by Caroline Glick
Ruth Fogel was in the bathroom when the Palestinian terrorists pounced on her  husband Udi and their three-month-old daughter Hadas, slitting their throats as  they lay in bed on Friday night in their home in Itamar.
The terrorists  stabbed Ruth to death as she came out of the bathroom. With both parents and the  newborn dead, they moved on to the other children, going into a bedroom where  Ruth and Udi’s sons Yoav (11) and Elad (four) were sleeping. They stabbed them  through their hearts and slit their throats.
The murderers apparently  missed another bedroom where the Fogels’ other sons, eight-year-old Ro’i and  two-year-old Yishai were asleep because they left them alive. The boys were  found by their big sister, 12-year-old Tamar, when she returned home from a  friend’s house two hours after her family was massacred.
Tamar found  Yishai standing over his parents’ bodies screaming for them to wake  up.
In his eulogy at the family’s funeral on Sunday, former chief rabbi  Yisrael Meir Lau told Tamar that her job from now on is to be her surviving  brothers’ mommy.
In a rare move, the Prime Minister’s Office released  photos of the Fogel family’s blood-drenched corpses.
They are shown as  they were found by security forces.
There was Hadas, dead on her parents’  bed, next to her dead father Udi.
There was Elad, lying on a small throw  rug wearing socks. His little hands were clenched into fists. What was a  four-year-old to do against two grown men with knives? He clenched his fists. So  did his big brother.
Maybe the Prime Minister’s Office thought the  pictures would shock the world. Maybe Binyamin Netanyahu thought the massacre of  three little children would move someone to rethink their hatred of  Israel.
That was the theme of his address to the nation Saturday  night.
Netanyahu directed most of his words to the hostile world. He  spoke to the leaders who rush to condemn Israel at the UN Security Council every  time we assert our right to this land by permitting Jews to build homes. He  demanded that they condemn the murder of Jewish children with the same  enthusiasm and speed.
He shouldn’t have bothered.
The government  released the photos on Saturday night. Within hours, the social activism website  My Israel posted a short video of the photographs on YouTube along with the  names and ages of the victims.
Within two hours YouTube removed the  video.
What was Netanyahu thinking? Didn’t he get the memo that photos of  murdered Jewish children are unacceptable? If they’re published, someone might  start thinking about the nature of Palestinian society.
Someone might  consider the fact that in the Palestinian Authority, anti-Jewish propaganda is  so ubiquitous and so murderous that killing the Fogel babies was an act of  heroism. The baby killers knew that by murdering Udi, Ruth, Hadas, Yoav and Elad  they would enter the pantheon of Palestinian heroes. They can expect to have a  sports stadium or school in Ramallah or Hebron built for them by the Palestinian  Authority and underwritten by American or European taxpayers.
And indeed,  the murder of the Fogel children and their parents was greeted with jubilation  in Gaza.
Carnivals were held in the streets as Hamas members handed out  sweets.
Obviously YouTube managers are not interested in being held  responsible for someone noticing that genocidal Jew hatred defines Palestinian  society – and the Arab world as a whole. But they really have no reason to be  concerned. Even if they had allowed the video to be posted for more than an  hour, it wouldn’t have made a difference.
The enlightened peoples of  Europe, and growing numbers of Americans, have no interest in hearing or seeing  anything that depicts Jews as good people, or even just as regular people. It is  not that the cultured, intellectual A-listers in Europe and America share the  Palestinians’ genocidal hatred of the Jewish people.
The powerful  newspaper editors, television commentators, playwrights, fashion designers,  filmmakers and professors don’t spend time thinking about how to prepare the  next slaughter. They don’t teach their children from the time they are Hadas and  Elad Fogel’s ages that they should strive to become mass murderers. They would  never dream of doing these things. They know there is a division of labor in  contemporary anti-Semitism.
The job of the intellectual luminaries in  Western high society today is to hate Jews the old-fashioned way, the way their  greatgrandparents hated Jews back in the days of the early 20th century before  that villain Adolf Hitler gave Jewhating a bad name.
Much has been made  of the confluence of anti-Semitic bile pouring out of the chattering classes.  From Mel Gibson to Julian Assange to Charlie Sheen to John Galliano, it seems  like a day doesn’t go by without some new celebrity exposing himself as a Jew  hater.
It isn’t that the beautiful people and their followers suddenly  decided that Jews are not their cup of tea (or rail of cocaine). It’s just that  we have reached the point where people no longer feel embarrassed to parade  negative feelings towards Jews.
A DECADE ago, the revelation that French  ambassador to Britain Daniel Bernard referred to Israel as “that shi**y little  country,” was shocking. Now it is standard fare. Everyone who is anyone will  compare Israel to Nazi Germany without even realizing this is nothing but  Holocaust denial.
The post-Holocaust dam reigning in anti-Semitism burst  in 2002. As Jewish children and parents like the Fogels were being murdered in  their beds, on the streets, in discotheques, cafés and supermarkets throughout  Israel, fashionable anti-Semites rejoiced at the opportunity to hate Jews in  public again.
The collective Jew, Israel was accused of everything from  genocide to infanticide to just plain nastiness.
Israel’s leaders were  caricatured as Fagin, Shylock, Pontius Pilate and Hitler on the front pages of  newspapers throughout Europe. IDF soldiers were portrayed as Nazis, and Israeli  families were dehumanized.
No longer civilians with an inherent right to  live, in universities throughout the US and Europe, Israeli innocents were  castigated as “extremist-Zionists” or “settlers” who basically deserved to be  killed.
Professors whose “academic” achievements involved publishing  sanitized postmodern versions of anti-Jewish Palestinian propaganda were granted  tenure and rewarded with lucrative book contracts.
Today, when properly  modulated, Jew hatred is a career maker. Take playwright Caryl Churchill’s  1,300- word anti-Semitic monologue Seven Jewish Children.
The script  accuses the entire population of Israel of mass murders which were never  committed.
For her efforts, Churchill became an international celebrity.  The Royal Court Theater produced her anti- Jewish agitprop. The Guardian  featured it on its home page. When Jewish groups demanded that The Guardian  remove the blood libel from its website, the paper refused. Instead, it left the  anti-Semitic propaganda on its homepage, but in a gesture of openmindedness,  hosted a debate about whether or not Seven Jewish Children is  anti-Semitic.
From London, Seven Jewish Children went on tour in Europe  and the US. In a bid to show how tolerant of dissent they are, Jewish  communities in America hosted showings of the play, which portrays Jewish  parents as monsters who train their children to become mass  murderers.
Seven Jewish Children’s success was repeated by the Turkish  anti-Semitic action film Valley of the Wolves- Palestine, which premiered on  January 28 – International Holocaust Memorial Day. The hero of that film is a  Turkish James Bond character who comes to Israel to avenge his brothers, who  were killed by IDF forces on the Turkish-Hamas terror ship Mavi Marmara last  May.
No doubt owing to the success of Seven Jewish Children and Valley of  the Wolves-Palestine and other such initiatives, anti-Semitic art and  entertainment is a growth sector in Europe.
Last month Britain struck  again. Channel 4 produced a new piece of anti-Semitic bile – a four-part  prime-time miniseries called The Promise. It presents itself as an historical  drama about Israel and the Palestinians, but its relationship with actual  history begins and ends with the wardrobes. In what has become the meme of all  European and international left-liberal salons, the only good Jews in the  mini-series are the ones who died in the Holocaust. From the show’s perspective,  every Jew who took up arms to liberate Israel from the British and defend it  from the Arabs is a Nazi.
WHAT ALL this shows is that Netanyahu was  wasting his time calling on world leaders to condemn the murder of the Fogel  family. What does a condemnation mean? France and Britain condemned the  massacre, along with the US. Does that exculpate the French and British for  their embrace of anti-Semitism? Does it make them friends of the Jewish state?  And say a British playwright sees the YouTubecensored photographs. No  self-respecting British playwright will write a play called Three Jewish  Children telling the story of how Palestinian parents do in fact teach their  children to become mass murderers of Jews. And if a playwright were to write  such a play, The Royal Court Theater wouldn’t produce it. The Guardian wouldn’t  post it on its website. Liberal Jewish community centers in America wouldn’t  show it, nor would university student organizations in Europe or  America.
No, if someone wanted to use the photographs of Yoav’s and  Elad’s mangled corpses and clenched fists as inspiration to write a play or  feature film about the fact that the Palestinians have no national identity  outside their quest to annihilate the Jewish state, he would find no mass  market.
The headlines describing the attack make all this  clear.
From the BBC to CNN the Fogels were not described as Israelis.  They were a “settler family.” Their murderers were “alleged  terrorists.”
As far as the opinion makers of Europe and much of America  are concerned, the Yoavs and Hadases and Elads of Israel have no right to live  if they live in “a settlement.”
So too, they believe that Palestinians  have a right to murder Israelis who serve in the IDF and who believe that Jews  should be able to live freely wherever we want because this land belongs to  us.
Until these genteel Jew haters learn to think otherwise, Israel  should neither seek nor care if they condemn this or any other act of  Palestinian genocide. We shouldn’t care about them at  all.
Caroline Glick
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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