Source: In the News UK, 6-25-09

Thursday marks three years since kidnapping of Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit on border of Gaza Strip

Today marks three years since the kidnapping of Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit on the border of the Gaza Strip.

The 22-year-old was captured by Palestinian gunmen during an attack on an Israeli army base in 2006 and he is believed to have been held in the Gaza Strip by the militant group Hamas ever since. Earlier this week hundreds of Israelis temporarily blocked aid from reaching the region demanding his release. Israel has increasingly tightened the blockade on the Gaza Strip ever since militants tunneled over the border and captured Sgt Shalit in a deadly raid which left four people dead.

During the three years of his capture no aid group has been allowed access to the 22-year-old, with the International Red Cross even refused permission to provide him with correspondence from his family. Hamas has continually called for the release of hundreds of Palestinian prisoners in exchange for the Israeli solider.

On Tuesday, Israel released Hamas parliamentary speaker Aziz Dweik, who was held for almost three years, apparently in retaliation to the capture of Sgt Shalit.

Diskin and Dekel fly to Cairo for decisive talks on Schalit

Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency) head Yuval Diskin and the prime minister’s special envoy for prisoner exchanges, Ofer Dekel, will hold what are being called “make-or-break talks” in Cairo on Sunday in an effort to clinch a deal to free kidnapped soldier Gilad Schalit from Gaza before the Olmert government leaves office.

The negotiators, who will meet with senior Egyptian intelligence officials, have until Sunday night to finalize an agreement, sources told The Jerusalem Post on Saturday night.

A special cabinet session is scheduled to convene Monday morning on the exchange. Ministers will either be asked to approve the details of a prisoner swap, or be briefed on the unsuccessful efforts.

Fourteen of the 26 cabinet ministers have told the Post that they would likely support a deal, or at the very least would not prevent it from going forward.

Prime Minister-designate Binyamin Netanyahu has been updated by Olmert, but was not asked to approve the latest developments.

Israel’s deadline of Sunday night for an agreement is based on the expectation that coalition agreements for the new government are to be presented to the Knesset on Tuesday.

“This is the last week that decision-makers have to fulfill their obligation to save Gilad,” Yoel Schalit, Gilad’s older brother, told Channel 2 on Saturday……

A video slide show celebrating 60 years of Israel set to Gil Troy’s updated version of his “Why I Am A Zionist” article (2001).

Video designed and edited by Bonnie K. Goodman.

Welcome to the new blog for “Together With Israel.” The site’s purpose was inspired by Gil Troy’s November 2, 2006 article from The Canadian Jewish News:

WE MUST ACT TO FREE THE SOLDIERS

Recently, I gave an audience of 200 involved Jews in Montreal a pop quiz.

“How many of you have heard of Gilad Shalit, Ehud Goldwasser, and Eldad Regev,” I asked. Most hands shot up proudly, as people recognized the names of the three Israelis kidnapped this summer – and still held hostage by Hamas and Hezbollah. I then asked: “How many of you have done anything to support their families or demand their release?” Every single hand dropped, dejectedly.

Shame on us. How could we observe the Jewish holidays without imagining even briefly what it must have been like for these three families with a son, a brother, absent from the table? How could we celebrate without empathizing with these three young men, caught in a hellish purgatory devised to impose pain on them, their families, the State of Israel and the Jewish people?

We cannot sit idly by anymore. We must act.

There are two kinds of constructive responses to the hostage crisis. We can reach out to the three affected families with the simple message of “anachnu eetchem,” we are with you. Letting these people, wracked by worry, know through cards, letters, children’s drawings and little gifts that they are not alone is important. It strengthens them by placing their personal predicament in the broader sweep of Jewish history, the Israeli narrative, and the modern struggle between democracies and Islamist terror. Small gestures can’t save the boys, but they can lighten the load, even momentarily, that these three families have borne since the summer with grace.

The person-to-person contact is easy. And, as my family discovered when we tried to help the three soldiers Hezbollah kidnapped ? and murdered ? in October 2000, the rewards can be tremendous. We as a family bonded so deeply with one of the families, that of Benny Avraham, of blessed memory, that my children now have a special set of Israeli “grandparents.”

The greater challenge is determining what kind of political efforts will facilitate the three?s release. This requires a sophisticated analysis of the dynamics surrounding the two separate kidnappings – that of Gilad Shalit, a 19-year-old with a shy smile, by Hamas on the Gaza border; and that of Ehud Goldwasser, a 31-year-old engineer, and Eldad Regev, a 26-year-old pre-law student, by Hezbollah just south of Lebanon.

Clearly, direct pressure on the two terrorist organizations is not likely to work. But constant, relentless, constructive pressure on their supporters or neighbours might help. We need to mobilize a vast coalition of Jews and non-Jews to bombard Lebanese officials and activists for the Palestinian cause – as well as western diplomats who interact with Palestinian and Lebanese officials – with a simple message: free the kidnapped victims today.

Palestinians seeking a resumption of western aid must know that until Shalit is home again, no aid will flow. And those who support the Palestinian cause, waving the flag of humanitarianism, should be challenged to try saving a young kid caught in the crossfire. “Treat him as a human. Make a stand for our common humanity,” we should say.

Similarly, as the Lebanese government begs the international community for reconstruction aid, all assistance should be contingent on arranging the release of Goldwasser and Regev. This summer’s ceasefire was supposed to secure their release. We cannot allow the world to forget their fates.

In late September, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper refused to join a massive pile-on against Israel at the Francophonie summit. Most of the other 72 countries were ready to approve a resolution lamenting Lebanon’s suffering and not Israel’s. Standing on principle, Harper forced the leaders of the world’s French-speaking nations to acknowledge the suffering of everyone caught in the crossfire. Since then, many have asked how they can thank Harper, and they have responded logically by donating money to his party, by joining his party and by seeking effective candidates who can win in contested districts.

Another way to salute Harper is to emulate his example. We have an opportunity to stand on principle, to rally around a seemingly hopeless cause, and make a statement affirming humanity, democracy and civilization. If we fail, there are at least three families in Israel who will remain grateful for our efforts.

Show Support

WAYS TO SHOW SUPPORT THAT YOU ARE "TOGETHER WITH ISRAEL": We can reach out to the affected families with the simple message of "anachnu eetchem," we are with you -- Gil Troy

 

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