Tel Aviv University
On the anti-Semitic web site Counterpunch, Ben Gurion
University's Neve Gordon and Tel Aviv University's Yigal Bronner
smear Israel using Hamas propaganda "statistics" verbatim
http://counterpunch.com/gordon01272009.html
What War
is Teaching the Children of Gaza and Israel
Fueling the Cycle of Hate
By YIGAL BRONNER and NEVE GORDON
Israeli soccer matches were suspended during the assault on Gaza.
When the games resumed last week, the fans had come up with a new
chant: "Why have the schools in Gaza been shut down?" sang the
crowd. "Because all the children were gunned down!" came the answer.
Aside from its sheer barbarism, this chant reflects the
widespread belief among Israeli Jews that Israel scored an
impressive victory in Gaza – a victory measured, not least, by the
death toll.
Israeli pilots and tank commanders could not really discriminate
between the adults and the children who hid in their homes or
huddled in the UNRWA shelters, and yet they chose to press the
trigger. Therefore, it is not at all surprising that the lethal
onslaught left 1,314 Palestinians dead, of which 412 – or nearly one
third of all of the casualties – were children.
This latest assault underscores that Israel, not unlike Hamas,
readily resorts to violence and does not distinguish between
civilians and combatants (only the weapons at Israel's disposal are
much more lethal). No matter how many times the Israeli government
tries to blame Hamas for the latest Palestinian civilian deaths it
simply cannot explain away the body count, especially that of the
children. In addition to the dead, 1,855 Palestinian children were
wounded, and tens of thousands of others have likely been
traumatised, many of them for life.
Every child has a story. A Bedouin friend recently called to tell
us about his relatives in Gaza. One cousin allowed her five-year-old
daughter to walk to the adjacent house to see whether the neighbours
had something left to eat. The girl had been crying from hunger. The
moment she began crossing the street a missile exploded nearby and
the flying shrapnel killed her. The mother has since been bedridden,
weeping and screaming, "I have let my girl die hungry".
As if the bloody incursion was not enough, the Israeli security
forces seem to be keen on spreading the flames of hatred among the
Arab population within Israel. Hundreds of Palestinian citizens of
Israel have been arrested for protesting at the Israeli assault and
more than 200 of them are still in custody. One incident is enough
to illustrate the psychological effect these arrests will likely
have on hundreds more children.
A few days after the ceasefire, several men wearing black ski
masks stormed the home of Muhammad Abu Humus. They came to arrest
him for protesting against the killings in Gaza. It was four in the
morning and the whole family was asleep when the men banged on the
door. After entering the house, they made Abu Humus's wife Wafa and
their four children Erfat (12), Shahd (9), Anas (6) and Majd (3)
stand in a corner as they searched the house, throwing all the
clothes, sheets, toys, and kitchenware on the floor. With tears in
their eyes, the children watched as the armed men then took their
father away and left.
Chance would have it that Abu Humus, a long-time peace activist
and member of the Fatah party, is a personal friend of ours. In
2001, he joined Ta'ayush Arab-Jewish Partnership, and since then has
selflessly organised countless peace rallies and other joint
activities. During the past eight years, we have spent many hours at
each other's homes and our children have grown up respecting and
liking one other. It is hard to believe that just one month ago he
attended the Bar Mitzvah of Yigal's son in a Jerusalem synagogue.
Muhammad and Wafa Abu Humus have tried over the years to instil
in their children a love and desire for peace, and while the
security forces may not have destroyed this, the hatred they have
generated in one night cannot be underestimated. Indeed, what, one
might ask, will his children think of their Jewish neighbours? What
feelings will they harbour? And what can we expect from those
children in Gaza who have witnessed the killing of their parents,
siblings, friends and neighbours?
We emphasise the Palestinian children because so many of them
have been killed and terrorised in the past month. Yet it is clear
that Israeli children are suffering as well, particularly those who
have spent long periods in shelters for fear of being hit by
rockets.
The one message that is being conveyed to children on both sides
of this fray is that the other side is a bloodthirsty monster. In
Israel, this was instantly translated into gains for the
hate-mongering Yisrael Beytenu party headed by the xenophobic
Avigdor Lieberman, who is now the frontrunner in mock polls being
held in many Jewish high schools, with the hawkish Binyamin
Netanyahu coming in second.
Hatred, in other words, is the great winner of this war. It has
helped mobilise racist mobs, and as the soccer chant indicates it
has left absolutely no place for the other, undermining even basic
empathy for innocent children. Israel's masters of war must be
happy: the seeds of the next wars have certainly been sown.
Yigal Bronner teaches in the Department of South
Asian Languages and Civilizations at the University of Chicago.
Neve Gordon is chair of the department of
politics and government at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev and
author of Israel’s Occupation (University of California Press,
2008).
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