is shaped.
Rabbis of LA | Rabbi Aaron Wants to Bathe You in Sound
First of two parts
Rabbis of LA | How Rabbi Artson Fell in Love with God
Third of three parts
Emhoff at Jewish California Summit; Israel’s Birthday; New AFTAU Hire; Repair the World
Notable people and events in the Jewish LA community.
Rachel Goldberg-Polin Speaks at L.A. Synagogues, Yom HaAtzmaut Program in Beverly Hills
Notable people and events in the Jewish LA community.
The Charles Bronfman Prize Announces CultivAid CEO Tomer Malchi as 2026 Laureate
The Israeli-American scientist is helping transform global agriculture through innovation and sustainability.
Israeli Colleges and Universities Support Reservist Students in a Difficult Time
“Our main role is to keep the students moving forward, even when the path is complex.” – Professor Yossi Rosenwaks
Antisemitism Un-Masked on Broadway
The play “Giant” and its urgent, timely message could not have come sooner—in part because it clashes with the antisemitism we see on the news. Today a dandy like Dahl is not the problem. What we are all witnessing now is low-class thuggery prowling city streets.
“Netflix is a Joke” Returns to LA with Jewish Acts Galore
The Book and the Sword
You must keep one foot in the sanctuary even while going out to war; and you must go out to war even when your heart yearns to remain in the sanctuary.
In the Desert – A poem for Parsha Bamidbar
What went so wrong in the desert?
A Bisl Torah — Your Time Capsule
If you created a time capsule representing who you are and what you stand for, what would be included?
Not Wandering in the Wilderness with Bewilderness
A Moment in Time: “Me Time”
Inaugural ‘Core Vital Voices Conference’ for Orthodox Women Who Provide End of Life Care
Chaplains are called to be present. We hold, we witness, we support others in accessing their spiritual resources, and we accompany. We honor the grief, loss, and love by seeing and hearing them when it is unbearable.
Print Issue: The Speech I Won’t Give at Georgetown Law | May 15, 2026
An outcry over my support for Israel in my Jewish Journal columns forced me to withdraw from my commencement address at Georgetown Law School. Here is the speech I was going to give.
Israel’s Noam Bettan Advances to Eurovision Grand Final
This is the fifth time that Israel has qualified for the Eurovision final in the past six years.
More news and opinions than at a Shabbat dinner, right in your inbox.