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Miriam Shaviv

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Miriam Shaviv,

Miriam Shaviv

Opinion

Governmental deception

July 10, 2014 13:45
2 min read

The Israeli reaction to the revelation that an Arab teenager, Mohammed Abu Khdeir, was allegedly murdered by Israeli Jews has ranged from denial to - more commonly - disgust and depression that Jews could be responsible. Israeli ministers, either genuinely shocked or to show how different they are to the Palestinian leadership, have rushed to disavow the crime in the strongest terms.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu promised to treat Jewish terrorism as harshly as the Arab variety. "We do not distinguish terror from terror," he said. Even according to the hawkish minister Naftali Bennett: "Abu Khdeir's murder is a heinous act that is anti-moral and anti-Jewish."

These sentiments are appropriate. But the official response has lacked one important element: cheshbon nefesh, or soul-searching over the Israeli authorities' own responsibility for the horrific events of the past month.

Specifically: did the government deliberately, and needlessly, help create the almost hysterical atmosphere which ultimately led to Abu Khdeir's murder?