Synday, October 17, 2004, Killing
children is no longer a big deal By Gideon
Levy MORE than 30
Palestinian children were killed in the first two
weeks of Operation Days of Penitence in the Gaza
Strip. It's no wonder that many people term such
wholesale killing of children "terror." Whereas in
the overall count of all the victims of the
intifada the ratio is three Palestinians killed for
every Israeli killed, when it comes to children the
ratio is 5:1. According to B'Tselem, the human
rights organization, even before the current
operation in Gaza, 557 Palestinian minors (below
the age of 18) were killed, compared to 110 Israeli
minors. Palestinian human rights groups
speak of even higher numbers: 598 Palestinian
children killed (up to age 17), according to the
Palestinian Human Rights Monitoring Group, and 828
killed (up to age 18) according to the Red
Crescent. Take note of the ages, too. According to
B'Tselem, whose data are updated until about a
month ago, 42 of the children who have been killed
were 10; 20 were seven; and eight were two years
old when they died. The youngest victims are 13
newborn infants who died at checkpoints during
birth. With horrific statistics like
this, the question of who is a terrorist should
have long since become very burdensome for every
Israeli. Yet it is not on the public agenda. Child
killers are always the Palestinians, the soldiers
always only defend us and themselves, and the hell
with the statistics. The plain fact, which must be
stated clearly, is that the blood of hundreds of
Palestinian children is on our hands. No tortuous
explanation by the IDF Spokesman's Office or by the
military correspondents about the dangers posed to
soldiers by the children, and no dubious excuse by
the public relations people in the Foreign Ministry
about how the Palestinians are making use of
children will change that fact. An army that kills
so many children is an army with no restraints, an
army that has lost its moral code. As MK Ahmed Tibi (Hadash)
said, in a particularly emotional speech in the
Knesset, it is no longer possible to claim that all
these children were killed by mistake. An army
doesn't make more than 500 day-to-day mistakes of
identity. No, this is not a mistake but the
disastrous result of a policy driven mainly by an
appallingly light trigger finger and by the
dehumanization of the Palestinians. Shooting at
everything that moves, including children, has
become normative behavior. Even the momentary
mini-furor that erupted over the "confirming of the
killing" of a 13-year-old girl, Iman
Alhamas, did not revolve around the true
question. The scandal should have been generated by
the very act of the killing itself, not only by
what followed. Iman was not the only one. - Mohammed Aaraj was eating a sandwich
in front of his house, the last house before the
cemetery of the Balata refugee camp, in Nablus,
when a soldier shot him to death at fairly close
range. He was six at the time of his death.
- Kristen Saada was in her parents'
car, on the way home from a family visit, when
soldiers sprayed the car with bullets. She was
12 at the time of her death.
- The brothers Jamil and Ahmed Abu
Aziz were riding their bicycles in full
daylight, on their way to buy sweets, when they
sustained a direct hit from a shell fired by an
Israeli tank crew. Jamil was 13, Ahmed six, at
the time of their deaths.
- Muatez Amudi and Subah Subah
were killed by a soldier who was standing in the
village square in Burkin and fired every which
way in the wake of stone-throwing.
- Radir Mohammed from Khan Yunis
refugee camp was in a school classroom when
soldiers shot her to death. She was 12 when she
died.
All of them were
innocent of wrongdoing
and were killed by soldiers acting in our name. At
least in some of these cases it was clear to the
soldiers that they were shooting at children, but
that didn't stop them. Palestinian children have no
refuge: mortal danger lurks for them in their
homes, in their schools and on their streets. Not
one of the hundreds of children who have been
killed deserved to die, and the responsibility for
their killing cannot remain anonymous. Thus the
message is conveyed to the soldiers: it's no
tragedy to kill children and none of you is
guilty. Death is, of course, the most
acute danger that confronts a Palestinian child,
but it is not the only one. According to data of
the Palestinian Ministry of Education, 3,409
schoolchildren have been wounded in the intifada,
some of them crippled for life. The childhood of
tens of thousands of Palestinian youngsters is
being lived from one trauma to the next, from
horror to horror. Their homes are demolished, their
parents are humiliated in front of their eyes,
soldiers storm into their homes brutally in the
middle of the night, tanks open fire on their
classrooms. And they don't have a psychological
service. Have you ever heard of a Palestinian child
who is a "victim of anxiety"? The public indifference that
accompanies this pageant of unrelieved suffering
makes all Israelis accomplices to a crime. Even
parents, who understand what anxiety for a child's
fate means, turn away and don't want to hear about
the anxiety harbored by the parent on the other
side of the fence. Who
would have believed that Israeli soldiers would
kill hundreds of children and that the majority of
Israelis would remain silent? Even the Palestinian
children have become part of the dehumanization
campaign: killing hundreds of them is no longer a
big deal. -
Origins
of anti-Semitism
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