By Susan Abulhawa
Jul 1, 2014 02:36 AM ,
The bodies of three
Israeli settlers who went missing on June 12th were found in a hastily dug
shallow grave in Halhul, north of Hebron.
Since the teens went
missing from Gush Etzion, a Jewish-only colony in the West Bank,Israel has
besieged the 4 million Palestinians who already live under its thumb, storming
through towns, ransacking homes and civil institutions, conducting night raids
on families, stealing property, kidnapping, injuring, and killing. Warplanes
were dispatched to bomb Gaza, again and repeatedly, destroying more homes and
institutions and carrying out extrajudicial executions. Thus far,
over 570 Palestinians have been kidnapped and imprisoned, most notably a Samer
Issawi, the Palestinian who went on a 266-day hunger strike in protest of a
previous arbitrary detention. At least 10 Palestinians have been killed,
including at least three children, a pregnant woman, and a mentally ill man.
Hundreds have been injured, thousands terrorized. Universities and social
welfare organizations were ransacked, shut down, their computers and equipment
destroyed or stolen, and both private and public documents confiscated from
civil institutions. This wonton thuggery is official state policy conducted by
its military and does not include the violence to persons and properties
perpetuated by paramilitary Israeli settlers, whose persistent attacks against
Palestinian civilians have also escalated in the past weeks. And now that the
settlers are
confirmed dead, Israel has vowed to exact revenge. Naftali Bennet, Economy Minister said, "There is no mercy for
the murderers of children. This is the time for action, not words."
Although no Palestinian faction has claimed responsibility for the
abduction, and most, including Hamas, deny any involvement, Benjamin Netanyahu
is adamant that Hamas is responsible. The United Nations requested that Israel
provide evidence to support their contention, but no evidence has been
forthcoming, casting doubt on Israel’s claims, particularly in light of its public ire over the recent unification of Palestinian
factions and President Obama’s acceptance of the new Palestinian unity.
In the West, headlines
over pictures of the three Israeli settler teens referred to Israel's reign of terror over Palestine as a "manhunt" and
"military sweep." Portraits of innocent young Israeli lives rged
from news outlets and the voices of their parents are
featured in the fullness of their anguish. The US, EU, UK, UN, Canada and the
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) condemned the kidnapping and
called for their immediate and unconditional release. Upon discovery of the
bodies, there has been an outpouring of condemnation and condolences.
President Obama said, "As a father, I cannot imagine the
indescribable pain that the parents of these teenage boys are experiencing. The
United States condemns in the strongest possible terms this senseless act of
terror against innocent youth."
Although hundreds of
Palestinian children are kidnapped, brutalized or killed by Israel, including
several in the past two weeks, there is rarely, if ever, such a reaction from
the world.
Just prior to the disappearance
of the Israeli settler teens, the murder of two Palestinian teens was caught on
a local surveillance camera. Ample evidence, including the recovered
bullets and a CNN camera filming an Israeli sharpshooter pulling the trigger
at the precise moment one of the boys was shot indicated that they were killed
in cold blood by Israeli soldiers. There were no condemnations or calls for
justice for these teens by world leaders or internationaal institutions,
no solidarity with their grieving parents, nor mention of the more than 250
Palestinian children, kidnapped from their beds or on their way to school, who continue to
languish in Israeli jails without charge or trial, physically and
psychologically tortured. This is to say nothing of the barbaric siege of Gaza,
or the decades of ongoing theft, evictions, assaults on education, confiscation
of land, demolition of homes, color coded permit system, arbitrary
imprisonment, restriction of movement, checkpoints, extrajudicial executions,
torture, and denials at every turn squeezing Palestinians into isolated
ghettos.
None of that seemingly matters.
It does not matter that
no one knows who murdered the Israeli teens. It seems the entire country is
calling for Palestinian blood, reminiscent of American southern lynching
rallies that went after black men whenever a white person turned up dead. Nor
does it matter that these Israeli teens were settlers living in illegal
Jewish-only colonies that were built on land stolen by the state mostly from
Palestinian owners from the village of el-Khader. A huge portion of the
settlers there
are Americans, mostly from New York, like
one of the murdered teens, who exercise Jewish privilege to hold dual
citizenship; to have an extra country no matter where they're from, one in
their own homeland and one in ours, at the same time that the indigenous
Palestinians fester in refugee camps, occupied ghettos, or boundless exile.
Palestinian children are
assaulted or murdered every day and barely do their lives register in western
press. While Palestinian mothers are frequently blamed when Israel kills their
children, accused of sending them to die or neglecting to keep them athome away from Israeli snipers, no one questions
Rachel Frankel, the mother of one of the murdered settlers. She is not asked
to comment on the fact that one of the missing settlers is a soldier who likely
participated in the oppression of his Palestinian neighbors. No one asks why
she would move her family from the United States to live in a segregated,
supremacist colony established on land confiscated from the native non-Jewish
owners. Certainly no one dares accuse her of therefore putting her children in
harms way.
No mothr should have endure the murder of her child.
No mother or father. That does not only apply to Jewish parents. The lives of
our children are no less precious and their loss are no less shattering and
spiritually unhinging. But there is a terrible disparity in the value of life
here in the eyes of the state and the world, where Palestinian life is cheap
and disposable, but Jewish life is sacrosanct.
This exceptionalism and
supremacy of Jewish life is a fundamental underpinning of the state of Israel.
It pervades their every law and protocol, and is matched only by their apparent
contempt and disregard for Palestinian life. Whether through laws that favor
Jews for employment and educational
opportunities,
or laws that allow the exclusion of non-Jews from buying or renting among
Jews, or endless military orders that limit the movement, water
consumption,
food access, education, marriage possibilities, and economic independence, or
these periodic upending of Palestinian civil society, life for non-Jews
ultimately conforms to the religious edict issued by Dov Lior, Chief Rabbi of
Hebron and Kiryat Arba, saying "a thousand non-Jewish lives are not worth
a Jew's fingernail."
Israeli violence of the past few weeks is generally accepted and
expected. And the terror we know they will unleash on our people will be, as it
always is, cloaked in the legitimacy of uniforms and technological death
machines. Israeli violence, no matter how vulgar, is inevitably couched as a
heroic, ironic violence that western media frames as “response,” as if
Palestinian resistance itself were not a response to Israeli oppression. When
the ICRC was asked to issue a similar call for the immediate and unconditional
release of the hundreds of Palestinian children held in Israeli jails (which is
also in contravention of international humanitarian law), the ICRC refused, indicating there’s a difference between the
isolated abduction of Israeli teens and the routine abduction, torture,
isolation, and imprisonment of Palestinian children.
When our children throw rocks at heavily armed Israeli tanks and
jeeps rolling through our streets, we are contemptible parents who should be
bear responsibility for the murder of our children if they are shot by Israeli
soldiers or settlers. When we refuse to capitulate completely, we are “not
partners for peace,” and deserve to have more land confiscated from us for the
exclusive use of Jews. When we take up arms and fight back, kidnap a soldier,
we are terrorists of the extreme kind who have no one to blame but ourselves as
Israel subjects the entire Palestinian population to punitive collective
punishment. When we engage in peaceful protests, we are rioters who deserve the
live fire they send our way. When we debate, write, and boycott, we are
anti-Semites who should be silenced, deported, marginalized, or prosecuted.
What should we do, then? Palestine is quite literally being wiped
off the map by a state that openly upholds Jewish supremacy and Jewish
privilege. Our people continue to
be robbed of home and heritage, pushed to the margins of humanity, blamed for
our own miserable fate. We are a traumatized, principally unarmed, native
society being destroyed and erased by one of the most powerful militaries in the
world.
Rachel Frankel went to the UN to plead for their support, saying
“it is wrong to take children, innocent boys or girls, and use them as
instruments of any struggle. It is cruel…I wish to ask: Doesn’t every child have
the right to come home safely from school?” Do those sentiments apply to
Palestinian children, too? Here, and here, and here, and here, and here,
and here are
video examples of the abduction of Palestinian children from their homes at
night and on their way to and from school.
But none of that matters either. Does it? It matters that three
Israeli Jews were killed. It doesn’t matter who did it or what the
circumstances were, the entire Palestinian population will be made to suffer,
more than they already are
Susan Abulhawa is a Palestinian writer and the author of the
international bestselling novel, Mornings in Jenin (Bloomsbury 2010). She is
also the founder of Playgrounds for Palestine, an NGO for children.
No comments:
Post a Comment