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Gideon Levy's article below clearly and without doubt confirms that:
Occupation is Terrorism.
The author almost justifies any form of "violence" resistance
by Palestinians in response to
Zionist State Terrorism including martyr operations.
He
emphasizes to the Jewish public in the Zionist entity that Palestinian
life is as dear as the lives of any group of people.
Racist Zionist leaders intentionally keeps its public ignorant of its
terrorism, and try's to hide it from the international world opinion.
( Adib Kawar)
The Price
of Ignorance
By Gideon Levy
"Israelis hadn't heard about all
the killings of Palestinians in the past few months."
"Israel counted "81 days of quiet without 'terrorist attacks'. But there
is no greater lie than this. The quiet was only here. During this
"quiet," dozens of Palestinians were killed, and almost no one bothered
to report it. That is how it becomes possible to speak of quiet and then
claim that the Palestinians disturbed it.
The fact that the media does not speak of Palestinian deaths does not
mean that they did not happen."
"There was only one place where the entire event was ignored -
(the murdering of Palestinians)
the country whose soldiers perpetrated the killing."
The suicide bomber
at the Geha Junction, Shehad Hanani, was from Beit Furik, one of the
most imprisoned villages in the territories that is surrounded by earth
roadblocks on all sides. It's a place where women in labor and the sick
have to risk walking through fields to get to the hospital in adjacent
Nablus. At least one woman in labor, Rula Ashatiya, gave birth at the
Beit Furik checkpoint and lost her infant. Few Israelis are capable of
imagining what life is like in Beit Furik: the almost universal
unemployment, poverty, endless siege and humiliations of life inside a
prison. A young man like Hanani, who was 21, had no reason to get
up in the morning other than to face another day of joblessness and
humiliation.
However, Israelis
have little interest in knowing the lay of the land from which terror
springs.
The Israeli media have next to nothing to say about life in Beit Furik.
By the same token, few Israelis heard about the killing of the
suicide bomber's relative, Fadi Hanani, 10 days ago in
Nablus, just
as they hadn't heard about all the killings of Palestinians in the past
few months. Life in Beit Furik and the killing in Nablus do not justify
a suicide bombing at a bus station, but whoever wants to fight terror
must first and foremost improve life in Beit Furik.
Israel counted "81
days of quiet" without terrorist attacks. But there is no greater lie
than this. The quiet was only here. During this "quiet," dozens of
Palestinians were killed, and almost no one bothered to report it.
That is how it becomes possible to speak of quiet and then claim
that the Palestinians disturbed it. The fact that the
media does not speak of Palestinian deaths does not mean that they did
not happen. The eight Palestinians who were killed last week in
one day at Rafah, for example, killing along the lines of a medium-sized
terror attack, together with destruction that is to an extent unknown in
Israel, weren't enough to generate any interest here last week. They
barely got a mention. The international community dealt prominently with
this frightening killing, and the United Nations secretary-general
issued a special statement condemning them. There was only one
place where the entire event was ignored - the country whose soldiers
perpetrated the killing. The images of giant bulldozers and
tanks demolishing more and more houses, and the scenes of the dead and
42 wounded, among them women and children, being taken to hospitals in
Rafah were hardly shown in Israel.
The
mass-circulation daily Yedioth Ahronoth, for example, mentioned the
killing in Rafah in a sub-headline to a very small item on an inside
page that dealt with the minor injuries sustained by a settler couple in
the Gaza Strip settlement of Nisanit as a result of a Qassam rocket.
This is how the national agenda is determined. Such disgraceful
coverage of such a lethal operation by the IDF might evoke other
regimes, in which the public is shown only what the authorities want it
to see.
This has nothing to do with media critique; it's about our image. A
society that disregards loss of human life, caused by its own soldiers,
is a tainted society. A society that conceals from its citizens vital
information of this kind is undercutting their sense of judgment.
The situation is further compounded when one examines the attitude of
the Israeli society toward its victims: there aren't many societies that
immerse themselves in bereavement so intensely. What we have, then, is a
dual morality: we count only our own dead, all the rest don't exist.
Concealing
information has another ramification: if we don't know, there is no one
to ask why. The eight Palestinians were killed in Rafah during the
destruction of the tunnels without the question being asked as to
whether this mission was justified at any means, at any price.
This is a
deliberate aim. It permits presenting the Palestinians as the only
guilty party, and it falls on fertile ground. The majority of the public
doesn't want to know what the IDF is really doing in the occupied
territories. But the media, therefore, are in serious breach of their
duty.
Both those who support the occupation and those
who are against it are entitled to
get complete information about the price it exacts.
The presentation of killing as such a marginal matter also sends a
dangerous message to Israeli soldiers: there is nothing terrible about
killing more and more Palestinians
On Thursday, 15
passersby were wounded in the targeted killing of Islamic Jihad activist
Makled Hamid in Gaza. Last week, three children, one of them five years
old, were killed in Balata refugee camp, near Nablus. The week before,
three children were killed on one Saturday in Jenin and in nearby
Burkin. Two Palestinians were killed recently along the fence in Gaza,
trying to enter Israel to find work. Six Palestinians were killed in
Rafah in the previous tunnel operation in the middle of the month.
Increasing numbers of children were shot to death near the Qalandiyah
refugee camp. All of these cases rated barely a mention in the media.
But behind each Palestinian victim is family and friends, and hatred
springs up from their graves.
Ibrahim Abd el
Kadr, from Qalandiyah, who a few months ago lost his eldest son, Fares,
when the fourteen-and-a-half-year-old was shot in the head by soldiers,
swore to take revenge. Is it so difficult to understand him?
There is,
therefore, an Israeli price to the many concealed Palestinian dead. They
are incentives to terrorism.
Their exclusion from our agenda cannot make the results of their
killing disappear as well. Would Hanani have carried out his killing
operation at Geha Junction if he had grown up in humane conditions and
if his relative had not been assassinated? That question should be very
disturbing to us. In the meantime, though, it's not even on the agenda.