After militants killed his parents during Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel, Maoz Inon vowed to reject revenge and choose a path of reconciliation — for his own healing and his country’s.
The 49-year-old is among thousands of Israelis calling on the international community to formally recognize the State of Palestine ahead of a UN summit next week where several Western countries are set to do just that.
For Inon, a tourism entrepreneur who became involved in the peace movement about 20 years ago, dialogue, recognition and forgiveness on both sides are key to a secure future for the region.
Photo: Reuters
“By revenging the death, we are not going to bring them back to life, and we’re only going to escalate the cycle of violence, bloodshed, and revenge we’ve been trapped within, not since Oct. 7, but for a century,” he said.
Inon said he “wasn’t surprised” when militants attacked Israel, after the years of “occupying, oppressing, and walling between us and the other side.”
“I knew it’s going to explode in our face,” he said. “I didn’t, in my worst nightmare, [think] I will pay the price.”
Inon has since become a key figure in a new campaign calling for Palestinian statehood, but the initiative is facing an uphill battle for Israeli hearts and minds.
According to a survey by the Pew Research Center, only 21 percent of Israeli adults think Israel and a Palestinian state can coexist peacefully — the smallest share since they began asking the question in 2013.
The campaign’s petition, titled “No to War-Yes to Recognition,” has so far garnered the signatures of more than 8,500 Israelis, with organizers hoping to submit the document with 10,000 names at the UN General Assembly.
“Recognising a Palestinian state is not a punishment for Israel, but a step toward a safer and better future, based on mutual recognition and security for both peoples,” the petition reads.
The initiative was launched by Israeli grassroots movement Zazim Community Action, which has distributed thousands of posters and put up a billboard in Tel Aviv as part of the campaign.
“On Oct. 8, 2023, it was clear already that the doctrine of managing the conflict has totally collapsed, and that we have two options,” movement cofounder Raluca Ganea said. “One is complete destruction and annihilation of the other side, or a two-state solution.”
The humanitarian catastrophe unfolding in Gaza is expected to dominate the UN event starting today, nearly two years after Israel’s military offensive began in response to Hamas’ attack.
The meeting is expected to see France, Britain, Belgium, Canada and Australia recognize a Palestinian state.
For Ganea, it would be a step toward ending what she called the “dehumanization” of Palestinians, particularly in Gaza, by giving them the same “status as other nations around the world.”
The push for recognition must be accompanied by concrete steps to ensure the state is manifested on the ground, Inon said.
“Everyone that is acting against a two-state solution must be punished, must be sanctioned,” he said, from the politicians on down.
Inon proposed that incentives and investment from the international community must also accompany the sanctions to show that “peace will bring many fruits ... prosperity and stability, and security and safety.”
The approach is one shared by Yonatan Zeigen, whose mother — prominent peace activist Vivian Silver — was killed at Kibbutz Beeri on Oct. 7, 2023.
“I had to accompany my mother to her death on the phone,” he said.
Out of a feeling of “total helplessness,” Zeigen said he found a sense of responsibility to make sure that nobody else goes through a similar experience.
“The only sustainable and viable future here is the two peoples sharing the land,” he said.
“Palestinian liberation and Israeli security is dependent on the Palestinians receiving their basic right,” he added. “It shouldn’t be negotiable, conditional, in line with Israeli timing. It’s a basic right of peoples, self-determination and statehood.”
However, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has insisted “there will be no Palestinian state,” and far-right members of his government have pushed for increased settlement in the occupied West Bank to preclude the possibility.
Nonetheless, all the activists were confident in the future of the movement.
“French and Germans, it wasn’t so long ago that they couldn’t imagine themselves being part of a confederation,” Zeigen said. “I think that peace is as realistic as war.”
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