Over 1,000 days after: Israel cannot afford to forget lessons from October 7 - editorial
Summarized and contextualized by DistantNews.
At a glance
- Israelis marked 1,000 days since the Hamas invasion and massacre with ceremonies and reconstruction efforts.
- The anniversary highlighted both ongoing grief and a determined commitment to rebuilding communities.
- However, the day also exposed deep political divisions, with public discourse returning to pre-October 7 blame and criticism.
Israelis marked 1,000 days since the Hamas invasion and massacre with somber ceremonies and a powerful display of resilience. Families of victims and the October Council marched along the Gaza border, while a minute of silence was observed nationwide. Simultaneously, the Tekuma Administration reported over 1,000 reconstruction projects underway in the Gaza border region, signaling a deep commitment to rebuilding homes, schools, synagogues, and farms.
shouldn't have happened
This dual focus on remembrance and reconstruction paints a picture of a nation grieving yet fiercely determined to rebuild and reaffirm its presence. The editorial praises this spirit, calling it the "Israel that deserves honor: grieving and still building, furious yet still committed to life."
However, the 1,000-day mark also starkly revealed the persistent and corrosive political divisions within Israeli society. The public conversation, the editorial notes, has largely reverted to the divisive language and blame-casting that characterized the period before October 7. Opposition figures attacked the government's failures, while coalition members engaged in reckless accusations against military officials.
we will replace them and fix them.
This internal strife, the article argues, is a dangerous echo of the pre-massacre divisions that weakened the nation and emboldened its enemies. The editorial warns that such contempt and personalized blame cheapen grief and turn national failure into a weapon, urging Israelis to learn from the past and prioritize unity over division.
impertinent.
Originally published by Jerusalem Post. Summarized and contextualized by our editorial team with added local perspective. Read our editorial standards.