Israel’s Supreme Court judges: Merely tone deaf, or simply morally obtuse?

Peloni:  The death penalty should be employed against terrorists such as the perpetrators of October 7.  Doing so would serve to alleviate the concerns of the petitioners bemoaning the living conditions of the too well kept butchers who owe their continued good health and splendid quarters to the over indulgent support of the very people they were caught trying to slaughter.

Israel’s Supreme Court’s diligent concern for the conditions of Hamas terrorists outrages the Israeli public

Im Tirtzu campaign   Courtesy

There are moments in life when a person or an institution will do something that causes jaws to drop and provokes mass headshaking in disbelief.

Such an event recently occurred when Israel’s Supreme Court, its self-proclaimed bastion of democracy, took it upon itself to aggressively worry about the conditions of Hamas prisoners, including the Nuhkba sadistic murderers of October 7, 2023, now incarcerated in Israeli prisons.

In case you had to read this over a few times, yes, that is what they are doing. Because Internal Security Minister Itamar ben Gvir made it a priority to de-luxuriate the prison conditions of Hamas and other political prisoners in Israeli jails, he unleashed a torrent of petitions of left-wing organizations.

Interestingly, when the conditions for such prisoners was akin to summer camp, the Court was untroubled. Segregated quarters, conjugal visits, cell phones, courses, tolerated sexual harassment of female Israeli guards – all of this was acceptable.

It was only after Ben Gvir clamped down that the outrage ensued.

At that point, the Court became like Santa Claus, sitting on its big chair waiting for various left wing NGOs to sit on its lap in order to ask what they wanted for Christmas.

Of course, the Court is claiming that the current conditions are human rights violations. They forced radical changes to be made to the Sde Teiman prison, requiring the State to build a new detention facility so as to placate the Court’s concerns as to crowding.

Most recently Justice Ruth Ronen even went to the trouble of visiting the prisons themselves in order to ascertain the acceptability of conditions. This seems rather disingenuous since no prison is comfortable, and it is questionable as to how much of a relative sense any Justice has concerning prison conditions.

Instead, Justices have wrapped themselves in the mantle of moral sanctimony to declare that Israel must provide more liberal conditions (that in all likelihood have never been provided by any warring country to its enemies and are certainly not provided in the prisoners’ place of origin) regardless of the cost or the diversion of resources and manpower,

The fact that our existential enemy is completely untroubled by its torturing our hostages, military and civilian, is of no matter to the justices. We have to be more Catholic than the Pope.

Not surprisingly, the average Israeli looks at this with the disbelief I referenced above. Does the Court not know that we are fighting with an enemy that seeks our complete annihilation, that spits on humanity as well as human rights, and is all too happy to have its acolytes manipulate the heartstrings of the completely confused, yet thoroughly self-righteous elements of Israeli society?

The Supreme Court is at best tone deaf to the implications of what it is espousing, and at worst, is showing itself to be morally obtuse. Tone deafness would be the Israeli equivalent of the late unlamented presidents of elite American universities invoking the “context” in order to call an anti-Semitic spade a spade.

Here the Court is missing the context of the larger picture in which these prisoners are here and why their prisons are necessarily becoming increasingly overcrowded,

However, sadly, I think it is more egregious than this. I think the Justices believe that come what may, we must adhere to their standards, so as to be able to be morally undisturbed.

The Court is forgetting the enshrined Jewish wisdom and law that says that if someone is coming to kill you then you need to kill them first.

The prisoners are Hamas murderers. They are not carjackers, drug pushers nor check kiters. Their mission is to kill as many Jews as possible.

Sadly for them, their mission went awry and they were captured. Given half a chance, as Yahya Sinwar clearly demonstrated when he was freed in the Gilad Shalit prisoner release, they would return to try murdering Jews again.

Israel is not in turn murdering these killers. Nor are we torturing them, But by what moral compass are we obligated to make their sojourn in our prisons anything approaching comfortable?

Here are two proof texts of my assertion that regular people look at the Court’s conduct with revulsion and disgust. The first concerns Im Tirtzu’s bus stop poster campaign, in which some 100 posters were placed around Tel Aviv with the pictures of four Supreme Court Justices and the caption: “At a time when our hostages are in Gaza, the Supreme Court worries about terrorists. The Court is opposing Israel.”

The entire cost of the campaign was paid for in full by the grassroots support of some 700 Israeli donors who provided the funding in about a week’s time. To my way of thinking, this was an outcry, a putting of one’s money where his convictions are.

The second proof is that the Supreme Court, through its spokesman, publicly chided Im Tirtzu for “incitement,” and said that it would be undaunted in its efforts. This is classic “protesteth too much.”

When the Supreme Court, which I had naively assumed was an overarching arbiter of justice and law, unconcerned with the rantings of mere mortals, deigns to cry foul, then I know that we hit a nerve.

The Court is right to cry out, as their conduct has just provided the citizens of Israel with glaring truth as to the intentional removal of the Court from the concerns, values and mindset of the overwhelming majority of Israelis.

Sadly, but tellingly, Israel’s Supreme Court has just indicted itself for violating care and concern for the citizens of Israel.


 

Douglas Altabefis the Chairman of the Board of Im Tirtzu and a Director of the Israel Independence Fund.

January 3, 2025 | 10 Comments »

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10 Comments / 10 Comments

  1. @Edgar I remember the news reports from the time. I was shocked. And there were reports they were tortured to get confessions. I just googled: Hilltop youth Shaked and this article by Ben-Gvir from 2019 came up. Doesn’t mention her. But I remember it.

    Oops, it does and it has her picture. She claimed there was no torture. She chose to blindly believe whatever the security services told her.

    https://www.jns.org/hilltop-youth-have-rights-too/

    Here’s another one. I googled: Shaked hilltop youth parents

    Mother of detained minor appeals to Minister Shaked
    Hundreds demonstrate outside home of Justice Minister Shaked to demand Jewish minors held by Shin Bet be allowed to meet with attorney.
    Arutz Sheva Staff
    Jan 1, 2019, 10:05 PM (GMT+2)

    https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/257024

  2. SEB-

    I don’t know anything about this at all. Please detail it for me, if you have time. It sounds like the most stupid thing any politician could do. And that doesn’t sound like the Shaked I respected.

    Do yo have any handy links?

  3. @Edgar I lost all respect for her when she apologized for meeting the parents of the hilltop youth who had been denied accessto lawyers or their parents, minors, and proceeded to join the wolves baying for them to be legally lynched.

  4. Shaked was a very sincere, loyal, colleague of a guy who completely misled her as to his intentions..

    No one who was arguably one of Israel’s best Ministers of Justice in history, could be regarded as weak.
    She trusted their 10 year association and collaboration too much, and was left high and dry, and demonstrably shaken and irresolute by the betrayal.

    And I always thought that Katsav was framed; fat too much secrecy about the “witnesses/accusers. You may recall that just then thee was a strong antipathy against Sephardim in high places………almost a racial type persecution

    Just in my view.

  5. @Edgar Yes, that’s when I first realized Bennett was an unprincipled opportunist and Shaked was a weak sister, utterly spineless. Before that I supported them.

  6. I’ve always wondered if Katsav was really guilty. The chief justice was an Arab who had refused to stand for Hatikva. I didn’t know Katsav was an Iranian-born Jew and Likud. The fact that the president of Israel could be brought down by a Muslim Arab chief justice has always been a hasbara point used to prove the Apartheid allegation is a lie, ironically.

    https://www.timesofisrael.com/ex-president-katsav-gives-his-first-interview-since-jail-to-iranian-opposition-tv/

  7. dreuveni-

    Throw in how they treat the Hilltop Youth, pure Israeli patriots, with committing fake crimes verified Arab family feuds, innocents tortured into confessions and draconianly sentenced.

  8. dreuveni-

    Yhrow in how they treat the Hilltop Youth, pure Israeli patriots, with committing fake crimes verified Arab family feuds, innocents tortured into confessions and draconianly sentenced.

  9. The first question to cross my mind was: are Israeli prisoners, whether Arab or Jew, treated at least as well as these Hamas terrorists?
    If the answer is “NO!!”, these members of the Supreme Court should spend their next vacation in the very same prison.