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*** THE ALIYAH REVOLUTION ALBUM ***

Tuesday, May 08, 2007

Every Jew is responsible for one another? (Kol Yisrael areivim zeh la'zeh?)


Drivers ignore dying man on road



(Click here if video doesn't download.)

Shocking.

Disturbing.

Appalling.

These are just a few of the words that come to mind.

Can it be that Israeli society has become so cold, unforgiving and apathetic (as Avi Dichter, Israel's Internal Security minister, asserts)?

Before casting blame and making sweeping judgements, it's important to place this tragic event in the proper context.

On the morning of March 13th, 1964, 29 year old Kitty Genovese was brutally murdered just outside her New York apartment.

For over 30 minutes, 40 of Ms. Genovese's neighbors watched the brutal attack, doing absolutely nothing. Only 35 minutes after the attack had begun did someone finally call the police.

In order to determine if New Yorkers were in fact cold and heartless, or, if perhaps there was another explanation as to why no one responded to Ms. Genovese's cries for help, a series of experiments were conducted.
The researchers consistently found that as the number of bystanders increased, the likelihood that any one of them would help decreased.
This phenomenon is known as the "bystander effect".
If we are by ourselves when an emergency occurs, we perceive ourselves to be 100% responsible for taking action. However, when there are 10 bystanders, we each perceive ourselves to have only a tenth of the responsibility. The higher the number of bystanders, the less obligated each individual is likely to feel to intervene.
Another explanation given is...
If we are unsure of our own perceptions and interpretations, or if the situation is ambiguous, we look to others for help in defining what is going on. If others appear calm, we may decide that whatever is happening doesn't require our assistance.
When these findings are applied to Israel society, I believe that we can better understand why this tragic event occurred, and how similar occurrences can be prevented in the future..

Frankly, over the last two decades, as corruption and deceit infected many of the seats of power within Israeli society - particularly the government - average Israelis came to feel that they were no longer able to make a difference. Israeli society was now ruled by the law of the jungle - everyone for themselves and the survival of the fittest - and whoever didn't play by those rules would come to be viewed as friers / (suckers) - the absolute worst thing you can call an Israeli.

It is not a matter of Israeli society being populated by cold and heartless individuals, quite to the contrary. However, the foreign values that have consciously been imported from abroad (courtesy of Israel's ruling elites), such as individualism and materialism have come to replace the authentic Jewish values of self-sacrifice and of caring for the needs of the community.

We are taught in Pirkei Avot (Ethics of our Fathers, 5:22):
Whoever possesses these three qualities belongs to the disciples of Abraham our father: a generous eye, a humble spirit, and a meek soul.

But he who possesses the three opposite qualities--an evil eye, a proud spirit, and a haughty soul--is of the disciples of Bilam the wicked.
So, what is the solution?

I believe that each and every one of us needs to take upon themselves a sense of personal responsibility for making the Jewish State of Israel the best it can possibly be.

True, there are many challenges within Israeli society, and we can't possibly overcome all of them with our limited abilities and resources, but, returning once again to Pirkei Avot, 2:21:
It is not incumbent upon you to finish the task. Yet, you are not free to desist from it.

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8 Comments:

  • At 2:51 PM , Blogger Ezra said...

    Interestingly enough, while in the passenger's seat, driving down Derech Hevron yesterday, I witness a car nip a parked car's bumper and flip over on its back.

    Immediately there was half a dozen people assisting the woman who was pinned to her seat.

    She insisted on getting out of the car and people assisted her - miraculously, she had no broken bones, but was in shock and people were hugging and holding her, offering her water, calling the police and ambulance repeatedly and directing traffic away from the mess.

    Maybe it's a Jerusalem thing.

    On the other hand, I am not so surprised that folks that can sit at home while others are evicted to make room for Hamas training camps can sit in their cars and cruise by a maimed accident victim as though it were on TV.

     
  • At 5:11 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

    Personally I work with PTSD & violence survivors and this incidence screams "emotional & psychological numbness." That would come from being bombed, having your friends & family blown up and your entire country and your life threatened on a daily basis.

    I don't think its uncaring - I think it shows a severe nationwide trauma.

     
  • At 5:20 PM , Blogger Ze'ev said...

    Barbara, thanks for the comment.

    How would you explain the Kitty Genovese case, in NY in the 1960's, which was not under attack?

     
  • At 10:41 PM , Blogger Aaron Amihud said...

    no excuses. no severe national trauma. no bystander effect. just pure evil. this time showing it's not our leaders but we the people who are evil.

    this is a wake up call. stop blaming the leaders. thank almighty for the leaders we do have compared to the common israeli. harsh to say and i love my brothers but a spade is a spade. and we the jewish people need to do some changing from the ground up not the top down.

    aaron

     
  • At 2:35 AM , Blogger Der Shygetz said...

    Last week, I was passing by a very underprivileged part of Brooklyn and I saw that a man had apparently been hit by a car and was lying in the intersection. Knowing the area, it could well have been an insurance scam, and the man did not seem badly hurt. Nevertheless, EVERY SINGLE PERSON, myself included, who passed by kept calling 911 until help arrived.

    And had it been a Yid, Hatzoloh, Shomrim, Chaverim, and just plain decent people would have been on the scene in seconds so that we would not have even had to wait for NY EMS. In fact, had the injuries been more severe I would have called Hatzoloh anyway and they would have come even though the victim was not Jewish.

    That's the difference between people who live in a prosperous, free society where people are taught to have respect for one another and those who live in a small, insular, dangerous, torn society where everyone is polarized and it is each man for himself (EXCEPT in the one Jewish sector, corrupted though it has been by participation in national politics , that distances itself from the medina and happens to run most of the private sector social services programs in EY).

    Of course it is the people and not the leaders. Who would elect an Olmert or a Peretz or a Peres except someone who is so corrupted by the evil in Israeli society that he has lost respect for himself and everyone else around him.

    Now, go back and read the "toilet" post and see what it is really about.

     
  • At 2:17 PM , Blogger Pinchas said...

    This exact same scenario probably happens once a week in every country in the world. But we don't hear of it. It happens once in Israel and it makes international headlines! The Boston Herald's headline screams "Israelis take detour from moral highway." If a dog bites a man it's not news. But if a man bites a dog that's a three banner headline. Israel is no question held to a higher standard. The nerve of Der Shygetz to claim that the citizens of Brooklyn, New York are more sensitive, caring, and helping than Israelis are. Accidents happen every day in New York and New Yorkers know better than anyone to "mind your own business." That's why a video clip like this happening in New York (and no doubt countless such videos exist) will never make it to the news. It's not newsworthy. It happens in Israel and the entire nation is collectively humiliated and embarrassed. It is even discussed in the Knesset. There is no question what happened was a huge chillul Hashem. But only because Israel is held to a higher standard than the rest of the world – Boro Park included. And this nation is doing soul searching so as to never allow something like this to happen again.

     
  • At 2:24 AM , Blogger Aaron Amihud said...

    this is a chillul hashem by anyone's standards. and as far a soul searching goes, my wife is a literature teacher currently taking courses to become drivers ed teacher. so she brings it up in the training she's doing about this very happening and the response she got from other teachers that were training to be teachers in drivers ed was don't be so sure that if you saw the man laying on the street as you drive by that you wouldn't have done the same thing. then the instructor of the class quickly went back to his lesson. yep, that's some soul searching we've got going on here.

    sorry pinchas, your intentions are pure but you're fighting a losing battle. this incident has shown that it has indeed gotten that bad here. has it really come to this? answer: yes.

    now we have another justification to change our nation.

     
  • At 2:34 AM , Blogger Pinchas said...

    If you feel you are fighting a losing battle you've already lost. The other day I saw a man hand his baby to a taxi cab driver who held it while the man folded up the stroller to put it in the trunk. Why doesn't that make the news? Why doesn't it make the news when I see a teenager help carry an old lady's bags on to a bus he's not even taking? When young people simply get up for their elders on the bus. Sorry Aaron I'm not giving up that easily. These are not things you see in New York -ever!

     

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