Tehran – What you are reading is an excerpt from Crosh Alyani’s unpublished book on Israel’s war against the people of Gaza. In this book, which is scheduled to be published in Persian in the coming months, the author presents this theoretical explanation of this deep inequality.
Not a novel: Timeline
Part of the book is a timeline spanning around 81 weeks, collecting and briefing events focusing on all issues related to Gaza and Gaza and resistance.
This type of timeline is a carefully selected slice of life. Life itself is neither fair nor logical nor can it be argued as to whether it is a fragment of it. Still, it’s important to be careful. The timeline is not a novel. Of course, it’s fragmented like a novel, unfair like a novel, selective like a novel, but there are differences too.
There is one author in the novel, an absolute and sovereign power. This author does whatever it takes to carry out the plan in their minds. They narrate and create everything they need to move forward with that plan. On the other hand, there are billions of human authors in the timeline, and perhaps natural events could be considered authors in a different sense.
These authors are limited by the existence of others and by what we call “reality” or “real world,” but they cannot do anything they like. Their plans are incomplete and constantly changing. In a novel, the author will direct your gaze. They will determine exactly where you look.
Those who select and compile events on the timeline cannot guide their gaze in the way novelists can do. You’re not just following a clear, linear storyline. It also has the ability to check and explore facts beyond the frames of the timeline.
That’s also why your timeline can become boring so quickly. It lacks innovation. No matter how amazing the events involved may be, it quickly falls back to repetition and normality, dulling the reader’s mind. The timeline is not a very efficient and guided story.
It does not provide direction or entertainment, but it does not guide or enjoy it, just like life itself, which is simply the basis for recognition. It does not provide direction or entertainment, but it does not guide or enjoy it, just like life itself, which is simply the basis for recognition. Putting it more simply, and in a clear mind, the timeline is like the area you have to work to reap the harvest.
No one will do anything for you. If you pay attention like a seed, you harvest. Certainly, the text will provide results regularly and ultimately, but none of them means anything unless you try your own efforts.
Violation of time and space
Another part of the book presents a new theory called malt politics. Simply put, this theory explores systems of domination targeting both the individual and society’s body, health, life and death, and aims to put everything under its control.
On October 7, 2023, the Al-Aqsa Flood Operation, and the Gaza Strip, are important because it caused an irreparable rupture in this control system. The walls around Gaza were broken physical barriers. But in addition to that, the specific walls (these of time, structure, and capital) were torn apart that day in ways that could not be ignored or repaired.
October 7th demonstrated that time-changing from the besieged and vanishing Gaza to the agent’s Gaza is not impossible.
The Al-Aqsa flood operation proved that all stolen capitals, lands, life, faith, and even intelligence could be reclaimed or rebuilt. Nothing is trapped in a safe forever.
That day, we, the Palestinians and Israelis, began to see everything that this system of control had no mysterious structure. That militarism made it unbeatable. It also had no security systems or various technologies, particularly information-related technologies.
Inevitable pluralism
The morning of October 7th is the clearest moment in a series of events to help you understand the essence of disagreement. That morning, fighters who slashed through the fence or slid over paragliders may have seen, among other things, fulfilling God’s promises: victory close to their hands.
The Israeli resident of Nahal Oz may have been listening to birds about the day’s work and thinking about the day’s work, while another Israeli stationed at Nahal Oz’s military security base eager to escape the heavy, quiet surroundings.
Israel, wearing light floral pants, decides how many bracelets and necklaces to wear. Perhaps I even hid the last bit of cannabis in my ziplock bag and hidden it from my freeloaded friends in a water flask.
Years later, biblical scholars say that Hamas’ actions on the morning of October 7th are examples of the Hebrew concept of escape, which was cut off from his linguistic ties with Egypt and reimagined as a modern military spirituality free from ethnic identity.
It becomes clear that this is not merely about different levels or types of perception. It’s about the identity itself. The Palestinian brother was shot – two months, two years ago – at checkpoints, for entertainment for no reason, Israeli parents could never feel their children were returning from military service and starting technical work for IT companies.
Infinite in human history
Human history appears to be a continuing narrative of rising, strengthening and domination of the power system on one side.
From myths and legends to things like blacksmith casts and archers to ancient national history and modern times, this pattern never stopped. Gandhi in Asia, Lumumba in Africa, Fred Hampton in America, Bobby Sands in Ireland, and anarchists who fought Franco in Spain just fall into the vast, endless seas of this struggle.
It is important to understand that this is not a story or emotional propaganda. It is rooted in human neurological and biological structures, and this struggle never stops. It is also important to make sure that the Gaza story never ends, but as Hussein’s story never ends, it never ends, as it never ends, as it never ends.
Crosh Alyani is an Iranian cultural critic and he is the author of the book Israel: The Story of Continuous Discrimination, Assassination and Attacks (2021).