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Opinion

Stone-throwing Jews scare me more than terror attacks

June 16, 2016 11:53
Victims of Jewish extremist arson damage at a historic Galilee church
4 min read

The attack on Sarona was horrific. The people who carried it out knew only to hate. They embraced the nihilist culture of death. We must defend ourselves against them any way we can. This was an act by our enemies against a soft target. The perpetrators sought to kill as many Israelis as possible and, in seeking to provoke a security response from Israel, demonstrated a callous disregard for their own people, many of whom were looking forward to an easing of their situation for the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

While I'm appalled by this attack and all too many like it, I'm not troubled by it, by which I mean I don't lie awake at night searching my Jewish conscience.

A story that I read last night, however, in the immediate aftermath of reading news of the Sarona terrorist attacks, did trouble me deeply, because it reported on a problem which points to a deeper malaise in Israeli society. The source of the story was the Catholic News Agency, not on my regular reading list, and it was headlined: Stone-throwing attack on Catholics in Israel shows a "culture of contempt".

The story related how, while attending Mass on May 28 in the courtyard of the small chapel of the Community of St Therese of Lisieux in Rehovot, the congregation were attacked by a group of Jewish boys of about 14 years old, hurling stones. The Catholic community in Rehovot is mainly composed of migrant workers from Africa, India, the Philippines, and Sri Lanka, as well as university students.

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