OPINIONS

Thu 05 Feb 2026 6:58 pm - Jerusalem Time

Gaza the Besieged Between Ideological Walls: Sanctifying the Idea and Denying Humanity

Dr. Ibrahim Nairat

Opinion Writer

Gaza is not merely a besieged spot on the map, but a mirror of extended political and moral failure, a place where geography has shrunk and conflict has expanded to the point of suffocation. Since the Oslo Accords, peace has seemed more like an unwelcome burden than a historical option, a temporary phase that quickly turned into something to be overcome. The real question was not how to reach a settlement, but how to live without one.

In Israel, the entire society cannot be reduced to a single stance, but the nationalist and religious right-wing camp that dominated decision-making in recent decades treated Oslo as a tactical error, not a path to be completed. This camp did not view a settlement as a solution, but as a postponed threat, and did not see a Palestinian state as a possible partner, but as a danger to the state's identity and future. Fear of demography, of mutual recognition, and of the very idea of equality, made true peace more unsettling than continued conflict. Thus, agreements were emptied of their content through settlement and the imposition of facts, transforming the idea of a solution into a permanent crisis management. Deep down, an equation resided that accepted neither gradualism nor compromise: either complete control over the land, or an open-ended, endless conflict.

On the other side, Hamas stands with a project that views Palestine as an indivisible unit, a project not based on temporary solutions or incomplete compromises. Time is a central element in this vision, as history is seen as a long path not measured by the logic of quick achievement. If the goal is not achieved today, it will be achieved in the future. The land is left as one complete piece, and Islam is seen as the ultimate guarantor, not politics or international balances. In this sense, the present is not the center of decision, but the distant promise that gives the conflict its meaning and continuity.

But what both parties fail to realize, or refuse to acknowledge, is that the camp of peace is much wider than the camp of rejection, and that the street, here and there, has become more aware than leaders assume. The average Palestinian realizes that denying the existence of the other is no longer possible, just as the average Israeli realizes that force alone cannot erase an entire people or abolish their presence forever. The equation, at the level of the people, has become both understandable and harsh: neither side can swallow the other, nor can the other erase it, and any talk of a “final solution” is now nothing more than a costly political illusion.

And herein lies the most dangerous paradox. While the base of realistic understanding expands in societies, political options narrow, and the voice of projects that only thrive in an atmosphere of rejection grows louder. The war between the right-wing camp in Israel and Hamas is not only managed as a military confrontation, but as a systematic process of excluding the very ideas of peace, a process aimed at pushing them out of the public sphere, distorting them, associating them with weakness or betrayal, and making a return to them almost impossible. In this context, blood becomes the real guarantor of the equation's continuation. The more blood is shed, the more rational language recedes, the camp of compromise shrinks, and the cost of any voice calling for a solution rises. Blood does not resolve the conflict, but it resolves the debate, and closes the windows through which peace might enter. With each round, the idea of mutual recognition is buried deeper under the rubble, not because it is unrealistic, but because it does not serve those who thrive on conflict.

But what both parties also fail to realize is that the entire path is heading towards a bottleneck that is narrowing with time. Right-wing Israel acts as if time is on its side, but in reality, it is struggling against it. With each passing year, the issue becomes more complicated, legitimacy erodes, internal division deepens, and military superiority turns into a political and moral burden. The occupation, long managed as a security file, has become an existential knot, whose explosion cannot be postponed indefinitely.

Conversely, Hamas bets on time as a historical promise, but it clashes with an exhausted societal reality. Gaza, presented as a symbolic reservoir for the future, is being depleted in its present, and with it, the people's capacity for endurance and for imagining a life outside the logic of long waiting. Time here does not only act as an ally, but as a harsh test for society, accumulating fatigue and deepening the gap between rhetoric and reality.

Thus, while each side thinks it is pressuring its opponent, it is in fact pressuring all of reality to the point of suffocation. Every step towards the brink is presented as steadfastness, but ultimately it brings everyone closer to a point of no return, where slogans are not enough, force does not decide, and future promises do not convince.

Gaza is the place where this tragedy intensifies. It bears more than it can endure; it is used to test the illusions of control and postponed salvation. A small area burdened with more than it can bear, used to test grand illusions, the illusion of permanent control, and the illusion of postponed salvation. Between these two illusions, the larger, often silent, camp of peace is crushed, aware of the impossibility of annihilation, and unable to impose its logic in a time of blood.

In the end, the question urgently imposes itself, inescapable: Have the parties truly exhausted all their tools, or does war turn into a ready option every time a small space appears to achieve goals of exclusion? Is the conflict ignited because there is no alternative, or because the alternative—sitting down, recognizing, and accepting a solution—threatens the ideological structures upon which these projects are built? Either the parties realize, sooner or later, that there is no escape from sitting down, not as a concession but as an existential necessity, or they continue to manage the conflict with blood, round after round, until there is nothing left to exclude but humanity itself.

Thus, peace is not killed because it is impossible, but because it is undesirable by forces that need conflict to justify their existence. With each round of war, we not only move further away from a solution, but collective consciousness is re-conditioned to believe that a solution was never possible in the first place. And when everyone realizes the extent of the loss, the question may no longer be how to achieve peace, but how much more blood must be shed until a simple idea, known to people for a long time, is allowed to resurface.

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Gaza the Besieged Between Ideological Walls: Sanctifying the Idea and Denying Humanity

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