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Rudy Rachman
Judaism is not a religion. I know a lot of us have been constantly saying that, but all the
Dr. Ahmed
claims about the Holy Land and the Temple is all religious.
Rudy Rachman
No, it's historical. That's where we came from.
Dr. Ahmed
How can someone become an ethnic people convert?
Rudy Rachman
Well, there are Native American nations that have a way for one to actually become Native American. It's actually almost identical to converting to Judaism. It's up to the indigenous population to choose how one becomes a member of their society. And I wouldn't see any of you guys going to Native Americans and, and telling them you don't have an ability for someone to join your nation. It's only when it comes to the Jewish people that we're being challenged.
John (Moderator)
I'm here with Dr. Ahmed and Rudy Rachman. You both were in Surrounded, you haven't seen the episode yet, so you both are kind of coming into this a little bit blind. But thank you both for being in the original video and welcome to the follow up podcast.
Rudy Rachman
Thank you for having us.
John (Moderator)
I really want to see if we play back certain moments from the episode, if we can find even the smallest kernels of agreement. This is a huge conflict, a huge historic, you know, issue. It's very complex. It, it ranges over a very long time period. But if we kind of zoom in to the most human level, maybe there are just these, these small semantic tweaks, maybe there are just these acknowledgments of each other's humanity that can, you know, know, open up space for there to be agreement and kind of possibilities of visualizing a future so that I know it's, it's a hope and you know, there's reasons to believe that that's not possible. But that's what I want to try and do. So I'm going to pull up the first clip and then I'll invite you both to jump in from there.
Rudy Rachman
Dr. You did something that's very important that I think that we can transcend the conversation is by understanding what we're saying rather than terms. The, the reason why I'm saying that anti Zionism is anti Semitism is because I'm giving a very specific definition of Zionism, which is the official definition and the definition that historically was and currently is that the Jewish people.
Dr. Ahmed
So that's not what we mean.
Rudy Rachman
Exactly. This is why we need to have a conversation of what do you truly mean when I say I'm a Zionist? I'm not talking about suffering of Palestinians. I want Palestinians to be able to return. I want Palestinians to be able to live no, no, my actions are actually working to that. I work with Palestinian leaders in Gaza and in the west bank to actually change the situation.
Dr. Ahmed
You are blaming Palestinians for what's happening in Gaza.
Rudy Rachman
I'm not blaming Palestinians for what's happening. I actually blamed the US Government for their foreign aid. I blame the British for what they did into our country. And I would like to see us being able to transcend. But what you are doing is so important because everyone who's listening can realize we need to understand what we're actually saying. If you're condemning the suffering of Palestinians, that is not being anti Zionist. And for if you're miscommunicating that and Israelis are hearing you saying I'm an anti Zionist, let's ask you what you
John (Moderator)
truly mean by that, Dr. Ahmed.
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John (Moderator)
What do you mean when you say anti Zionism for Palestinians?
Dr. Ahmed
We been suffering for the past 75 years, even more than that, since the establishment of this ideology called Zionism. And even if we take the definition that Rudy's taken is that this means the right of Jewish people to live in the land of Palestine. On what expense is the question? On what expense are they allowed to come from Europe and other parts of the world and settle in Palestine? History showed us that was a very, very bloody process. And a lot of people were killed. And until now, to support the ideology of Zionism for us Palestinians and for all those who are supporting the Palestinian cause, anti Zionism means anti ethnic cleansing, anti genocide, anti stealing homes, confiscating lands, which is happening as we are talking right now. As we are speaking right now. This is happening not only in Gaza, in the west bank as well. So this ideology that's called Zionism, for us, it's a bloody ideology that killed so many people, that massacred so many people. It used all kinds of tactics. It to used. It used terrorism, it used political blackmailing just for the sake of this goal. That might sound nice and benign, but it is coming on a very, very high price on the expense of people's lives and properties.
John (Moderator)
Okay? Rudy, let's pull you in and hear your response to that and I'll see if I can find any points to elaborate on.
Rudy Rachman
Well, if I were to do the same thing, I would basically make the argument that because there has been terrorism from the Palestinian side and a lot of negative things that have come from the Palestinian population, which doesn't represent all, then that means that the very Palestinian identity and the movement of the Palestinian people means it's associated to something negative. That's what Ahmed just did. And what I'm saying is that the movement of Zionism was the movement to seek to have self determination for the Jewish people on their ancestral homeland called Israel Judea. Historically it was Israel Judea before it was renamed to Palestine. Same way Ahmed is from Bethlehem, the house of bread in Hebrew. This was the name of the territory. These were Hebrew cities, Hebrew towns, Hebrew civilization and Hebrew name. Now when someone is saying that they're an anti Zionist, they're anti the idea of Zionism and Zionism, if it is the right for the Jewish people to self determine on their ancestral homeland, then someone that's an anti Zionist is against that very idea. That being said, I don't think that that's what Ahmed and many people are saying. I do believe that when they're saying they're against the suffering of Palestinians and associating that to anti Zion, what they're doing is misdefining anti Zionism and misdefining Zionism. Now there were a lot of words that were thrown out, Genocide, which is clearly not happening in the land. Have there been a lot of people dying, innocent people dying on both sides? Absolutely. We want to go to the specifics of the individuals. We can. If we go into the policies and the criticisms of the different things that were done, we can. But to constantly be throwing these blanket statements, these trigger words to demonize a population is not going to help us get anywhere. When I'm criticizing Palestinians, I'm criticizing Palestinian individuals, I'm criticizing Hamas, I'm not saying all Palestinians. When Ahmed and a lot of people are criticizing Israel, they're not criticizing specific politicians or policies, they're criticizing all of Zionism and the very idea that I have a right to this line and calling it a cute idea, but it has to be associated to something negative because a lot of people suffer from this inability to be able to see the humanity on the other side. And they just connect all of their experiences and suffering from to the very identity of the others, which is what keeps us trapped in this conflict.
Dr. Ahmed
Let's not confuse Jews and Zionists for us. We have completely. We don't look at them as the same at all.
John (Moderator)
Yeah, what's the distinction?
Dr. Ahmed
We have no doubt that Jewish people have the right to visit live in the Holy Land. That's no problem. That's been the case, actually, when the European Jews were fleeing the European persecution and the Holocaust, the Palestinians opened their doors for them, opened their homes for them and said, sure, come over. This is the land that we can live together. You have connection to it because you follow Abraham, you follow Isaac, you follow Moses. You have connection with that. We have no problem with that. Both Christians and Muslims, Palestinians. The problem is not with Jewish have the right to exist or live or settle in the land of Palestine. The problem is with the ideology. That's political ideology. That's not even religious, secular ideology that used all kinds of tactics until nowadays to kick Palestinians out.
John (Moderator)
Rudy brought up that you're kind of taking on Zionism in this broad way, maybe an overly general way. But he's curious in specific criticisms you have of the government itself. If you could narrow your focus. What are some of those most specific criticisms?
Dr. Ahmed
That there is a problem in the Israeli society. There's a very problematic. I don't want to call it sickness, but there's a problem in the society. There are Israelis who are in thousands chanting death to Arabs. There are little young Israeli girls signing on the rockets that are fired to Gaza. Their names as a gift or as a. This is sickening. This is sickening to see people, average people in the Israeli society. And again, we're not talking about Judaism, we're talking about people in the Israeli society. All this hatred that coming out. We believe it's coming out from the Zionist ideology. Now we don't have to fight over terminology. We don't have to argue over what's the name. All what we care about is what's happening, the real actions that's happening on the ground.
John (Moderator)
So we're talking about religious extremism. Is that another way I could.
Dr. Ahmed
I would not say religious extremism. It's political extremism. It's as many people. Netanyahu himself is a secular person. He's not religious. There's so many people in the Israeli government who are promoting ethnic cleansing and genocide according to the definition of many of the international organizations. What's happening? They are not religious at all. I believe if a Jewish person follows their religion properly, they won't not be that extreme. They would not be that hateful. You have so many rabbis so many right wing or Orthodox Jews who are against what the Israeli government is doing. So it's not about religion whatsoever. We have to clearly say that it's not about the Jewish religion at all.
Rudy Rachman
So no one said that all Jews are Zionists and all Zionists are Jews. Jews are descendants of this ancient civilization and this people. And Zionists are believed in the idea that Jews should have a right to self determine on their ancestral homeland. You could be a Jew and against idea and you could be a non Jew and for that idea. So no one said they're both. Also European Jews are Jews that had an experience in Europe, not that originate in Europe. And he is right. There were some Palestinians who welcomed Jews just as there are Jews who welcomed Palestinians as I am. And no one is trying to deny that now when it comes to there are problems in Israeli society. I mean, I don't know a society without problems. And there are problems also within the Palestinian society. But you won't hear me saying Palestinian identity is the problem or that the problem is called the Palestinian identity. But every single time that we're having a conversation, instead of pinpointing those specific problems within Israeli society, we're always equating them and attaching them to the name of the Israeli people, the Israeli state, or to Zionism. I mean, there are minorities who chant the death of Jews. And I have videos where I debate those people, expose their voices, call them out for the things. The majority of Israeli society would reject those ideas. But yet this minority that is super loud and constantly used in the media and Al Jazeera because they love to show the Jews that are bad to make this impression to people on the outside that the Jews are all bad. The majority of the Israeli people reject that. And Ahmed knows that because he lived in this land, he grew up in this land. And I'm sure he's met some Israelis that are bad, but many Israelis that are good. And yes, there are some politicians that are promoting ideas of ethnic cleansing. I would say that the transfer ideas of transferring Palestinians out of a certain land is an idea of ethnic cleansing that's not being done in action. But there are no Israeli politicians that I know of that are probing the ideas of genocide, that are saying all Palestinians need to be killed, which is what genocide is the intent killing of a population. And thankfully that's not happening. And I hope that will never happen on either side.
John (Moderator)
So let me, let me rewind a little bit. I mean, I, I hear good faith coming from both of you. Neither one of you want to paint with a broad brush by religion and say all people of this religion are hateful. And, you know, there's some disagreement about what Zionism means. I think we. We might just have to kind of park that there. But something, Rudy, that I heard from Ahmed was this idea of a sickness. Now, as an American, I can kind of empathize with that because internally we discuss this, you know, like a cultural sickness. We have a very divisive culture. So like I, you. You will find me being very critical of American culture. Does any of kind of how what he described going on as kind of a political radicalism does that? And I know you've kind of acknowledged that, but does that resonate with you? Can you elaborate on that a little more?
Rudy Rachman
It absolutely resonates, yeah. And this is why it's important to separate it from the term Zionism and from the idea of Zionism, because there are many people like me who believe the Jews have a right to self determine on their ancestral homeland and are against the violence of people, Palestinians, and are for the idea of having them return to the land and seeing them as a fellow native population of this land. So is there hate? Yes. And I would say that the biggest win Hamas had is not the amount of Jews that they killed. It's the amount of Jews that they turn them to be like Hamas and to be hateful. And that has been growing since October 7th, of course, due to trauma. But we need to now focus on energy to be able to change it. Are there Palestinians who completely hate all Jews or hate all Israelis? Yes, we can go to traumas where that source is from, and this is the symptom. But if we don't cure the source of where this is coming from, we're going to continue this loop of violence. And the way to cure the source is to understand that both of our identities are legitimate. Both of the names that we use, like Palestinian. A lot of Jews and Israelis tried to demonize the name Palestinian. I reject that. Why are we demonizing and rejecting the name Zionist or Israel? We have to be able to understand that the certain names that we're using to describe ourselves are describing our humanity and our right to exist, not the negativity that exists. And we can specifically talk about that negativity and heal where the source is coming from, which is the suffering that exists and the inability to have full access to this land for both of us, from the river to the sea. And if we focus on those points to be able to move us forward, we could give our children a Better future than the one we inherited.
Dr. Ahmed
As much as you try to make it as a chicken and egg situation or a vicious cycle that we don't know who started it. We all know who started it. We all know it all started when the militias and the European Zionists came and massacred so many Palestinians, took their homes, took their villages. We all know that's when it started. Before that, Jews, Muslims, Christians were living peacefully in Palestine. Jews had the ability to go and access all their places of worship, all the holy and sacred spots. There are so many documented stories about Palestinians and Jews babysitting their own children, neighbors living with each other, eating the same food, having the same culture. It all started when few people in Europe decided that let's create this ideology called Zionism and let's go and establish a national homeland for Jews at any expense. That is the problem that it's, it's, it's, it doesn't matter how they were going to establish it, let's just establish it. If it means we're going to kill people, let's do it. If it means we're going to bomb homes, let's do it. And that's what history proves. It's not, I'm not just making stuff up. This is exactly what happened. You, you hear it from Israelis, you hear it from, from older Israeli soldiers who participated in these massacres. Look it up, you'll find it. It's all over.
John (Moderator)
I hear what you're saying, but I want to be cautious about looking towards the past too much because just from my experience as an outsider from this conflict, it's very hard to get to a point of consensus on how to right the wrongs of the past and what the rights and wrongs of the past are. Something that we were kind of focusing on from Rudy was this idea of like, who are the bad actors on his side. And you know, I think that question kind of came towards you, but instead of looking at the past, you know, let's kind of think about the present. And this actually came up in your guys debate. So Dr. Ahmed, I want you to respond, but let's do, let's watch how you guys discuss this in a clip and then I'll throw it back to you.
Rudy Rachman
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Rudy Rachman
Edu Sci the difference in this conversation is that there are bad actors on both sides. I'm identifying the individual bad actors on the Israeli side, identifying the bad actors on the Palestinian side and saying do not attach these bad actors to all Palestinians. What you're doing is identifying the bad actors here and saying it's all Israelis and refusing to identify bad actors.
Dr. Ahmed
I said majority. They came on the borders of Gaza.
Rudy Rachman
That's horrible to say.
Dr. Ahmed
And they're cheating the things that teaching death to Arabs. Right and left.
Rudy Rachman
Minority of the population.
Dr. Ahmed
It's not minority.
Rudy Rachman
It's a great minority. And it should be zero. It should be zero.
Dr. Ahmed
Is Israel a democratic state?
Rudy Rachman
Yes.
Dr. Ahmed
So why would a minority be able to control the actions of the government?
Rudy Rachman
Great question. This is the majority of parliamentary system government where you have all these different parties and in order to have power you need to have over 60 seats out of 120 seats. In order to have the majority, you don't have a 60s party seat, you have a 20, you have a five, you have a two. And the majority is very small. So then a party with two seats that is a minority has the ability
Dr. Ahmed
to find out how to believe the
Rudy Rachman
reality of the political system. That's how we got to change it. I can speak for Netanyahu. There's plenty of criticism that I have in Netanyahu.
John (Moderator)
Dr. Ahmed, do you feel feel like there's presence of bad actors coming from your end as well though?
Dr. Ahmed
Absolutely. The doctor myself, I don't just put a band aid on every disease that I see. I like to look for the root cause of it. I like to look what caused such a bad act from somebody you're trying to say let's not talk about history. Rudy's going 3000 years old story and connecting it to what's happening right now. I would love to exclude history completely out of this discussion. I would love it. And let's sit down and let's talk about, you know what these are the human rights of the people. There's an apartheid. Whether we like it or not, there is an apartheid. There are people who are living on the one side of the wall in a very luxurious lifestyle, abundance of water, all kinds of life needs are available for them. And you just step one side on the other side of the wall and, and you have completely different world, completely different life circumstances. So yes, if you want to delete history, let's take it out of the formula. Let's not talk about the rights of anyone in that land. Let's talk about what's happening right now. Let's create a democracy, let's create equal rights, citizenship for everyone and let's allow anybody who had a house or had a property, a deed or a property in the land to come back and take it and use it. So we cannot say we don't want to talk about history while the whole discussion is about 3,000 year old claim.
John (Moderator)
I hear your your point about the asymmetry of power. Even if we don't think about this in a historical sense, I think we all would agree that that kind of is true. Right now Israel is just a much more powerful military presence, literally a nuclear power. But the conversation often goes towards Hamas. Do you consider Hamas a bad actor?
Dr. Ahmed
So Hamas is a natural outcome of the many years and decades of oppression. Even if we're a group of secular people or religious fanatics or anybody in the shoes of the Palestinian. I mean, what do you expect from a child, a five year old child sitting down in his house, sleeping at 3am in the morning and a group of soldiers just walk in, start humiliating his father, harassing his mother, and then capturing his brother to prison and he doesn't hear about his brother for another 10, 15 years. What do you expect that kid to do when he becomes an older man? What do you expect from people who lost all their family members simply because a letter came five minutes before they bombed their homes and everyone died? So you have to understand this is a natural outcome, a resistance movement for the oppression and the occupation that was taking place. Do I agree with all the actions and the tactics of Hamas? Absolutely not. Nobody agrees with anybody. But to say that they are the only bad actor and they are just evil. They just happen to be. Hamas did not start till 1986. Israeli oppression and aggression started since 1948. So you have to understand where that's coming from. Trust me, if there is no oppression, if there is no aggression from the Israeli side, we would not have seen a movement like Hamas. We would not have seen people who are willing to blow themselves up in a bus because of. Just simply because they want to do that. So we have to understand where did that come from and where did it start?
Rudy Rachman
You know, Ahmed, I see you as my. As my family member, as my cousin. I know Palestinians are rooted to this land, and many of them descend from the Jewish people. And although they're not Jewish today, they're still descendants of the same people. We come from this land and our futures are tied together. I know that you're a dentist and you're a doctor, and you're probably a good doctor, but, you know, I say this with the utmost respect. I think there are a lot of people who still suffer from a reality where there's a good guy and there's a bad guy, and I think you suffer from that too. And there are many Jews and Israelis who suffer from this as well. This is not the way that we can be able to transcend. If you see all Israelis is bad and all Palestinians is good, then there's no way for us to move forward. There are many different Israelis and many different Palestinians that are bad, and there are many that are good, and there are many that are. That are good on both sides. Now, where did this start? I never said this started from the Palestinians. You will never hear me say that the source of all issues is from the Palestinians. I actually sourced the British. When the British came, what they did is they divided and conquered all civilizations. Whether we look at India and Pakistan, we look at Afghanistan, we at look. We look at Nigeria with the House of Fulani, Yoruba and the Igbos, and they did the same thing between the Israelis and the Palestinians. What did they do to the Israelis that made us feel like the Palestinians in the Arab world were against us? They appointed Hajimen Al Husseini as the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem. A Palestinian who as an individual was very hateful towards the Jews, had met with Hitler several times and wanted Hitler to come and finish off the Jews in the land. They, the British that were against Hitler appointed Hajimen Hosseini as the representation of. Of the Palestinians. So when we heard the spokesperson Say things and say horrible things about Jews. We interpreted that as. That was the Palestinian position. Now, what did they do for the Palestinian to experience Zionism and Israel and the Jewish people as European colonialism? They wrote the Balfour Declaration. Now, keep in mind that they wrote the Balfour Declaration before they even had access to the land. They wrote it when the Ottomans were still in control. So why would they even plan to create something that they didn't even have the land over? Furthermore, when they did have control of the land, the Jews were being killed by the Nazis. Wouldn't be your intention, since you wrote it clearly, to allow the Jews to leave from Europe and to come and build their Jewish state. Yet every ship of Jews that was fleeing Europe, fleeing Nazi persecution, was sent back to Europe and not allowed. And even after the Holocaust with the white papers, Jews were not allowed to come into this land. So in reality, the British did not want to allow for the creation of a Jewish state. What they wanted was for the idea of Zionism to be experienced by the Arab world as an extension of European colonialism. And this is where we start with the problem, where I and my population starts to experience your population as the source of our problem, and vice versa. Now, you brought up villages that were displaced. Were there many villages that were displaced in 1948? Absolutely, but only in the context of war. If it wasn't a war, then villages weren't displaced, and the only villages that were displaced were villages that were complicit in attacking Jews. Was every single individual there attacking Jews? Absolutely not. Should they all have been kicked out? No, but we need to provide a little bit more of context when things are being said. Now, in terms of asymmetry, it's a fact that Israel has more power, which is why Israel has more of a responsibility to fix the situation. I'm constantly talking about that we need to take the actions to give freedom of speech, to invest in education, in infrastructure and job opportunities, and to change the conditions that is causing people to hate Israel. And then once those conditions are shifted, we can start having conversations of integration and. And the right of return and for us to be able to live here together. Now, when Ahmed was asked if Hamas is a bad actor, he said yes, very quickly and then focused almost 99% of the time on justifying Hamas. When I was asked about extremist Arabs or. Sorry, when I was asked about extremist Israelis, I spent the majority of the time condemning them, saying why they're bad, and a minority of the time giving the context. And the context is Important because people aren't born just hateful. Palestinians aren't born just hating Jews for no reason. There is a context, but there is also a manipulation of the media, of the Palestinian Authority previously, of the Palestinian Liberation Organization and of Hamas today, and of this anti normalization policy that we can't even communicate between one another that is causing the Palestinian population to come to conclusions that all Israelis are bad. And although that might not be the source where this is all starting from, it is still a problem that has to be addressed the same way that the hate that exists on the Israeli side has to be addressed. But you know what? When an Israeli like me says that Palestinians are my family and we should live together, nothing happens to me. When a Palestinian says something that they should live with Israelis, all of a sudden they disappear, whether in the west bank or Judea and Samara and in Gaza. And when I've made videos with Palestinians, I have to blur their faces and change their voices. Now, one last thing. Ahmed said that there were many stories of Jews living with Palestinians. They were living good in the past. And my intention of this conversation and all of the work that I do is to recreate that, to create a future where we could actually be able to live together and not see each other as our enemies, but as the family that we are right in front of one another.
Dr. Ahmed
I'm also in agreement that the British policies over the early 19th century caused so much divisions around the world and caused so much problems. Even when they left the United States, they left behind them the seeds of the civil war. So yes, I agree that whatever they left, they created a problem. But we cannot keep blaming that on the British. The British are not the ones who put the guns in the hands of the Israeli soldiers in Deir Yassin. The British are not the ones who put all the young men and young boys, even though had nothing to do with any war, and executed them in front of their mothers and daughters and their sisters and let the women run to the other village to make everyone run away. The British did not kill 70,000. Finally, Israel agrees that the 70,000 people were killed in Gaza. So we cannot keep blaming them on the actions. Right now. I cannot blame the British for any Palestinians actions right now. I can say their policies were bad back in the early 19th century. But right now we're adults, we're grown ups, we have to take responsibility of our actions. You cannot expect from a Palestinian to have exactly the same because of that asymmetry that we're talking about. You cannot expect that As a Palestinian, I have to act exactly like. As an Israeli, I cannot do that. Israel is the bully. You cannot expect a kid in the school who's been beaten up by all these bullies and expect, hey, you have to act in the same manner. No, you go to the one with a stick, you go with the one with the weapons. You go with the one to the one with the aircrafts and bombs and telling them, hey, you should stop. You should not do this. Let's sit down and talk. That's exactly how civilized nations work and talk.
John (Moderator)
What about what Rudy said, though, about, you know, Rudy made the point that there are Palestinians who can't, you know, out of fear for their lives, feel like they can't say that they should live peacefully with the Jews.
Dr. Ahmed
No, no, it's not true. There's so many Palestinians are saying they want to live peace peacefully. Even the president of the Palestinian Authority is saying that. The government in Ramallah is saying that what, the people who actually might lose their. Their lives are the traitors, the one who are helping the Israeli army to assassinate and kill Palestinian people. These are the people who are losing their lives. Now, in the west, it's completely the opposite. If a Jewish person or an Israeli person stands up for the rights of the Palestinians, they get canceled. They don't get invited to anything. They lose financially, they lose jobs. But find me a Palestinian who came to the States or came to the west and start talking bad about Palestine and start supporting Israel. Look how supportive they get. They get all the talk shows, they get all the invitations to all these synagogues and these churches. There are several examples of those Palestinians who come, and they were very supported by many of the Westerners because they speak against Palestine. On the other hand, Israelis or Jews who speak against the atrocities of the Israeli government, they already, right away, they don't get the same treatment, they lose big time.
John (Moderator)
Dr. Ahmed, I hear what you're saying something as an outsider, somebody who consumes a lot of Western media, I think it would be very difficult for the Palestinian cause to gain as broad of a support as I think is necessary for the kind of change that I think we all are hoping for. Without a more surgical criticism of Hamas, your characterization of the Palestinian people as kind of the bullied people, I think that resonates, but it also does kind of generalize. And I hear so much focus on Hamas and Hamas using the Palestinians as human shields. And I'm sure we can go into the validity or the invalidity of those claims, but I guess my larger Point is, it seems hard from my perspective to brush past Hamas and sort of what they represent as kind of an elected governing body and a kind of a political movement in their own way. That just seems like something that I don't see the world moving past. Do you? Does that resonate with you?
Dr. Ahmed
I don't agree. Because at some point Nelson Mandela was called the biggest terrorist in South Africa and he was banned from every Western outlet. Later on he was celebrated and he was asked to talk to Taliban, was also brushed as the most terrorist group in Afghanistan. And now the United States is sitting down with them and having negotiations with them. These political conflicts, they always change as much as it's important for Palestinians to gain sympathy on the support of the Western media, as much as Palestinians lost hope in that. And they see, you know what, even when people speak against Palestine, the freedom of speech was completely out of the window in America. Professors, students lost their jobs and lost their education simply because they spoke. They didn't do anything else but spoke against a genocide. So there is not much hope from Palestinians and Palestinian supporters in Western media to be the savior of the Palestinians. Unfortunately, me, as an American Palestinian, I never lose that hope. I'll try my best to explain and express and talk about it, but the problem is that they always put this hanger. Do you condemn Hamas? Do you condemn what Hamas is doing? As if it's the gate to any discussion. I refuse to accept that narrative. I refuse to accept that I have to have a permission and talk about and give a judgment about a group simply so you can hear me. I think we keep trying, if that's. If we keep trying to express our story and our narrative without any conditions and contingencies, we'll keep doing it.
John (Moderator)
Rudy, before we move on to the next clip, I know you want to get in here one more time.
Rudy Rachman
Yeah. So I'm going to try to go again because there were many things discussed. I only sourced the British to source where the hate started, not what's still affecting us. And we've been victims till this day of what started then but is continuing. And I would say that there are countries like America who are profiting from war and investing a lot of weapons to make sure war continues. Iran and Qatar that are also profiting from this conflict, and those would be modern countries that are profiting from our division. You mentioned Del Yassin wasn't in war. Del yassin was in 1948. And I'm sorry for all my Palestinian cousins who suffered not just in the Yasin but in other places, and I hope that we can find resolution. But again, all these conflicts, whether it's Gazans dying, this is all during war and conflict, not just random situations of people attacking one another. In terms of Abu Mazen wanting to support living in peace with the Jewish people, I mean, he supports families of Palestinian terrorists and pays them monthly salaries for having killed Jews. So I don't believe that he wants to do that. Now, you said that Palestinians can openly speak about wanting to live with Israelis. I mean, I have many Palestinian friends who were normalizing and were hiding their identity, but somehow their identity was found out and they disappeared for weeks. And after disappearing, they told me that they were caught by the Palestinian Authority, were tortured. This happened also in Gaza and by Hamas for even doing a zoom call with Israelis. So Palestinians absolutely do not have freedom of speech and don't have the rights. Now, calling Israeli as the bully is, again, putting this good guy, bad guy narrative. And we're not going to be able to get out of that if we're always seeing all Palestinians is bad or all Israelis is bad. Again, let's specify which Israeli is bad and let's specify which Palestinian is bad. But that doesn't mean that's all. Now, you said that if an Israeli speaks about Palestinian rights and Palestinian identity and speaks on behalf of the Palestinians and cares about them, that they would get canceled. Well, I'm saying it right now, and I say it all the time, and I don't get canceled. I'm actually seen as one of the leading voices of young Jewish activists online, and no one is canceling me for speaking about Palestinians. So that's not true. Last thing about asymmetry, you know, just because one has the power doesn't mean that they're bad. You know, when King David was young, he was weak against Goliath, but eventually he becomes a powerful king, and he's the same King David. So just because Israel today has power doesn't mean that we're bad. But with that power comes the responsibility to fix the situation. If Palestinians were in power, I'd expect them to be the leader of the change. We are currently in power and we have to change the conditions. That is something I'm putting on Israel's responsibility to do in order for us to be able to transcend.
Dr. Ahmed
We agree on that point.
John (Moderator)
Oh, wonderful. So we're just a little bit past halfway. I want to. My opinion is not terribly important. I'm not a very educated person on this issue, but I do have, I think, a good sense of like an outsider's perspective. And so yeah, Dr. Ahmed, I think if I were to put a pin in anything, it really is how can the Palestinian cause be self critical and also advocate for itself? That to me feels like an important question in winning the hearts and minds of broader public. As you responded to. But that's sort of like the pin of kind of what I feel like is a really important question when we look at the Palestinian side. I want to show you guys a clip because in your debate, Rudy, you kind of brought up this idea of welcoming the Palestinians into Israel and kind of what if we were to visualize what a one state society might look like. And so we're going to hear what you said and then kind of discuss
Dr. Ahmed
it
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Rudy Rachman
Do you believe that there should be one civilization? The reason I don't use one state is because the current political system that we have with the Knesset is completely corrupt and horrible and we have to create something new. A republic that people have a right to depend, but something new. Do you believe in one civilization for both of our people?
Dr. Ahmed
If it's equal rights, yes. If it's fair, if it's just, yes.
Rudy Rachman
So let's talk about.
Dr. Ahmed
Well, if Palestinians and Jews agree to have a one state solution, it won't
Rudy Rachman
be a Jewish state, it will be a Jewish state.
Dr. Ahmed
So that's. You're asking what I'm looking at my vision for it. It cannot be a Jewish state.
Rudy Rachman
Why not? What is a Jewish state? That's a problem for you because it's
Dr. Ahmed
not a democratic state. If it's.
Rudy Rachman
But it could be both. It could be both, right?
Dr. Ahmed
What do you mean?
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No?
Rudy Rachman
Why would it not be a Democrat?
Dr. Ahmed
It doesn't have to be secular.
Rudy Rachman
Sure, but you could have also a culture. A Chinese state, a Japanese state is going to be Japanese by its culture.
Dr. Ahmed
But a Jewish state will have rights for Jewish people more than the rights. That's what happens. That's what happened to Palestinians who live under the Israeli rule, those who are
Rudy Rachman
living in Israel, they don't have to serve in the army, they don't have to do a lot of things that
Dr. Ahmed
they're talking to them. Have you spoken to any of those
Rudy Rachman
people, Those Palestinians who live as Israeli citizens who don't have to serve in the army?
Dr. Ahmed
Second or third class?
Rudy Rachman
They're not second or third class.
Dr. Ahmed
Absolutely they are.
John (Moderator)
First off, I want to commend you, Dr. Ahmed, for, for entertaining that thought experiment, because I do think that's a big concession. What if we were to entertain this idea of a one state solution? What could it look like? I think that that's a generous participation because that, that's something that you don't hear often.
Dr. Ahmed
But
John (Moderator)
what is your pushback? I want you to elaborate a little bit on the pushback that you were trying to articulate in that clip. And then Rudy, you can respond to what he says.
Dr. Ahmed
So I believe that, and me and many Palestinians believe that there is a possibility of having a one state solution, a democratic state that's not religious, not Islamic, not Christian, not Jewish, where everybody, regardless of their faith, they have equal rights. Where everybody, regardless of their faith, they have access to their holy sites, where everybody can practice their faith and their identity freely without having to feel that they're subjugated and they have to be second class citizens. That's an idea that many Palestinians have no problem with it. The problem is that we feel that Israelis are not genuinely desiring this. They want to always keep the Palestinians as the working class, the labor class, the subjects who are forced to stand in lines for hours and hours on checkpoints, who are simply do not have the same right as the Jewish citizens. So that is the problem that we're having in trying to believe that people like Rudy, and honestly, Rudy is saying good things. And I hope and I pray they are genuine. The problem is that it's hard to believe. It's hard to believe that there are enough Israelis who are willing to accept this.
John (Moderator)
Well, I mean, I would, I would say, I would vouch for Rudy in that I, I sense that he's being very genuine. But you know, it's, it's, this is difficult to, to, to thread the needle on both ends. But Rudy, when, when you hear Dr. Ahmed's concerns about the Palestinians having a second class status in this future, we're imagining, what do you think?
Rudy Rachman
Well, first of all, I use one civilization instead of one state because I think already the political framework that we have in Israel proper today is something that doesn't work. And saying one state kind of implies the extension of that. And I think we need to build something that is a republic, that doesn't have equal rights for each person, that we do have representation in our governments, but something that is built completely different and not a parliamentary style system that doesn't work. I would say one major issue in conversations like this is we always are seeing Judaism as a religion and Judaism is not a religion. A religion is a belief system in a God, deity, book or prophet. So if one does not believe in the God, deity, book or prophet, let's say a Christian that rejects Jesus is not a Christian. A Muslim that rejects Muhammad is not a Muslim. A Buddhist that rejects Buddha and their philosophies is not a Buddhist. And a Jew that rejects Hashem and Torah is still a Jew. So we're not a wandering ideology. That one is a part of it if you believe in it or not. We are the descendant of an ancient civilization called Judea. And Judaism is the portable suitcase of that civilization. We are a people, we are family, we are a nation, we are a civilization and not a religion. So when I'm saying a Jewish state, it is to recreate that civilization. But in that civilization you also had many non Jews who had equal rights under King David. Under Malaktaud, like many people in Islamic studies learn that King David had a civilization which gave equal rights to everyone. Now Israeli Arabs are not second class citizens. They're equal citizens like everyone else. And Palestinians in the west bank are not second class citizens because they're not citizens and they don't have rights into Israel. And that's something that's wrong. But I also don't have rights into the Palestinian Authority areas and into the Gazan areas. So it's not one person has more rights than the other. It's limitation of movement and inequality that exists on both sides. Now in order to be able to find a solution, we have to understand the non negotiables for both sides. Now it's important for the Israeli audience and people who are pro Israel and Zionist to hear. Palestinians will not let go of the right of return and freedom from the river to the sea. This is something that is non negotiable on their end and we have to learn it and understand it. And you know why I respect it? Because I believe the same thing. I believe that I will never let go of the idea. I mean, for 2,000 years we didn't let go of this idea that we should have the right of return. And I understand where it's coming from the Palestinians because we are family and it's coming from the same place. Now, the non negotiables for the Israeli side is full economic, political and military control over Israel and Israel is the capital and the third Temple is built. Those are non negotiables on both sides. Now you're going to ask yourself, how are we going to go from where we are today, point A to point G? Well, there's B, C, D, E, F to get to G. And in order to be able to get there, we have to understand that first of all, we have to address with the demographic issue and the cultural issue. The demographic issue can be addressed if we understand that today 16 million Jews around the world are the descendants of two and a half tribes. There's nine and a half tribes of Israel that have yet to be reunited and returned to the Jewish people. Today their population is 500 million. 20% still identifies Israelites. Half of them want to make aliyah. We're talking about 20 to 50 million people that would be returning to the land of Israel once that population returns. The idea of Palestinians returning does not threat Jewish demographics and does not remove the fact that it's a Jewish state. The next thing for kosher if we as Jews want to be able to see Palestinian culture change, we have to change the conditions of Palestinians living. We have to be much harsher against terrorism. Will completely remove Hamas, completely remove Hezbollah, completely remove the Palestinian Authority, but be much softer and so much caring of Palestinian individuals who are being mistreated, who are suffering, and provide them education, infrastructure, job opportunities, roads, equal resources. And once Palestinians experience Israel as caring for their lives, not as putting them to the side, then the conditions can change for us to be able to shift the culture and be able to see each other as one living in the civilization.
Dr. Ahmed
So question if you're completely okay with the return of all Palestinians to their homeland, but that's contingent that the 20 million Jewish from around the world will come back. Let's say if those 20 million, they don't want to come back, they're happy where they are, they're happy in America, they're happy in Argentina and saying, I don't want to go back to the Middle east, it's too much. So are you going to tell those Palestinians who are still willing to come back from the refugee camps in Lebanon, Syria and Jordan and Egypt that they, they're not allowed to come unless those Jewish around the world are willing to come? Is that, is that what your point? To keep, to keep the, the the demographic structure that you were hoping to keep.
Rudy Rachman
Ahmed, don't get me wrong, I'm not a referee. I'm not in the middle. I'm on the side of Israel. And I'm telling you what the non negotiables are for the Israeli side. And as someone on the Israeli understand what the non negotiables are on your side. And in order to be able to get there, we have to create a reality that can work for both. I'm telling you that there are nine and a half tribes of Israel. As you know, there are 12 tribes. This is not something new that exist out there. And they are.
Dr. Ahmed
You're saying that. No, the answer is no.
Rudy Rachman
The answer is if I could actually,
John (Moderator)
if I could actually jump in here, because again, I see really good faith coming from both of you. And I think this is a very interesting point that we're in, in the conversation. Rudy, something that you said that I admittedly get kind of stuck on. Dr. Ahmed might feel the same way is when you said you don't see Judaism as a religion and you kind of described it as several things afterwards, including kind of a nation and a people. But as, again, as an outsider. I think the tricky thing is Judaism is a religion. Like there are many, many people who see it that way, who practice it and. But it is also, you know, kind of in scene as an ethnicity because there's, you can trace the lineage back. So it exists as many things. And it's also now, I mean, the Star of David is on the flag. So I think this is a source of, of confusion. And I think where wires get crossed is it means so many things to so many different people. So what you're describing to us is kind of a political project, not that different to maybe like the United States, like let's build a great republic. And that's admirable. But then as you go deeper into it, it can also sound like a religious project, which I think invites a lot of pushback because that just raises concerns. Do you hear, kind of what I'm, what I'm saying.
Rudy Rachman
Let me address it just to address Ahmed on his question, because I wasn't able to respond the same way. You would want to see the right of return, but you would not accept a reality with the right of return that doesn't also come with freedom from the river to the sea. I cannot accept anything that you're asking if it doesn't fulfill the non negotiables on my side. What I do believe is that we can be able to get there together. The non negotiables on my side are non negotiable, the same way they're non negotiable for yours. But I'm proposing a path that we can both have what we need. Now, Judaism is not a religion. I know a lot of us have been constantly saying that, but the moment that that started in history of us referring to Judaism as a religion is in the time of Napoleon. Napoleon was one of the first individuals in European history to give Jews equal rights. Until then we were constantly persecuted and even shortly after Napoleon, we went right back to persecution.
John (Moderator)
What would the one word be that you would choose?
Rudy Rachman
A civilization? Because a religion is only a belief system for any people. And Judaism is not only a belief system and it isn't for any people. It is for one people. We are a civilization and we as a.
John (Moderator)
Do you believe in God?
Rudy Rachman
Yes, we have, but.
John (Moderator)
And do you believe that God has a specific purpose for you?
Rudy Rachman
I believe Hashem created this world and has a specific purpose for every single person. But let me tell you this, you're
John (Moderator)
not being intellectually honest if you don't.
Rudy Rachman
I am. There are many indigenous civilizations.
John (Moderator)
That is like the core of what all human beings see as a religion.
Rudy Rachman
Let me tell you, there are indigenous civilization. I'm sorry to push back, but that's just okay.
John (Moderator)
This is the weakness I feel like on your side is that feels intellectually dishonest.
Rudy Rachman
Would you say that aboriginals, Maoris and indigenous Native Americans are religions, yet they have spiritualities, but they're not religions. So a native population can have a spirituality. Maybe the western modern nations don't, but ancient indigenous peoples absolutely have spirituality at the core of their civilization. And even if an individual does not believe in that spirituality, they still are part of the people. You're looking at spirituality through the framework of Western societies. And it doesn't work through Western societies because we're not part of the West.
John (Moderator)
No. This is what I'm trying to point out.
Dr. Ahmed
But all the claims about the Holy Land and the Temple is all religious.
Rudy Rachman
No, it's historical. That's where we came from. It's actually history.
Dr. Ahmed
Where did it come from? It's all religious.
Rudy Rachman
It's all history. You dig in the land, you find our history. That's not God saying ethnicity.
Dr. Ahmed
How can someone be become an ethnic people convert?
Rudy Rachman
Well, there are Native American nations that have a way for one to actually become Native American. It's actually almost identical to converting to Judaism. It's up to the indigenous population to choose how one becomes a member of their society. And I wouldn't any of you guys going to Native Americans and telling them you don't have an ability for someone to join your nation. It's only when it comes to the Jewish people that we're being challenged.
John (Moderator)
But Rudy, Rudy, I, I hear, I, I mean, thank you for allowing me to push back. And again, I'm not, I don't have the utmost confidence that I'm right. But I have a really strong hunch here that this is, this is a problem or, or a point that, similar to what I said about Hamas on the other side as like something that needs to be more closely examined by the Palestinian side if they want to see their goals achieved. I feel like this is, this is quite confusing because indigenous peoples don't possess nuclear weapons. There's no nation state that we can think of today that accurately represent. But can they possibly be non indigenous? But let's think about the now. And so as an American, there's, this is a point of major contention in American politics is are we or are we not a Christian nation? And I believe it's Thomas Jefferson's, you know, he's famously quoted for the separation of church and state, state. And many Americans hold that very dear. And there's a, a vocal political movement in the United States that wants the United States to be seen as a Christian nation. Now that's a very divisive point of contention. And so what I'm saying is it to kind of brush past what the average person, what the normal person sees as religion and say we're not a religion, we're a civilization. But there are elements of our culture that are very much religious, like belief in a specific God and a culture centered around those practices and, and, and those faith based, you know, touch points. I, I don't think you're going to get the support or, or even just the understanding of, of a lot of people by, by trying to kind of merge all those things into one thing.
Rudy Rachman
Well, is, isn't spirituality different than religion? Because there are many indigenous civilizations that have spirituality at the core of their identity, like Native Americans who believe in a wolf deity and a barefoot deity and all kinds of very interesting deities. And if an individual Native American doesn't believe in that, they're still Native American and they're not calling their identity a religion. It's only applied to the Jewish people. And that's because the Jews have been mistakenly communicating to the world that we're a religion in our mind. What we're saying is this is our Spirituality. But what the world is hearing is that this is a wandering ideology that is not based on being a people. Look at Iran today. Is it not a Persian country? Of course it's a Persian country. Are there non Persians that are living as Iranians? Yes. Is it still a Persian country? Yes. Is being Persian a religion? No. Is it connected to spiritualities? Historically? Yes. So you're looking at it through the Western framework that to be spiritual, you must be a part of a religion. And that doesn't work for ancient civilizations like the Mayans, like the Aztecs and others.
John (Moderator)
But I can't think of any example that would line up with what you're saying where it's like we've been incorrectly referring to ourselves as a religion and we see ourselves as a civilization.
Dr. Ahmed
And I believe millions and millions of Jews would disagree with you. And even those who are living under the Israeli government, they would disagree with you.
Rudy Rachman
And there are many more Jews that would agree with me than disagree with me, especially when they hear the explanation of what it means to be a religion, not what we mean, but what the world means and what the world defines it as.
Dr. Ahmed
Bring this back to the discussion. Regardless if you count yourself as an ethnicity or a religious or a spirituality nation, we'll have bombs and F15s and F16s who are killing people, bombing homes in Gaza and. And still doing that. And. And they're still doing that. And you're still using all your money and your power to influence American politics. I mean, John asked a very good question, is like, what can we do as. As Americans, as Westerners? What you're doing right now, John, is amazing. The fact that you're able to have this discussion, this dialogue, without the fear of someone's pulling out from advertising in your show, without the fear of someone pushing you to say, no, you cannot air this episode. This is highly respectful and highly appreciated from many people like John who are now going out and pushing the envelope and saying, let's hear what Palestinians have to say. We've been screaming out by ourselves in the corners for the past 20, 30, 40 years, and no one wants to listen to us. CNN anchors and hosts who've been kicked out because simply they acknowledge that there's a suffering of the Palestinians. In one of the episodes, in one of their talks, many other politicians lost their. But so. So the fact that we are now hearing the Palestinian voices is highly appreciated, John. And that is something. So good discussion, good talk. I don't know if it's going to make a difference whether you believe Judaism is a religion or spirituality or ethnicity on what's happening on the ground. It does have effect on what's happening historically. Because all your claims is religious claims.
Rudy Rachman
No historic claims.
Dr. Ahmed
Historical say it's not a religion. So, so I, I. These are things that Ahmed.
Rudy Rachman
What is the name of your city? It's Bet Lechem. That's history. That is Hebrew. We come from this land. That's not a spirituality or a biblical verse. That is actual history.
Dr. Ahmed
No problem with that.
Rudy Rachman
Historically, no, but I say history and you keep trying to make it about religion, not a religious argument.
Dr. Ahmed
Many of the descendants of the Hebrews who named Bethlehem these days still live there. Didn't go to Europe.
Rudy Rachman
Yes, I agree with that.
Dr. Ahmed
Why are we bringing Europeans to, to have more claim?
Rudy Rachman
They're not Europeans. They were displaced in Europe the same way Palestinians that are displaced elsewhere are not part of those other societies. They're not Europeans. Stop trying to delegitimize our identity because some of us, not all of us, not even most Israelis, the minority of Israelis had an experience external in Europe. We come from the same land that you come from. We are the same family. If we tested our blood, we, we would have the same DNA. But this is not a religious argument, a historical argument. And the majority of media by the way, is against Israel on social media and on, on, on national news.
Dr. Ahmed
This is new. This is the action. This is the results of the actions of the Israeli government. This is new. This is just for the past two years.
Rudy Rachman
This is the rise of anti Semitism and people using your cause only when it fits their agenda. When Palestinians are being Hamas. Let me put it in any other context.
Dr. Ahmed
They don't care about the anti Semitism. It's all about anti war man.
Rudy Rachman
How many people spoke about Palestinians dying in the Syrian civil war in Black September, suffering under the Palestinian Authority, being killed once Israel left by Hamas. Who spoke about those Palestinians?
John (Moderator)
Nobody care about Guys, I want to.
Rudy Rachman
When they could use them against Holocaust
Dr. Ahmed
museums all around the world. Americans have been shoved in their throats to learn about the Holocaust. They've been, they've been wrong to learn about the Holocaust. No, but that comes with consequences that when the people who, who have presented themselves as the victims now they're causing the problem.
Rudy Rachman
People are gonna victims. But that has nothing to do with
John (Moderator)
now Dr. Ahmed and Rudy, I, I wanna, because we're coming up, we're actually on time. So I want to give. Rudy, I want to give you both the opportunity to say one last thing. But let's, let's here. I don't mean. I want to make sure that you both know that I see you all as independent voices. You know, Rudy is speaking for himself. Rudy is a content creator who says very unique things in his content. And he's. I believe that he's speaking from his independent voice. I don't believe he is controlled by some larger agenda. And I admire him for that. And that's why Jubilee was interested in engaging with him and why we're here. And, Dr. Ahmed, I believe you are someone who's very uniquely willing to entertain constructive conversations about what the future could be like in a unique way. But if my goal here was to kind of like. And I did think we uncovered some unique things, but I also wanted to communicate where, as an outsider, I felt there were weak points in how I was receiving the messages from both of you. And so I wanted. I hope that you can kind of take that away where it's like, as an outsider, I'm not following. You lost me there, like. Or you're losing people like me there. And so Hamas was an example, but then this kind of, this. This lack of clarity around what Judaism means to people. But. And I know, Rudy, what it means to you, but what I think, what other people associate it with, that was something I wanted to point out. And I didn't mean to come across as, like, leaning more one way or the other. But I appreciate you both for participating in this, and I want to give you each kind of an opportunity. Just what would your closing thought be in as constructive of a way as possible, like your hope for where this can lead to? Rudy, why don't you start us off?
Rudy Rachman
Sure, John, I didn't take offense. You know, we can have passionate conversations and know that our hearts are in a good place. I'm not going to bring any critiques because this is closing statement to talk about the future and on positivity.
John (Moderator)
If you critique Jubilee, please, I invite that.
Rudy Rachman
I'm talking actually about the Palestinian side, because if then my burn critiques, I won't be able to respond after. So I'll focus solely on the positive outlook. And I think every Israeli and Jew listening and every Palestinian and Arab listening has to understand there is no future where either of us disappear. There's not a future where we're all going to be killed on one side or the other. There's not going to be a future. We're all going to be displaced on one side or the other. And the status quo is clearly impossible and making us all suffer. And it's not about competition of who's suffering more it's about a reality that we are all suffering. Israel has the power to be able to make the change. That doesn't mean that Palestinians have no power to be able to do anything at all. But we need to understand that there is no future without each other and the conversation should be focused on what are the non negotiables and how can we take the steps to be able to get there and never vilifying and seeing the other person's identity and history as the source of our problem. If we see it that way, then the conversation goes left and south and bad right away. But we need to be able to understand that each other's identity are not linked to our suffering and we both have a place to stay here forever. Inshaallah Baza ta shem I don't think
Dr. Ahmed
I disagree much on many of the points that you mentioned. Honestly when we met the first time in the in the surrounded episode in my mind, you have to understand sitting down in front of an Israeli soldier, the only thought that comes to my mind that you know what this could be the one who's going to kill me one day, that comes to my mind when I'm in the west bank or when I'm in Bethlehem. So the fact that you are speaking that way and coming from the side that you are clearly and openly pro Israel but yet willing to sit down and see Palestinians coming back to their lands, I hope and I pray more people will start thinking that way. I don't want sellouts. I don't want to sit down with sellouts who are who are anti their own people. No, I respect people who are promoting the causes of their own community and their own nation. But I have more respect to people who do it in a fair way, in a just way. So I'm hoping that your voice will get louder in your own community. And I'm hoping more people will join your movement and I'm hoping more people will listen to what you're saying and I'm hoping one day the government will start acting in a similar way regardless. And I'm hoping, as John said, this is a genuine claim. I'm hoping more people will be speaking in that same language on both sides. I don't know what the future is hiding for us. I don't know where we're going to be in 10 years from now. We're hoping that we will see that civilization prosper where every single person under it having complete equal freedoms and rights regardless of their ethnicity, regardless of their faith, regardless of their religion, and people who are living as refugees will be back in their homes or they'll be compensated. And I'm hoping that we won't see more kids getting killed on either side.
John (Moderator)
Well, thank you both so much. It really is a privilege just to be in this position, even though I feel very unqualified. And I thank you for sharing your evening and your morning on opposite ends of the world, and I wish you both great rest of your day and safety and health. For more follow up episodes of Surrounded, be sure to Like Subscribe Leave us a positive review. Follow us wherever you get your podcasts. If you're watching the video version, subscribe to Tubily. If you want to see video episodes of surrounded, subscribe to Jubilee's YouTube channel. Thanks for supporting us. Thanks for listening. Remember, you could be wrong, so could I. Keep your mind open until next time.
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Podcast: Surrounded by Jubilee
Episode Title: Israeli vs Palestinian: Can They Agree? (ft. Rudy Rochman and Dr. Ahmed Soboh)
Release Date: May 3, 2026
Participants:
This follow-up episode of "Surrounded" continues an intense, nuanced debate between Rudy Rochman and Dr. Ahmed Soboh, two articulate representatives of the Israeli and Palestinian perspectives. The moderator, John, aims to move beyond entrenched narratives and see if even small kernels of agreement can be found. The discussion tackles definitions of Zionism, the distinction between Jews and Zionists, the roots of hatred, the challenge of collective blame, the meaning of a "Jewish state," and visions for a shared future. Both guests offer pointed criticisms, personal reflections, and remarkably candid moments about the failures and hopes within their respective societies.
Opening Definitions:
Host’s Clarification: John acknowledges how semantics drive confusion and conflict, noting:
Rudy: “Judaism is not a religion… We are the descendants of an ancient civilization called Judea. Judaism is the portable suitcase of that civilization. We are a people, a nation, a civilization.” (41:26)
Dr. Ahmed: “All the claims about the Holy Land and the Temple is all religious.” (49:45)
“When I criticize Palestinians, I’m criticizing individual actors… not the Palestinian identity. But when you criticize Israel, it’s often the whole of Zionism or the very idea of Israel.” (05:02, 09:59)
“Hamas is a natural outcome of many years and decades of oppression…” (20:52)
“The biggest win Hamas had is not the amount of Jews they killed. It’s the amount of Jews they turned into being like Hamas—hateful.” (12:42)
History as Narrative Divider:
“I never said this started from Palestinians. I actually sourced the British… But right now, we’re adults, we have to take responsibility for our actions.” (22:31; 27:16)
Moderator’s Point:
“It’s very hard to get consensus on what the rights and wrongs of the past are…” (15:35)
Responsibility for Change:
Rudy: “Israel has more power, which is why Israel has more responsibility to fix the situation… We are currently in power and we have to change the conditions.” (22:31; 36:19) Dr. Ahmed: “You cannot expect, as a Palestinian, I have to act exactly like, as an Israeli. Israel is the bully.” (27:16)
Criticism of Leadership:
“That’s an idea that many Palestinians have no problem with… but we feel that Israelis are not genuinely desiring this…” (39:33)
“So, are you going to tell those Palestinians… they’re not allowed to come unless those Jewish around the world are willing to come?” (45:04)
Rudy passionately distinguishes Judaism as civilization, not “just” religion, repeatedly comparing Jews to indigenous peoples, arguing that attempts to frame Judaism as merely a faith is a Western misunderstanding (47:49, 53:05).
John (moderator) and Dr. Ahmed push back, expressing that for much of the world Judaism is a religion, and conflation causes confusion and resistance:
“But that feels intellectually dishonest… That is like the core of what all human beings see as a religion.” (49:10) “Regardless if you count yourself as an ethnicity or a religious or a spirituality nation, there’s bombs and F-16s killing people…” (53:39 — Dr. Ahmed)
Rudy draws analogies to Native American and Persian identities, stressing that spirituality is part of civilization rather than a marker of religion.
| Timestamp | Quote | Speaker | |-----------|-------|---------| | 00:00 | “Judaism is not a religion… We are a civilization.” | Rudy Rochman | | 03:19 | “For Palestinians… anti-Zionism means anti-ethnic cleansing, anti-genocide, anti stealing homes…” | Dr. Ahmed | | 05:02 | “If I were to do the same thing, I would basically make the argument that because there has been terrorism from the Palestinian side… that would mean the very Palestinian identity is associated with something negative. That’s what Ahmed just did.” | Rudy Rochman | | 09:59 | “No one said all Jews are Zionists and all Zionists are Jews.” | Rudy Rochman | | 12:42 | “The biggest win Hamas had is… the amount of Jews they turned to be like Hamas and to be hateful.” | Rudy Rochman | | 14:09 | “We all know who started it… the militias and European Zionists came and massacred so many Palestinians...” | Dr. Ahmed | | 20:52 | “Hamas is a natural outcome of many years and decades of oppression... Do I agree with all its actions? Absolutely not, nobody agrees with anybody.” | Dr. Ahmed | | 22:31 | “I actually sourced the British…” | Rudy Rochman | | 36:19 | “With power comes responsibility. Israel is in power now and we have to lead the change.” | Rudy Rochman | | 39:33 | “The problem is that we feel that Israelis are not genuinely desiring this... it’s hard to believe there are enough Israelis who are willing to accept this.” | Dr. Ahmed | | 41:26 | “I use one civilization instead of one state… we need to build something new, a republic.” | Rudy Rochman | | 49:10 | “That is like the core of what all human beings see as a religion.” | John (Moderator) | | 53:39 | “Regardless if you count yourself as an ethnicity or a spiritual nation… there are bombs and F-16s killing people… It's what’s happening on the ground.” | Dr. Ahmed | | 59:30 | “Every Israeli and Jew listening and every Palestinian and Arab listening has to understand there is no future where either of us disappear... the status quo is clearly impossible and making us all suffer.” | Rudy Rochman | | 60:35 | “I hope and I pray more people will start thinking that way… I respect people who are promoting the causes of their own community… but do it in a fair way, in a just way.” | Dr. Ahmed |
The conversation is:
Rudy (59:14): Stresses that neither people will disappear, advocating for acknowledgment of each other’s identities and pain, and urging a process where non-negotiables are laid bare, then addressed in practical steps.
“There's not a future where we're all going to be killed on one side or the other… We both have a place to stay here forever.”
Dr. Ahmed (60:35): Expresses hope for genuine dialogue and more Israeli voices similar to Rudy’s, with mutual recognition, just leadership, and compensation or return for refugees.
“I'm hoping that your voice will get louder in your own community… I'm hoping one day the government will start acting in a similar way.”
This episode demonstrates the nearly intractable complexity of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, yet it also uncovers rare moments of understanding and shared hope. By parsing semantics, history, and lived experience, Rudy and Dr. Ahmed reveal how much ground is covered by core disagreements over identity, narrative, and justice. Despite the heated exchanges, both ultimately voice support for a future rooted in mutual recognition, equal rights, and personal as well as collective accountability.
This is a must-listen for anyone seeking a deeper, less polarized grasp of Israeli and Palestinian perspectives, as well as the immense hurdles still to be overcome on the path to peace.