O M E L A S | Looking back, as I walk away...

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(Edited)

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Any time I travel by plane, I take a photo of myself crossing the threshold.
It has become a personal ritual of trusting whatever lays ahead.

This ride will get bumpy...





Omelas, an imaginary utopian city from the 2,810-word fiction by Ursula K. Le Guin, called "The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas". Read it once (or listen), and ask yourself: "Do I stay, or do I walk away?"

Is there 'Omelas' in your life?

Omelas represents something more than just a city. It might be a symbol of something you idealize — or even ideology itself.

It could be a place. For some, something metaphysical, like Heaven.
For others, a physical location — a home, a country, a homeland.

Perhaps your Omelas is a relationship with someone — one you could never imagine yourself walking away from.

And yet...

Beneath the seemingly perfect façade of Omelas, there is also something terrible.
It isn't a secret to anyone, but it is isolated in a way that allows you to ignore it.

Ultimately, it forces you to make a decision:

Do you stay, pretending everything is fine, and accept 'evil' as the necessary price for 'good'?

Or does the guilt of associating with this 'evil' crush you until you would rather abandon the 'good' and walk away — perhaps to a worse place for you — but one where your conscience can stand — if not clean — then at least free of self-deception.

And, is it enough to simply walk away?

Is it a privilege to even have the ability to walk away?

What do those that stay think of those who walk away?



There is 'Omelas' in my life.

If Omelas represents 'maximal utopia' that comes at the price of the suffering of one individual, then imagine a lesser utopia that depends on a much greater suffering of many. If you can imagine people walking away from Omelas, it shouldn't be hard to walk away from my version of it... Right?

Right?

My parents always made sure that my siblings and I had great childhoods, even amid the grey, decaying remnants of the Soviet Union.
As children we had colorful lives — trips to the zoo, adventurous farm and city life, pets and toys, gifts from friends who visited from abroad.

But we also saw darker things: increasing military presence, and endless trains carrying tanks passing through our resort city — the first signs of what would become the First Russo-Chechen War. My parents saw the writing on the wall: it was time to leave, what was then my parents' 'Omelas'.

We moved to Israel... and it became our new Omelas.
My memory is filled with happy moments and friendships that I value to this day. Like most kids, I was raised to believe that there is a special place for God-chosen people — a land that was granted to people who survived great terror and oppression.

Of course we were taught about all the wars that were fought — a young nation surrounded by its enemies, its army outnumbered, yet victorious again and again through collective ingenuity, acts of heroism, and divine will.

And we were always reminded: We are the side that seeks peace, while those others seek our demise. I can't count how many olive-branch-carrying doves I've colored in school, all while carrying a cardboard box that contained my personal gas mask.

And somehow, through all that, I felt safe.
Whether it's child's naïveté, the presence of the bomb-shelters nearby, the belief in the superiority of our military, or perhaps a collective feeling that 'the good guys always win in the end.' It's hard to pinpoint the reasons exactly, but it had to make some sense — given that, we, and countless other Russian families, chose to move from one place at war to another place at war.

The 90s were marked by the horrors of Hamas-orchestrated suicide bombings, targeting civilians in buses, markets, restaurants, and other public spaces. Despite that, virtually all of my classmates — including myself — took a bus to school every day.

Despite the looming danger of meeting in public places, our lives were vibrant, full of teenage drama and carefree moments — not different than any memories of youth you might have growing up elsewhere. We went to clubs, concerts, roamed the malls, without our parents knowing our location or even able to contact us. Imagine that.

Every time there was an act of terror, we were shocked and felt afraid.
We heard of someone who knew someone...
Remembrance ceremonies were held, and together we felt righteous, undefeated, and unified.

This was the extent to which I understood life in Israel during my teenage years. We learned to enjoy life despite the dangers, and trust our army to protect us to its best ability. It was a blissful life that I cherish, and there is so much to be grateful for to Israel. That's how it was for me personally. I can't speak for others who lost loved-ones in the acts of terror, or invalidate their feelings. I was simply lucky. I didn't care for politics — not until well after my family moved from Israel to the US.

One thing I must tell you... This might be a personality flaw, or a glitch in the Matrix, but I never held nationalism in high regard. Somewhere between questioning the validity of the Torah and my innate resistance to authority, that seed simply never sprouted.
It never sprouted for any country.

What sprouted instead was Humanism.

Perhaps if I had stayed, and served in the army, sat by my friends at the border-watch through the night, or sailed with them on a battleship, things would have been different. Perhaps I would have even become a high-ranking officer, or — most likely — a frontline junkie (if I’m being honest), with unwavering loyalty to the homeland.

But, alas.

Those who walk away from Omelas don't always leave immediately.
They linger in thought — it takes time to weigh one's morals.
The overwhelming positive aspects of Omelas — its happy yet sophisticated lives — outshine the one negative aspect that is kept hidden in the basement. And so, for a long time, I was unable to make the decision. In fact, it wasn't until I read Ursula K. Le Guin’s work — well into my 30's — that my views and values have solidified.

It took years for me to see the signs of erosion. I was unable to reconcile the disproportionately brutal response to enemy attacks. Every time fire was exchanged, the response was always excessive and with no regard for civilians on the other side.

What used to make sense, suddenly wasn't adding up...
Throwing pamphlets before destroying a building, or a whole neighborhood, makes our army 'the most humane army in the world'?
What if it just an adds psychological torture? It serves less as a humane approach, and more as a way for Israel to evade condemnation.

Destroying a whole building with residents, or a school, is acceptable, if one or few Hamas members go down with it? 'They use their own as human shields' used to somehow make sense, but it just becomes a blank check to treat everyone as fair game.

It seems that one society was becoming safer — yes — but, at the cost of suffering growing elsewhere.

The day I left Omelas was the same day Israel fell under attack, on October 7th.
Seeing the aftermath of the attack left me in shock and dread for what was going to happen next.
It was grimly obvious — to me, and anyone who has seen Israel's response to any previous attacks from Gaza, that this time the nation was willing to abandon humanity in response. Words like 'Annihilation', 'Animals', 'Parking Lot' — these are not words of solemn self-defense, but of bloodlust. And no end in sight.

Just like in Omelas, where the anguish of one is hidden in the basement, the wall between Gaza and Israel makes it easier to ignore the suffering — it seals the eyes from seeing, ears from hearing, and hearts from feeling.


What does it mean to walk away?

These are difficult waters to navigate, because my criticism of the state gets conflated with ill will towards the people who live there. And that is not the case. I simply refuse to have my Jewish and Israeli identity be contingent on waving away humanist values.

My family and friends feel differently — some have even lashed out in anger and issued ultimatums. I can't fault them for their views — it took me so long to arrive at my conclusions — I can't expect others to instantly think like me. But I cannot maintain a relationship that demands that I relinquish empathy, and blindly follow a government that is commuting documented war crimes.

Each person has different values, and arrive at conclusions shaped by their unique experiences.
The citizens of Omelas cannot simply be plucked out of their good lives.
People who walk away from Omelas, walk away alone.
They leave in silence, because there are no words or ideas that haven't been explored before.
They have their lives, their conclusions, and their burden to bear.

Similarly, this is my path. I'm not taking any superior position, and I don't fault anyone who doesn't meet me where I am... I merely choose to be able to express my truth and principles and not fall inline with the accepted or expected narrative.


Am I privileged to be able to walk away?

Yes, I recognize that to a great degree I am.
Physically, I left a long time ago...
I haven’t served in the army, and I didn’t plant my roots.
Emotionally though I'm constrained to family and friends who have planted theirs — who have no choice but to go in unity with the majority for their own sake. It would be a huge sacrifice for one of them veer from the collective path.


What do those who stay think of those who walk away?

The people of Omelas are sophisticated; they are not oblivious to the terms of their happiness: Free the child, and the utopia collapses. So they cannot let anyone speak of 'freeing the child', or maintain contact with those who walk away.

Fortunately though, Israel is not a utopia — nor do I believe that its existence hinges on the ethnic cleansing of the Palestinians. There are also voices who speak out, from platforms much higher than my lowly blog, and so I still have a lot of hope.

Hope not for a utopia, but for an imperfect place — one where we take risks to find a shared humanity.


Is it enough to simply walk away?

This is the hardest question to answer.
Some readers have criticized the moral outcome of "The ones who walk always from Omelas" by pointing out that those who walk way are cowards for not fighting to save the child.
And that is a fair point.

Those who walk away cannot take it upon themselves to free the child and bringing the collapse upon the utopia...
They are stuck between two evils.

Perhaps this isn't really much, but I'm not walking away completely silently. I'm leaving you with something to weigh upon. I know that this isn't even going to reach all that many people, and will likely fall into the black hole of the blockchain in a few days. But if I can perhaps plant a seed, or by virtue of being Israeli myself give you the permission to speak your truth... and plant your seed.
It's never too late.


Thanks for walking beside me on the road into the unknown.





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16 comments
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This was really totally worth reading from the start to the end. First of all, thank you so much for sharing what Omelas mean. This is actually my first time hearing of it.

Walking away is always hard and that’s why it is one of the best tools to make people choose the opposite of what they want. When we have something to stay and fight for, it is good but the moment we still want to stay just because we feel bad for doing the right thing, then that’s a problem.

I have read a lot about Israel in the Bible and how much God has blessed them as a nation and the truth is, God will keep on protecting them because that’s his promise to them but one thing they didn't understand is that God made a better plan for them but they ignored it completely.

I’m happy you have seen things the way you do. And yes, it will take the others time to see things the way you do but that’s fine. What matters is that you’ve told them how you see things so they know. Hopefully one day they will come to see things in a different way and reach out to you.

For me, my Omelas will only make more sense when the people I love are with me but what comes first is doing the right thing. If those I love find it hard to come to side of truth, then it is sad but I just have to move on and walk alone and if I see even a stranger that accepts the truth, they become my Omelas.

This path won’t be easy for you, that’s for sure but I pray you don’t give up upholding what is right.

Sending you a “welcome to your new Omela” hug. 🫂

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(Edited)

Thank you so much for such kind words and the reassurance that speaking my truth is welcomed. I find myself in a no-win situation morally - I am grateful for my life in Israel and the friends and family that live there, but I also feel very heartbroken for all the innocent lives lost and destroyed in Gaza. I've lost friendships over this - plugs I didn't pull. But putting it in writing helps me work through my reasons in a way that I cannot explain in a heated conversation.

"Those who walk away from Omelas" is a very short read, but you can spend hours and days unpacking it's meaning, and it posses the exact moral argument that we find ourselves in today.

😌
🙏

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You’re welcome, Polo. I can understand how it feels not to be understood and trust me, it feels like hell especially from a loved one. Sorry about the loss you’ve had, hopefully this new chapter brings you peace and more wisdom to relate your thoughts to them.

Have a lovely day ahead! 💜

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i am all for humanism too.
i never felt borders were ok and families either.
we are one and i connect with who i feel good with, i can love all countries.
friendship is about the heart not the time spent forgetting who we are for eachother and not care because " we spent 15 years together " .
everything is the same and there is a time for all.

nice rant, little foot
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(Edited)

Merci mon Cheri 💗

Humanity is our true common tribe. Maybe some day we will abolish all borders; families, I don't know... All I know is that, when lines are crossed, and lives are ended without any remorse, there grows a hole in our identity that will not be filled.

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Great piece, @ankapolo!

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Sorry @promptedbeauty, but I know, based on your response, that you didn't read the post.

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I understand @ankapolo. I made that comment because the moral tension in Omelas that you reflected on really stood out to me. That’s why I mentioned it. But I realized my wording felt a bit too formal, so I’ve removed the later part of my comment. I did read and appreciate your reflections, and I found your personal take especially meaningful.

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I'm also hundred 💯% for humanism. Thanks for explaining what Omela means and the need to take that bold step... to walk away even when it seem insane to others.
I wish you happiness and peace.

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Thank you so much for reading and the kind words! 🔥🙌

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I have no real thoughts that I can articulate into a comment, but the thing that I took away from your words here are ... that I need to break down my own barrier and read some Le Guinn stuff, like all of it. I keep looking at this (because I can't afford it right now) on Amazon, and asking no one to buy it for me because I don't think they'd understand why I want it :P

But, I think I have had Omela, and will have Omela again in my life.

Perhaps Ursula herself is one of mine.

For me, the meaning of life is to make it meaningful. I do that by cherishing the relationships I have. As deeply as the other person can tolerate.

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I'm pretty sure that Omelas is unlike other work by Ursula... Omelas is more of an essay/story, only a few pages, and it's a philosophical exercise.

I will now look up her other work, cause I didn't know she was a sci-fi writer.

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This was such a beautiful read. It mirrors a lot of what I went through.

I'm a hardcore Nationalist. I love my country, the history, the culture -- the fact that we were the first country in the world to actively nuke ships out the water that were carrying slaves.

I'm not huge on borders and boundaries though -- because I do believe everyone that wants to seek a better life should be able to should they want to.

I've analysed my wife's family history and her Grandfather was Romany gypsy and her Grandmother Sicilian -- crazy right?

I somewhat feel people of yesteryear travelled way more than we did, but maybe because it was cheaper.

Anyway, I'm not one for wars either. I'd wish it if all the big countries would get together and work alongside each other rather than scrapple over resources.

But I think we're a long way off that.

Also interesting -- I started off my life in Russia. Was a very interesting experience, one that I may share some time.

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Thank you! I think that traveling a lot, and being a product of many cultures, as well as living in the US made me less and less of a nationalist across the board... a whole post - for another time...

I'd love to hear your Russian origin story :)

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