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Home Commentary

What a way to start off the new year of 2025

What has been the reaction of the leaders of the New Orleans community? One called this episode "unfathomable." It is entirely "fathomable." It stems from hatred of Israel in particular and of Jews in general.

by  Walter E. Block
Published on  01-05-2025 04:30
Last modified: 01-05-2025 14:30
What a way to start off the new year of 2025Chris Graythen/Getty Images/AFP

Scenes from a vigil held for people killed on Bourbon street are seen on January 04, 2025 in New Orleans, Louisiana | Photo: Chris Graythen/Getty Images/AFP

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What a way to start off the new year of 2025. Shamsud-Din Jabbar, a US citizen from Texas, drove his truck into a Bourbon Street crowd of revelers celebrating the arrival of January 1. He murdered ten innocent people and placed several dozen others in hospital; five of the latter perished from their injuries. Bourbon Street, for those unfamiliar with New Orleans geography, is similar to Times Square in New York City. Thousands of others looked on during this despicable incident, horrified. Happily, justice was done, and he was killed on the scene of his brutality in a shoot-out with the local constabulary.

Not too long ago, students from Tulane and Loyola Universities, also located in the Crescent City, held a demonstration. They did so on Freret Street, where both institutions of higher learning are located. They were protesting the supposed mistreatment of Palestinians by Israelis. These protests occurred in late April of 2024 and then again on Oct. 8 of the year just gone by, to earmark the events of Oct. 7, 2023. Yes, you got that right, they were celebrating the atrocity of this latter date.

How far is this part of Freret Street located away from Bourbon Street? Not too far. It is about 5.7 miles. From this fact, it is safe to say that there were at least a few dozen students from these two universities in that crowd of thousands of people on Bourbon Street when this tragedy struck. Presumably, a few of these young people took place in the previous protests against Israel on behalf of the Palestinians.

FBI agents look at the site where people were killed by a man driving a truck in an attack during New Year's celebrations, in New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S., January 1, 2025. Photo credit: Eduardo Munoz/Reuters

Shamsud-Din Jabbar is not an actual Palestinian. He changed his name in support of his Islamic beliefs. We may readily infer that he is a bitter critic of Israel from that fact alone. In addition, he had an ISIS flag in the vehicle with which he murdered so many innocent people. One can only wonder why he chose the target of his murderous frenzy as he did: party goers celebrating the New Year on Bourbon Street. Yes, there might have been a few Jews in his target area, but they were hardly concentrated there. Why not, one wonders, did he not aim at Chabad, or Hillel, or any of a number of synagogues in New Orleans. Perhaps it is because, with good reason, they all have armed guards. But, then, there were police on Bourbon Street at that time.

One also naturally wonders, did those student protesters have any second thoughts about their own hatred of Israel? Do they now regret their previous support for the Palestinian cause, now that they have tasted, directly, if they were on Bourbon Street on January 1, 2025, or indirectly, if not, the sort of thing that Israel must endure regularly? And this goes for campus protests at Columbia, Harvard, Yale, Berkeley and numerous other such institutions.

Make no mistake about it. Happily, this was the first and only (so far) outbreak of Middle East-oriented terrorism to occur in New Orleans. But it takes place all too often in the only Jewish state on the planet. Imagine if this sort of thing occurred in American cities with the same regularity as in Israel (9-11, too, transpired only once). Would these student protestors, and their faculty mentors too, have at least a smidgen of appreciation for the plight of the Israelis under such circumstances? One can only hope so.

What has been the reaction of the leaders of the New Orleans community? One called this episode "unfathomable." Not so, not so. It is entirely "fathomable." It stems from hatred of Israel in particular and of Jews in general, albeit geographically misdirected in this instance. Another called for "peace." Peace, while Hamas still holds hostages? While they and their Hezbollah and Houthi colleagues are still lobbing missiles, rockets, and drones in the direction of Israel? While Iran remains a dire threat to Israel? I say, no justice, no peace. I say, let's give war a chance! Peace after these Middle Eastern terrorists surrender, not before.

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