Sorry, but you’re wrong there. The translation tames things a bit, but the original slogan, along with the Hamas charter it’s drawn from, call for the outright extermination of Israel.
And Hamas are miserable anti-Semitic goons that are an armed minority and do not represent the interests of most Palestinians.
Interestingly the phrase was originally used by Likud in 1977 in an election charter: “between the Sea and the Jordan there will only be Israeli sovereignty”. If this phrase is a call to genocide the knife cuts both ways.
Personally, I don’t use it, because I’ve heard from some Jewish people I know that they find it offensive or alienating. But for me I’m not bothered with pro-Palestinian activists using it either.
Sorry, but you’re wrong there. The translation tames things a bit, but the original slogan, along with the Hamas charter it’s drawn from, call for the outright extermination of Israel.
And Hamas are miserable anti-Semitic goons that are an armed minority and do not represent the interests of most Palestinians.
Interestingly the phrase was originally used by Likud in 1977 in an election charter: “between the Sea and the Jordan there will only be Israeli sovereignty”. If this phrase is a call to genocide the knife cuts both ways.
Doesn’t make it right for anyone to say though.
Personally, I don’t use it, because I’ve heard from some Jewish people I know that they find it offensive or alienating. But for me I’m not bothered with pro-Palestinian activists using it either.
Saying that the country of Israel should not exist is not antisemitic.