The Syrian journalist promoting peace with Israel November 17, 2024Hayvi Bouzo (Screenshot/YouTube)(Screenshot/YouTube)The Syrian journalist promoting peace with IsraelHayvi Bouzo works from the U.S., knowing she is considered a traitor by many in her home country.By Batya Jerenberg, World Israel NewsHayvi Bouzo is a Syrian journalist trying to promote peace between Israel and the Arab world by using her online platform, which is based in the U.S. because her views make her a traitor in the eyes of many in her home country.The atrocities Hamas-led terrorists committed during their invasion of Israel last October 7 galvanized her to bring the Israeli side of the war to over three quarters of a million followers who watch her weekly podcasts on Yalla, a show she cofounded to âcounteract the deep-seated rhetoric that incites violence, antisemitism, and hatredâ in the Middle East, as she told The Jerusalem Post in a March interview.Bouzo has interviewed many Israelis so far who lost relatives on October 7 as well as family members of hostages, such as Thomas Hand, the father of a nine-year-old, Emily, who spent some eight weeks in Hamas captivity before being freed among dozens of women and children in the only hostage deal to date, last November.âI had to be composed with him during the broadcast,â she told Ynet in an interview published Saturday. âIt’s not an Israeli audience that identifies with this terrible story. My job is to use the force of the story to convince my audience. They can hit me with thousands of horrific stories on the Palestinian side, but I know that my audience is also shocked by [these] stories.âRead Israel first attacked radar detection systems to weaken Iran's ability to intercept strikesWhat comes across in the interview is that Bouzo feels a sense of mission.âThere are hundreds of TV channels in the Arab world, none of which present the Israeli side. Thereâs no mention of the hostages or their families,â she noted.The story that most affected her, she said, was that of the kidnapping of Shiri and Yarden Bibas and their four-year-old Ariel and nine-month old, Kfir, the youngest hostages still in captivity. It is not known if any of them are still alive, and Bouzo said she âcried through the whole interviewâ with their cousin, Yifat Ziller.âI thought of my own two children, Gino (11) and Talia (8),â she said. âI told my husband Hans that I couldnât imagine how Iâd keep it together if a disaster as horrific as that ever happened to us.âShe has received venomous messages in reaction to such podcasts, she said, but feels relatively safe in the U.S., while saying, âI live under the illusion that they donât know exactly where I live or where my studio is.âShe knows she would have been dead âlong agoâ had she stayed in her home country. She and her family fled in 2012 after they received death threats following a Facebook post she wrote about a âhorrific massacreâ the regime carried out towards the beginning of the civil war in Syria, which âstarted off with arresting children and carried on to chopping off hands and feet during interrogations,â she said.Read Iran, Hezbollah strongholds make Syria a âhunting groundâ for IsraelIn terms of Israelâs ongoing war, she expressed great satisfaction with how the Israelis have decimated Hezbollah, considering the amount of âblood on their handsâ they have of citizens not only of Israel but also Lebanon and her own country as well, she said.âIâm glad that youâre setting Lebanon ablaze to get rid of Hezbollah,â she said.She believes the fight against Hamas is also just, framing it as a battle against terrorism that has affected Palestinians in Gaza no less than Jews in Israel.âAssassinating a creature as evil as [Hamas head Yahya] Sinwar is an important step toward freeing the world of the threat of terrorism,â she said. âHis bloody regime has caused the deaths of so many Israelis, and heâs also killed Palestinians – innocent people.“His assassination conveys a message to anyone seeking to disseminate terror,â she continued. âThe regime in Tehran is shaking in its boots and any terrorist organization is feeling the pressure right now. Sinwarâs assassination is a victory for justice and brings the world one step closer to a safer and freer world.âBouzo also believes that most Palestinians want peace with Israel but that âthe initiative has to come from the Israeli side – talking about peace with the Palestinians and taking steps toward peace â because youâre the strong side.âRead IDF strikes Syria-Lebanon border for second time in week, Damascus saysShe is trying to do her part on her show, she said in her March interview.âBy bringing attention to shared histories and modern realities, Yalla fosters empathy and dialogue, striving for a future where humanization and mutual respect prevail between Israel and its Arab neighbors and amongst Jewish and Muslim communities worldwide,â she said. journalistpodcastPro-Israel advocacySyria