Become a Member
Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll

By

Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll,

Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll Axxxxx

Opinion

Israel can still learn from the Covid mistakes

'What went wrong? Well, decisions were made for political, rather than health considerations.'

September 24, 2020 15:39
Wearing masks in Tel Aviv
3 min read

It’s September and I’m writing this column in the midst of our second lockdown. The table (my office) is covered with school books, devices connected to Zoom, headphones, and children.

In my April column, during our first lockdown, I wrote that Israel is good in a crisis, but not so good at long term planning. And in July, when coronovirus rates started to rise, I wrote that if we don’t face the problems within, the mismanagement and the infighting, it will break us just the same as Covid would. And now we are again in lockdown, experiencing another holiday season alone, and the pattern continues.

If humans can be counted on for one thing it’s that we don’t learn from our mistakes.

What went wrong? How did Israel go from having one of the lowest Covid rates in the world to nearly the highest infection rate per capita? Well, of course, it was due to the ultra-orthodox/school openings/ left- wing protests/lack of enforcement/government incompetence/anything that someone-who-is-not-me did.