An unlikely charge of intent to commit treason landed Meir Baruchin, a grey-haired, softly spoken history and civics teacher, in the solitary confinement wing of Jerusalem’s notorious “Russian Compound” prison in early November.

The evidence compiled by police who handcuffed him, then drove to his apartment and ransacked it as he watched, was a series of Facebook posts he’d made, mourning the civilians killed in Gaza, criticising the Israeli military, and warning against wars of revenge.

“Horrific images are pouring in from Gaza. Entire families were wiped out. I don’t usually upload pictures like this, but look what we do in revenge,” said a message on 8 October, below a picture of the family of Abu Daqqa, killed in one of the first airstrikes on Gaza. “Anyone who thinks this is justified because of what happened yesterday, should unfriend themselves. I ask everyone else to do everything possible to stop this madness. Stop it now. Not later, Now!!!”

  • @Altofaltception
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    3910 months ago

    Just another example of democratic principles such as free speech being upheld from the “only democracy in the Middle East”.

    /S

  • @xenomor
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    3110 months ago

    Israel is a fascist ethnostate, built on a meticulously cultivated culture of racism. As an entity, they are entirely undeserving of our support or respect, and their uncritical supporters should be called out for their toxic malevolence at every opportunity. I’m so tired of this.

  • SilverserenOP
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    3010 months ago

    Ten days after that Facebook message, he was fired from his teaching job in Petach Tikvah municipality. Less than a month later he was in a high-security jail, detained to give police more time to investigate critical views he had never tried to hide.

    Inside Israel, veteran journalists, intellectuals and rights activists say, there is little public space for dissent about the war in Gaza, even three months into an offensive that has killed 23,000 Palestinians and has no end in sight. “Make no mistake: Baruchin was used as a political tool to send a political message. The motive for his arrest was deterrence – silencing any criticism or any hint of protest against Israeli policy,” the long-established Haaretz newspaper said in an editorial.

    I see no word to describe this other than fascism. Trump would love to have the ability to do this (and seems like he plans to with his “one day dictator” claim).

  • @erranto
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    2510 months ago

    Western media: Israel is a beacon of democracy that mast be defended by all means

    also Western media: nothing to see here, you an are anti-Semite, you need re-education.

  • @apfelwoiSchoppen
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    2010 months ago

    Yet again, fascism and genocide bring us closer to another world war.

      • NoneOfUrBusiness
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        610 months ago

        Which honestly isn’t all that important. This is Manifest Destiny in the middle east.

      • @Linkerbaan
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        010 months ago

        Which role? Jews have nothing to do with this. This is 100% racism.

  • @febra
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    1810 months ago

    I see “the only democracy in the Middle East” is delivering as usual.

  • Gazumi
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    1510 months ago

    So nothing at all like Nazi Germany… /s

  • Justin
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    910 months ago

    Leaked video of the teacher’s arrest /s

    https://youtu.be/vSKfjldiB2Q

    That clip comes from a really good 1940’s era video from the US government about why nazism is bad.

    Amazing that arresting professors who speak out against the government is example #1 of why fascism is bad, but here Israel is, arresting professors for political speech.

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    210 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    An unlikely charge of intent to commit treason landed Meir Baruchin, a grey-haired, softly spoken history and civics teacher, in the solitary confinement wing of Jerusalem’s notorious “Russian Compound” prison in early November.

    The evidence compiled by police who handcuffed him, then drove to his apartment and ransacked it as he watched, was a series of Facebook posts he’d made, mourning the civilians killed in Gaza, criticising the Israeli military, and warning against wars of revenge.

    He knew his views about the Israeli military were controversial; similar criticism at a less volatile time had cost him a teaching post in the city of Rishon LeZion, near Tel Aviv, three years earlier.

    Inside Israel, veteran journalists, intellectuals and rights activists say, there is little public space for dissent about the war in Gaza, even three months into an offensive that has killed 23,000 Palestinians and has no end in sight.

    Authorities also summoned Yael Ayalon, head of a Tel Aviv high school, after she shared a Haaretz article warning that Israeli media was hiding the suffering of Gaza’s civilians.

    When his name is clear, Baruchin plans to sue Israeli media who reported police charges without asking for his response or looking for evidence, and accused him of justifying and legitimising Hamas.


    The original article contains 1,237 words, the summary contains 210 words. Saved 83%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!