I want to fight for Israel. Why won’t anyone let me?
I could work to help sway opinion in my home country if only there was a shred of effective Israeli PR there and elsewhere abroad.
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This is a guest essay written by Giada Condello. You can also listen to the podcast version of this essay on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, and Spotify.
My name is Giada Condello and, as you might have guessed from my surname, I am Italian.
However, I am also Israeli and, just to get this out of the way, I am not Jewish.
I am not Jewish, but I gained Israeli citizenship a couple of years ago because I am married to an Israeli and I have chosen to live here.
I really enjoy living in Israel. While this might seem ordinary to you, you cannot imagine the difficulties this statement has caused me at airport security or during conversations with Israeli friends. It is a red flag. Apparently, an Italian is not supposed to prefer Israel over Italy. Well, surprise surprise, here is the first one.
I am also raising two other hybrids like myself, although dealing with my firstborn might prove more challenging, since he seems to have a strong affinity for skiing and Italian food. Nevertheless, I am working on it.
All joking aside, I am writing this letter because, after October 7th, I woke up with a sense of urgency and a strong desire to make a difference in the representation of Israel abroad, especially in my home country, Italy. Like everyone else that morning, I woke up in a different country, with a different mindset. I was shocked, I was confused, I was angry — but I was determined to fight.
With a heavy heart, a few days later, I flew to Italy with my children out of fear that something terrible might happen to them. However, once there, I felt a sense of guilt and helplessness. While my children were safe, my husband, the rest of our family, and all our friends were still in Israel, fighting so we would be able to come back, eventually.
I started to contact everyone I knew. I wanted to help as well. I wanted to counter those who labelled Israel an apartheid country, referred to Israelis as colonizers and Nazis, and spread the other falsehoods you are likely already familiar with, by presenting facts, history, and images.
I managed to find a contact at the Israeli Embassy in Italy. I tried to contact StandWithUs, Act-IL, and so many other organizations; Jewish, non-Jewish, and famous journalists. I joined hasbara WhatsApp groups, Facebook groups, Telegram, Instagram groups, but nothing really happened. Why?
Because it was messy! And still is by the way.
Everyone wants to help, but nobody knows how. There are so many accounts on Instagram, Facebook, and X, but they are not efficient. They are not efficient because they are not united, they do not follow a clear path, and they do not communicate a clear message.
There is nobody in Italy who is young, motivated, unlinked to any political party, understands the current trends, and is able to stand up and convey a clear and powerful message.
Why is there such an inability to create a team, educate its members and build a strong strategy? Now more than ever we need that! Our hasbara effort is all over the place, and it has started to make us feel impotent. I keep hearing people saying “their propaganda is too strong,” “they are too many of them,” “they don’t care about facts, they just hate the Jews,” and “it’s too late, we’ve already lost this war on social media.”
Have we? Did we even start doing it for real before Eylon Levi, Noa Tishby, Hen Mazzig, Hillel Fuld, and a few others showed it could be done — and done properly?
Did you know that Israel had a PR campaign called “Masbirim Israel” (Hebrew for “Explaining Israel”) back in 2010? Its purpose was to recruit Israeli citizens to the task of improving the nation’s public image in the world. I recommend checking out their website to see how successful that was.
Oh right, the website is down. Does not exist. So again, for people like me: Israeli with another citizenship, fluent in a foreign language, deeply aware of how Israel is being represented in their country of origin and highly motivated to change that, there is no opportunity. There is no way to help. In short, it is too late.
But my problem is that I do not accept this excuse.
Was it too late in 2010, when the social media era was just beginning? Was it not worth it to actually invest in the strength of people who, like me, wanted to help and knew how to do it, because they were familiar with a specific culture? Would Israel’s image not be in a different place 14 years later? Are 14 years not enough to at least start planning a PR strategy?
I spent two months in Italy after October 7th, and I witnessed firsthand the alarming level of ignorance and misinformation surrounding the events in Israel. It goes beyond the immediate crisis; there seems to be a significant lack of accurate representation and a complete absence of effective Israeli PR in Italy — and I am determined to change this narrative.
Italians deserve a more nuanced and accurate understanding of Israel beyond the distorted images portrayed on TikTok, Instagram, and TV. I believe all the other countries deserve it as well. Because it is not too late, it was not too late in 2010, and it is not too late in 2024.
Don’t get me wrong; I am aware that our government has other pressing priorities, but I also understand that turning a blind eye to an ongoing parallel war in the digital realm is not the answer.
This conflict began long before October 7th and will persist even after our troops leave Gaza. Ignoring or deprioritizing this issue will not make it vanish.
So, we are ready to fight. Please provide us with a way to do so.
A version of this essay appeared in The Times of Israel.
You have a clear understanding of the situation. We are fighting a battle with a religion deeply embedded in the culture and society. Arab culture is influenced by Islam to an extent not understood in the West. This in itself is crazy. The influence asserted by Arab culture through the use of its wealth is difficult to combat. In America there is now an organization CLDP that trains young Muslim men and women for service in the government of the USA. This is cunning. The website of this organization shows the placement of their graduates in the offices of many senators and congressional representatives (several Jewish members Schiff, Sanders etc.) here in the USA. The umma is embedding into the fabric of American society through politics. The sad fact is that this religion has no moderate faction to speak of fundamentally it teaches jihad. There is no distinction between politics and religion in Islam. I’m old and I don’t know if I have enough fight left in me but people must clearly be exposed to the truth about this 2 billion strong death cult. Too many times in the news we see western values projected in to what Muslim spokespeople actually say. They say what they mean clearly. They say death to the Jews death to America. Appeasing them is foolish. They must be stopped. They have infiltrated the UN to the extent that the UN is now nothing more than an endless generator of Jew hatred. Unfortunately too many bad guys turned out to be members of the tribe, Epstein Weinstein no doubt about the Jewish nature of these names. This stuff creates a pattern in people’s minds especially with ignorant people. The fact that the casualty statistics coming out of Gaza are never challenged that children are being killed not being exposed as 12, 13, 14, 15 & 16 year olds trained in using arms like RPG and AK47’s. We are responsible to expose and challenge. This information paints an ugly picture of us as people. It’s the same thing with us military aid to Israel. What they don’t tell you is that every penny must be spent in the USA the net overall effect from all this free stuff, in my opinion is the diminishment of Israeli ability to make their own equipment and at the same time makes Israel beholden to the US for support. Sorry about the rant I could go on and on I really appreciate what you wrote and posted. Thanks.
This is a very powerful call to action, Gaida. I am neither Jewish nor Israeli. I am Irish and so from a country that is profoundly anti-Israel and anti-Semitic. We have politicians who disgrace themselves regularly on the world stage: see Mary Robinson, Michael D. Higgins, Richard Boyd Barrett (the vilest of them all), Mick Wallace, Claire Daly, etc with their pro-Hamas rhetoric. I am a member of the Ireland-Israel Alliance, but we have been advised not to meet on account of the hostile environment. I am frustrated because I don't know how to counter the pro-Hamas propaganda these politicians are allowed spread on national media outlets (RTE, etc). Sometimes I think it's a pointless exercise anyway as if people want to live in the dark that's their choice. It will eventually swallow them up. However, not everyone in Ireland is hostile to Israel and they are being lied to by people like those named above. As this is not uncommon in Europe, maybe, Gaida, we can start some kind of pan-European drive to correct the misinformation and disarm the disinformation spread by Hamas and their proxies? After all, many hands make light work. Sean