Saturday, October 11, 2025
No Result
View All Result
SPHERE WORD
  • Home
  • ABOUT
  • TEACHING VAULT
  • FEATURED INTERVIEWS
  • GUEST SPOTLIGHTS
  • WORLD NEWS
  • en English
    • af Afrikaans
    • ar Arabic
    • zh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
    • nl Dutch
    • en English
    • fr French
    • de German
    • iw Hebrew
    • hi Hindi
    • it Italian
    • pt Portuguese
    • ru Russian
    • es Spanish
  • Home
  • ABOUT
  • TEACHING VAULT
  • FEATURED INTERVIEWS
  • GUEST SPOTLIGHTS
  • WORLD NEWS
  • en English
    • af Afrikaans
    • ar Arabic
    • zh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
    • nl Dutch
    • en English
    • fr French
    • de German
    • iw Hebrew
    • hi Hindi
    • it Italian
    • pt Portuguese
    • ru Russian
    • es Spanish
No Result
View All Result
SPHERE WORD
No Result
View All Result
Home GUEST SPOTLIGHTS

Palestinians have nobody to blame but themselves

Sphere Word by Sphere Word
April 25, 2025
in GUEST SPOTLIGHTS
0
Palestinians have nobody to blame but themselves
585
SHARES
3.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


By Jonathan Feldstein, Op-ed contributor Wednesday, April 23, 2025
A child stomps on an Israeli flag during a demonstration in Chicago, Illinois, to show support for the Palestinian people on October 11, 2023. Rally marshals stopped the display and attempted to take the flag. Organizers of the event called on the U.S. government to stop supporting Israel, which they refer to as a 'racist, apartheid state.'
A child stomps on an Israeli flag during a demonstration in Chicago, Illinois, to show support for the Palestinian people on October 11, 2023. Rally marshals stopped the display and attempted to take the flag. Organizers of the event called on the U.S. government to stop supporting Israel, which they refer to as a “racist, apartheid state.” | Scott Olson/Getty Images

This week, Palestinian Arabs and their supporters around the world have declared a “Day of Rage.” Again. Their “Days of Rage” along with “Nakba Day” are pretexts to rally support for Palestinian Arabs, my heart sinks — not out of fear, but out of a profound sadness for the moral bankruptcy it reveals.

This phrase, dripping with venom and incitement, is not a call for justice, peace, or progress. It is an orgy of anger, a glorification of destruction, and a stark reminder of timeless failure of Palestinian Arab leadership to ever build anything meaningful for their people. Instead of fostering hope, they peddle blame, perpetuate and celebrate violence, and tear down what others have painstakingly created, throughout Israel and across Western campuses and cities.

This has left the Palestinian Arabs mired in suffering. This endless blaming of Israel as the singular source of all their problems is their legacy. Sadly, for them, these are the equivalent of their Super Bowl, the only event that distinguishes their “culture” as a distinct ethnic group.

A “Day of Rage” is not about building schools, hospitals, or infrastructure for their own long-term well-being. It’s about channeling fury — often violently — against Israel, the Jewish people, and anyone who dares to support the Jewish state’s right to exist. The organizers, whether Hamas, the Palestinian Authority, or their international gang of cheerleaders, are not rallying for Palestinian statehood or prosperity; they’re stoking hatred to distract from their own failures. This exploits genuine pain to fuel a cycle of violence, rather than offering them a path to a better future.

Get Our Latest News for FREE

Subscribe to get daily/weekly email with the top stories (plus special offers!) from The Christian Post. Be the first to know.

For decades, the Palestinian Arab leadership has squandered countless opportunities to build something for their people. They have balked multiple times at creating the Palestinian Arab state, which they claim is their goal. Yet the truth is that they are more interested in destroying the one Jewish state than creating another Palestinian Arab state.

Billions in international aid have poured into Gaza and the West Bank and the Palestinian Authority (PA), yet there are no thriving cities, innovative industries, or vibrant elements of a civil society. Instead, we see rockets launched from Gaza, tunnels dug to infiltrate and attack Israel, and a culture that glorifies “martyrdom” and death over life. The PA rewards terrorists with stipends, names streets and parks after those who murdered innocents, and indoctrinates children with hatred through school curricula and media. This is not nation-building; it’s nation-destroying. This is the product of “Days of Rage” past, and the jihadi culture that controls it.

Conversely, in 1948, the Jewish people, emerging from the ashes of the Holocaust, founded a state on a sliver of land surrounded by enemies. With grit, ingenuity, and faith, they turned the desert into farmland, built world-class universities, and created a tech ecosystem that rivals Silicon Valley. Israel’s success is not a fluke; it’s the result of a people who chose to build rather than blame, to create rather than destroy. When faced with adversity—wars, boycotts, terror—Israelis responded with resilience, innovation, and a commitment to life. The Palestinian Arab leadership, by contrast, has missed every chance to emulate this, choosing instead to point fingers at Israel for their woes.

The “Day of Rage” epitomizes this mindset. It’s a spectacle designed to shift focus from the Palestinian Arab leadership’s corruption and incompetence to Israel’s existence as the supposed root of all evil. Their supporters who hijack public spaces around the world are only focused on Israel’s destruction, setting back the cause for the people for whom they allegedly demonstrate.

Never mind that Israel completely withdrew from Gaza in 2005, leaving behind greenhouses and infrastructure that could have been the foundation for a Palestinian Garden of Eden along the Mediterranean. Those greenhouses were looted and destroyed, and the land turned into a launching pad for rockets. Never mind that Israel has offered peace deals repeatedly — Camp David in 2000, Taba in 2001, Olmert’s offer in 2008 — all rejected or ignored. The Palestinian Arab leadership doesn’t want peace; it wants a perpetual grievance to justify its existence and rally the masses.

If there were ever a true reason for a Day of Rage, this is it.

This obsession has real consequences. Palestinian Arab children grow up in a world where their heroes are suicide bombers, not scientists or entrepreneurs. Their economy languishes because their leaders prioritize jihad over jobs. Their hospitals crumble, not because Israel withholds aid, but because funds are diverted to weapons and tunnels stored in and under the very hospitals whose purpose is to save lives.

And yet, the world drinks the “Day of Rage” Kool-Aid. Pro-Hamas activists across Western cities and campuses chant genocidal slogans they don’t understand, waving flags of a state that has never existed. They ignore the Palestinian Arabs’ own leadership’s rejectionism, antisemitism, and oppression of its own people. They ignore that Hamas’s charter calls for the destruction of Israel and the murder of Jews, or that the Palestinian Authority’s “pay-for-slay” policy incentivizes terror. They see only Israel’s flaws, magnified through a lens of selective outrage while excusing or romanticizing Palestinian Arab violence as “resistance.”

This double standard is a form of moral bankruptcy. If the world truly cared about Palestinian Arabs, it would demand accountability from their leaders. It would question why billions in aid have produced no progress. Instead, it enables the “Day of Rage” mentality, giving a pass to those who perpetuate Palestinian Arab suffering while demonizing Israel for defending itself.

I don’t rejoice in this reality. I pray for a day when Palestinian Arabs have leaders who choose life, who build schools instead of terror tunnels, who teach their children to dream rather than to hate. But that day will not come through “Days of Rage” or the moral cowardice of those who cheer them on. It will come when Palestinian Arabs reject the bankrupt ideology of blame and destruction and embrace the hard but rewarding work of building a future.

Until then, every “Day of Rage” is a reminder of what could have been, and a warning of the moral abyss that engulfs those who choose hatred over hope. Palestinian Arabs deserve better. So does the world. The world should demand it.

Jonathan Feldstein is President and CEO of the Genesis 123 Foundation and RunforZion.com

You might also like

Syrian election sparks violence in Aleppo: ‘People are afraid’

7 reasons for the trans conflict with Christianity

ELCA-affiliated college allowed male to join women’s team: AG


By Jonathan Feldstein, Op-ed contributor Wednesday, April 23, 2025
A child stomps on an Israeli flag during a demonstration in Chicago, Illinois, to show support for the Palestinian people on October 11, 2023. Rally marshals stopped the display and attempted to take the flag. Organizers of the event called on the U.S. government to stop supporting Israel, which they refer to as a 'racist, apartheid state.'
A child stomps on an Israeli flag during a demonstration in Chicago, Illinois, to show support for the Palestinian people on October 11, 2023. Rally marshals stopped the display and attempted to take the flag. Organizers of the event called on the U.S. government to stop supporting Israel, which they refer to as a “racist, apartheid state.” | Scott Olson/Getty Images

This week, Palestinian Arabs and their supporters around the world have declared a “Day of Rage.” Again. Their “Days of Rage” along with “Nakba Day” are pretexts to rally support for Palestinian Arabs, my heart sinks — not out of fear, but out of a profound sadness for the moral bankruptcy it reveals.

This phrase, dripping with venom and incitement, is not a call for justice, peace, or progress. It is an orgy of anger, a glorification of destruction, and a stark reminder of timeless failure of Palestinian Arab leadership to ever build anything meaningful for their people. Instead of fostering hope, they peddle blame, perpetuate and celebrate violence, and tear down what others have painstakingly created, throughout Israel and across Western campuses and cities.

This has left the Palestinian Arabs mired in suffering. This endless blaming of Israel as the singular source of all their problems is their legacy. Sadly, for them, these are the equivalent of their Super Bowl, the only event that distinguishes their “culture” as a distinct ethnic group.

A “Day of Rage” is not about building schools, hospitals, or infrastructure for their own long-term well-being. It’s about channeling fury — often violently — against Israel, the Jewish people, and anyone who dares to support the Jewish state’s right to exist. The organizers, whether Hamas, the Palestinian Authority, or their international gang of cheerleaders, are not rallying for Palestinian statehood or prosperity; they’re stoking hatred to distract from their own failures. This exploits genuine pain to fuel a cycle of violence, rather than offering them a path to a better future.

Get Our Latest News for FREE

Subscribe to get daily/weekly email with the top stories (plus special offers!) from The Christian Post. Be the first to know.

For decades, the Palestinian Arab leadership has squandered countless opportunities to build something for their people. They have balked multiple times at creating the Palestinian Arab state, which they claim is their goal. Yet the truth is that they are more interested in destroying the one Jewish state than creating another Palestinian Arab state.

Billions in international aid have poured into Gaza and the West Bank and the Palestinian Authority (PA), yet there are no thriving cities, innovative industries, or vibrant elements of a civil society. Instead, we see rockets launched from Gaza, tunnels dug to infiltrate and attack Israel, and a culture that glorifies “martyrdom” and death over life. The PA rewards terrorists with stipends, names streets and parks after those who murdered innocents, and indoctrinates children with hatred through school curricula and media. This is not nation-building; it’s nation-destroying. This is the product of “Days of Rage” past, and the jihadi culture that controls it.

Conversely, in 1948, the Jewish people, emerging from the ashes of the Holocaust, founded a state on a sliver of land surrounded by enemies. With grit, ingenuity, and faith, they turned the desert into farmland, built world-class universities, and created a tech ecosystem that rivals Silicon Valley. Israel’s success is not a fluke; it’s the result of a people who chose to build rather than blame, to create rather than destroy. When faced with adversity—wars, boycotts, terror—Israelis responded with resilience, innovation, and a commitment to life. The Palestinian Arab leadership, by contrast, has missed every chance to emulate this, choosing instead to point fingers at Israel for their woes.

The “Day of Rage” epitomizes this mindset. It’s a spectacle designed to shift focus from the Palestinian Arab leadership’s corruption and incompetence to Israel’s existence as the supposed root of all evil. Their supporters who hijack public spaces around the world are only focused on Israel’s destruction, setting back the cause for the people for whom they allegedly demonstrate.

Never mind that Israel completely withdrew from Gaza in 2005, leaving behind greenhouses and infrastructure that could have been the foundation for a Palestinian Garden of Eden along the Mediterranean. Those greenhouses were looted and destroyed, and the land turned into a launching pad for rockets. Never mind that Israel has offered peace deals repeatedly — Camp David in 2000, Taba in 2001, Olmert’s offer in 2008 — all rejected or ignored. The Palestinian Arab leadership doesn’t want peace; it wants a perpetual grievance to justify its existence and rally the masses.

If there were ever a true reason for a Day of Rage, this is it.

This obsession has real consequences. Palestinian Arab children grow up in a world where their heroes are suicide bombers, not scientists or entrepreneurs. Their economy languishes because their leaders prioritize jihad over jobs. Their hospitals crumble, not because Israel withholds aid, but because funds are diverted to weapons and tunnels stored in and under the very hospitals whose purpose is to save lives.

And yet, the world drinks the “Day of Rage” Kool-Aid. Pro-Hamas activists across Western cities and campuses chant genocidal slogans they don’t understand, waving flags of a state that has never existed. They ignore the Palestinian Arabs’ own leadership’s rejectionism, antisemitism, and oppression of its own people. They ignore that Hamas’s charter calls for the destruction of Israel and the murder of Jews, or that the Palestinian Authority’s “pay-for-slay” policy incentivizes terror. They see only Israel’s flaws, magnified through a lens of selective outrage while excusing or romanticizing Palestinian Arab violence as “resistance.”

This double standard is a form of moral bankruptcy. If the world truly cared about Palestinian Arabs, it would demand accountability from their leaders. It would question why billions in aid have produced no progress. Instead, it enables the “Day of Rage” mentality, giving a pass to those who perpetuate Palestinian Arab suffering while demonizing Israel for defending itself.

I don’t rejoice in this reality. I pray for a day when Palestinian Arabs have leaders who choose life, who build schools instead of terror tunnels, who teach their children to dream rather than to hate. But that day will not come through “Days of Rage” or the moral cowardice of those who cheer them on. It will come when Palestinian Arabs reject the bankrupt ideology of blame and destruction and embrace the hard but rewarding work of building a future.

Until then, every “Day of Rage” is a reminder of what could have been, and a warning of the moral abyss that engulfs those who choose hatred over hope. Palestinian Arabs deserve better. So does the world. The world should demand it.

Jonathan Feldstein is President and CEO of the Genesis 123 Foundation and RunforZion.com

Previous Post

Bondi memo lays out directives to protect kids from mutilation

Next Post

Trump seeks to improve American education through AI

Sphere Word

Sphere Word

Related Posts

Syrian election sparks violence in Aleppo: ‘People are afraid’
GUEST SPOTLIGHTS

Syrian election sparks violence in Aleppo: ‘People are afraid’

by Sphere Word
October 11, 2025
7 reasons for the trans conflict with Christianity
GUEST SPOTLIGHTS

7 reasons for the trans conflict with Christianity

by Sphere Word
October 11, 2025
ELCA-affiliated college allowed male to join women’s team: AG
GUEST SPOTLIGHTS

ELCA-affiliated college allowed male to join women’s team: AG

by Sphere Word
October 11, 2025
AI chatbot told teen how to commit ‘beautiful suicide’: lawsuit
GUEST SPOTLIGHTS

AI chatbot told teen how to commit ‘beautiful suicide’: lawsuit

by Sphere Word
October 10, 2025
Maverick City co-founder denies Chandler Moore’s allegations
GUEST SPOTLIGHTS

Maverick City co-founder denies Chandler Moore’s allegations

by Sphere Word
October 10, 2025
Next Post
Trump seeks to improve American education through AI

Trump seeks to improve American education through AI

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recommended

Belief in the afterlife rising, even among religious ‘nones’

Belief in the afterlife rising, even among religious ‘nones’

April 20, 2025
Pastor apologizes for not telling church about child abuse

Pastor apologizes for not telling church about child abuse

December 16, 2023

Categories

  • FEATURED INTERVIEWS
  • GUEST SPOTLIGHTS
  • Uncategorized
  • WORLD NEWS

Don't miss it

Syrian election sparks violence in Aleppo: ‘People are afraid’
GUEST SPOTLIGHTS

Syrian election sparks violence in Aleppo: ‘People are afraid’

October 11, 2025
SCOTUS rejects church’s request for award over COVID-19 lawsuit
WORLD NEWS

SCOTUS rejects church’s request for award over COVID-19 lawsuit

October 11, 2025
7 reasons for the trans conflict with Christianity
GUEST SPOTLIGHTS

7 reasons for the trans conflict with Christianity

October 11, 2025
Franklin Graham returning to the UK for ‘God Loves You’ Tour
WORLD NEWS

Franklin Graham returning to the UK for ‘God Loves You’ Tour

October 11, 2025
ELCA-affiliated college allowed male to join women’s team: AG
GUEST SPOTLIGHTS

ELCA-affiliated college allowed male to join women’s team: AG

October 11, 2025
Trump calls on Democrat Va. AG nominee Jay Jones to drop out
WORLD NEWS

Trump calls on Democrat Va. AG nominee Jay Jones to drop out

October 11, 2025

Welcome to SphereWord.com, where we are dedicated to exploring the profound wisdom and spiritual insights found in the Word of God. Our blog serves as your go-to resource for in-depth discussions on spirituality, biblical teachings, and the mysteries of creation. – Contact Us: For any inquiries or to get in touch with us, please feel free to contact us via email at admin@sphereword.com. We look forward to hearing from you!

SPHERE WORD

Donate

Support SphereWord today and embark on a transformative spiritual journey. Donate now to empower personal growth, gain practical guidance, and deepen your understanding of biblical teachings. Together, let's unlock the true meaning of God's Word and enrich our lives. Join us on this enlightening quest!

Categories

  • Home
  • ABOUT
  • TEACHING VAULT
  • FEATURED INTERVIEWS
  • GUEST SPOTLIGHTS
  • WORLD NEWS

© 2023 SphereWord SW - All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • ABOUT
  • TEACHING VAULT
  • FEATURED INTERVIEWS
  • GUEST SPOTLIGHTS
  • WORLD NEWS