A land that resists exile
France will recognize Palestine in September. The UK may follow. And Israel, as always, stands defiant. Not just against its enemies, but now against its own allies. It refused to send a delegate to the two-state summit in New York. Said it would play into Hamas’s hands.
But what are the alternatives? Antonio Guterres asked the question that too many leaders duck.
“A one-state reality where Palestinians are denied equal rights and forced to live under perpetual occupation and inequality? Or a one-state reality where Palestinians are expelled from their land? That is not peace.”
There it is. The silence between recognition and rockets. Between the rubble of Gaza and the marble floors of diplomacy. Between a people longing for sovereignty, and a state that insists security means domination.
Gaza has seen conquerors come and go
Oliver McTernan knows this terrain better than most. As a mediator with Forward Thinking, he's spent decades listening to both sides. What he said was sobering.
“Alexander the Great occupied Gaza for three years. Then he gave up. Napoleon lasted two weeks. The one thing about the people of Gaza—they are resilient. They love their land. And they will not leave it.”
That’s not strategy. That’s identity.
That’s not a political position. That’s home.
McTernan recalled a conversation with a senior Palestinian official in Ramallah. A man who, even at the highest levels of government, had never been to Jerusalem. Not once in his life. That is the invisible border of occupation. Not just physical, but psychological. A generation raised behind concrete and checkpoints, forbidden from their own holy city.
A history forgotten, a future denied
What if the real problem is forgetfulness? McTernan thinks many decision-makers are treating this as if history began on October 7. But Gaza is not a blank slate. The occupation didn’t start with Hamas. The pain did not begin with the latest war.
“We’ve had 80 years of a cycle of violence. Nine wars since Israel’s founding. Six major peace conferences. None have delivered.”
He’s not wrong. The two-state solution feels more like a prayer than a plan. But he still believes it’s the only democratic path left. Not through negotiations, but through pressure.
“The international community must say it plainly: the occupation has to end. Israel must recognize a Palestinian state on the 1967 borders.”
It sounds simple. It is not.
Rabbis, resistance, and the soul of Israel
Despite the gloom, McTernan sees glimmers of hope in unlikely places. Senior rabbis, some from the Orthodox tradition, are quietly advocating for coexistence. They invoke the teachings of Maimonides, who believed the Messiah would return only when Jews, Christians, and Muslims shared the land in peace.
“They believe the future may begin with two states, but could one day become a confederation.”
Do they have political power? Not enough yet. But in Israel, faith still shapes politics. If these rabbis can reach their communities, things could change.
Meanwhile, other rabbis—aligned with extremist politicians—push in the opposite direction. It’s a tug-of-war between the soul of Judaism and the machinery of nationalism.
On the Palestinian side, a missed chance
McTernan also spoke about what could have been. A European-backed project once brought together Palestinian politicians, businessmen, and students to map their shared aspirations. Despite factionalism, they agreed on one thing:
“Ninety percent of their suffering is rooted in occupation.”
And yet, the world squandered a critical moment. In 2006, when elections brought Hamas to power, the international community recoiled. Instead of engaging a nascent democratic experiment, they punished it.
“Had we supported the outcome of that election, we might not be facing the catastrophe we are witnessing in Gaza today.”
That line stays with you. It stings because it’s not hypothetical. It happened. A door was open, and we slammed it shut.
Conclusion: Not everything broken stays broken
We are told over and over that Israelis and Palestinians cannot live together. That hate is too deep, wounds too old. But who decided that? Who profits from that despair?
“Things don’t have to be the way they are today,” McTernan said. “This idea that they can’t live together must be challenged—and it can be.”
Maybe it’s not peace that’s impossible. Maybe it’s imagination that’s missing.
Key Quotes from the Interview:
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Antonio Guterres: “There is no security in occupation.”
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Oliver McTernan: “The people of Gaza are extraordinarily resilient. They love their land. And they will not leave it.”
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On failed negotiations: “Six peace conferences in 80 years—and still, nothing has delivered.”
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On religious leaders: “Senior rabbis believe Muslims, Christians, and Jews can share the land. It’s a theological foundation for peace.”
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On 2006 elections: “If we had supported that democratic result, Gaza might look very different today.”

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