A Palestinian boy was pulled from the rubble with one shoe still on, while an Israeli mother wept over her son’s empty bed—his life ended by a rocket he never saw coming. These images burn through screens and into our conscience, reminding us that the ancient quarrel between the children of Abraham has never ended, only evolved. And though it is their fight, its shockwaves unsettle the whole world, making peace not just their duty, but everyone’s urgent need.
The story of Isaac and Ishmael wasn’t meant to be a curse. It was never written to justify missiles or checkpoints, but to explain how nations could spring from brothers. And yet, what was once a matter of lineage has become a matter of pride, politics, and pain. The descendants of these two sons, Israel and selected Arab nations, now speak not in parables but in retaliation. And while they may argue about borders and histories, what lies at the core is something far older than modern statehood—a fractured family bond left untreated for millennia. It is as if the wound of Abraham’s house was never allowed to scab over.
Even the story of Jacob and Esau carries in it the blueprint of reconciliation. Two brothers, betrayed and wounded, but reunited after years of silence, each weeping on the other’s shoulder. That narrative exists for a reason. It whispers, perhaps stubbornly, that peace is possible. That one day, former rivals might see the futility of inherited rage. But history, in this region, seems to repeat not as tragedy or farce, but as a stubborn refusal to grow up. Leaders on both sides play the same games year after year, as if the old scripts will someday write a different ending.
There is, of course, no shortage of blame to go around. Israel, often buoyed by American support, acts with the confidence of someone who knows no real punishment is coming. Arab nations, some of which remain hostile and others cautiously neutral, leverage Palestinian suffering as political capital while failing to offer viable peace frameworks themselves. And those truly caught in the middle—innocent civilians, children, workers, dreamers—get ground down like wheat between two ancient millstones. It’s exhausting. It’s infuriating. And it’s deeply human in the most tragic sense.
What’s lost in the gunfire is not just life but imagination—the capacity to see a world beyond revenge. Generations of Israelis and Palestinians have now been born into hatred, raised on stories that valorize vengeance and mistrust. It’s not just the land that’s occupied; it’s the collective future. When the idea of peace becomes laughable, a myth, a naive fantasy told only by outsiders, then you know that something profound has been broken—not just treaties, but trust itself. And without trust, no border wall or ceasefire can hold.
One cannot help but ask, what if the courage needed now isn’t the kind found on a battlefield? What if it’s the courage to forgive, to admit wrongdoing, to compromise? That, I believe, is the most radical idea in the region right now. Not dominance. Not retaliation. But humility. The kind of humility Abraham himself might’ve asked for had he seen how far his children would fall. It’s tragic that those who once wandered the desert in search of promise now anchor themselves in stubbornness, as if soil were more sacred than soul.
Let us not romanticize war or the so-called righteousness of either side. Human dignity, not territorial maps, should be the sacred ground. The olive tree doesn’t care who claims the land beneath it. It just grows—roots deep, branches wide, always reaching for peace it will never taste. And perhaps that is the greatest insult to this conflict: that nature, in all its simplicity, fosters coexistence better than the humans who claim to have a divine right to the soil.
Peace will not come from treaties signed in haste nor from military victories paraded like trophies. It will come, if it comes at all, from the children of Isaac and Ishmael finally realizing that inheritance should not mean enmity. It will come when they stop waiting for the other to blink first and start acting as though the world, the very air, the very earth, is tired of their feud. For it is. And so are we.