I
don't think it is an appropriate thing to be
written, but we will sort it
out.
-- Anglo-Jewish Lord Robert Winston Yediot
AharonotIsrael, October, 2004 [This
article was translated from Hebrew] I
killed thirty children Confirmed and confessed,
B. Michael BETWEEN Sept 29 and Oct 15,
fifteen days in all, I killed thirty children. Two
children per day. Two dead children per day is more or less four
bereaved parents per day. Why more or less? Because
some of them were brothers. So, two dead children
for one pair of bereaved parents. Perhaps that's
better, because these parents are bereaved anyway,
so they are just bereaved twice, and another pair
of parents is released from being bereaved. But
perhaps it is less good, because to be bereaved is
worse than being dead, and being twice bereaved is
twice worse than being dead. So I don't really know
what to decide. All these children I killed in the Gaza Strip,
and all of them I killed by mistake. That is, I
knew that there were children there, and I knew I
would kill some of them, but since I knew it would
be by mistake I did not feel so pressured about it.
Because everybody makes mistakes. Only the one who
does nothing does not make mistakes. Mistakes
happen, we are all human beings. That is what I
think is so nice about my mistakes, they make me so
human and fallible, is it not so? The 30 children I killed by all kind of
mistakes. Each child with his special mistake.
There was one about whom I thought by mistake that
he was not a child. And there was one which I hit
because he insisted on standing exactly on the spot
at which I decided to shoot. And there was one who
threw stones and did not at all look six years old.
And there was one who from the air looked like a
wanted terrorist. Or like a Qassam rocket. Or like
a terrorist holding a Qassam rocket. And there were
some children who by mistake got into their heads
some of the shrapnel from the shell I shot into
their house. And there was one who by mistake hid
under her bed exactly when I blew up the bed in
order to expel the terrorist squad which was hiding
there. But this does not count, it was her mistake,
not mine. I remember it was the most hard with my first
mistake. I shot and shot and shot, then they told
me I had killed a child. I became pale, and my
mouth was dry, and my knees were shaking, and in
general I did not sleep very well that night. But
with the passing of time, and of mistakes, it
became much easier. Now I make mistakes with hardly
any side-effects. It was very helpful that my
friends, my environment, everybody, did not make so
much fuss over every small mistake. Here, just last week, when I killed by mistake
one girl, I shot two more mistakes into her head,
just to make sure that I was making a mistake. And
then the rest of my magazine, full of mistakes.
Once, I would not have been able to do that. True, some people tell me that I am making a
mistake in making this confession. They tell I have
not been in Gaza at all, and did not shoot any
bullet, and did not bomb, and did not shell, and
did not snipe. That's true, I did not. But who paid
for the bullets? Me. And who bought the gun? And
financed the shell? And the missile? Me. Me. Me.
Also me. And also, who is not growing pale any more with
every new mistake? Whose mouth is not getting dry
when one more child is laid in the earth? Whose
knees do not grow weak when another nameless baby
lies dead in a bloody cradle? Who goes on sleeping
soundly even when the number of mistakes reaches
thirty in two weeks? Me. Also me. So, don't tell me
I didn't kill. -
Israeli and
Jewish outrage at opinion piece, 'Palestine: The
Assault on Health and Other War Crimes,' by
British professor Derek Summerfield in
British Medical Journal
-
Ha'aretz
(Israel): Killing children is no longer a big
deal
-
Some
British doctors doubt the suicide of Dr. David
Kelly (Guardian)
-
Abu Ghraib American
doctors collaborated with interrogators in the
torture of Iraq prisoners
-
Israel
"harvests" the vital organs of Palestinian
children killed by their Army
- Israeli
medical association: OK to break fingers of
Palestinian prisoners during
interrogation
-
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