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CHILD ABUSE
IN THE PALESTINIAN AUTHORITY
By Justus Weiner
Jerusalem Post
October 5, 2002
From the outset of the current Palestinian intifada
two years ago, children and teenagers have assumed
an integral role. Regrettably, this role is not adequately
addressed in the recent Amnesty International report
entitled "Killing the Future Children in the Line
of Fire." Knowing that Israeli soldiers are ordered
not to shoot live ammunition at children, and face
disciplinary procedures or court martial for breaches,
Palestinian snipers hide among youngsters or use them
as human shields. Three recent developments are also
notable: Yasser Arafat's deputy, Abu Mazen, admitted
to a Kuwaiti newspaper in June that Palestinian children
have been paid NIS 5 (about $1) for every pipe bomb
they throw. Children have been increasingly mobilized
during 2002 for suicide attacks; their parents have
received cash payments from the Palestinian Authority,
Iraq, and Saudi Arabia. The attempt at a cover-up:
The Palestinian Journalists' Association has warned
members that they would be punished if they photographed
armed children. Sacrificing Children On March 30,
a 16-year-old Palestinian girl named Ayat Akhras walked
into a Jerusalem supermarket and detonated a bomb
concealed under her clothing, killing two Israelis
and wounding 22 others. On April 23, three teenagers
Anwar Hamduna, Yusef Zakut, and Abu Nada from Gaza,
attempted to crawl under the perimeter fence and attack
the residents of the nearby Jewish community of Netzarim,
only to be shot dead by guards. For over a month,
Palestinian children as young as 10 barricaded themselves
in Bethlehem's Church of the Nativity, alongside Palestinian
gunmen. In May, a 16-year-old Palestinian boy was
arrested in a taxi near Jenin with a bomb strapped
to his body. On June 13, a 15-year-old Palestinian
girl, arrested for throwing a firebomb at IDF soldiers,
admitted during interrogation that she had previously
been recruited as a suicide terrorist. On July 9,
Israeli security forces arrested another 15-year-old
Palestinian girl who admitted to having agreed to
carry out a suicide attack in Israel. These are some
of the latest developments in the intifada, an unprecedented
wave of ongoing attacks that has roiled the region
for two years. Although some elements in Palestinian
society oppose using children, or at least their children,
in "martyrdom" operations, these voices remain isolated.
IDF soldiers who participated in Operation Defensive
Shield, for example, reported that children were sometimes
left behind to trigger booby-traps that terrorists
set for troops. But why are these young people willing
to throw away their lives? Who led them to believe
that assuming dangerous roles in the violence will
result in improving their personal, family, and political
situation? How did the celebration of violence against
Israelis become so deeply ingrained in Palestinian
culture? What cause, no matter how deeply held, can
motivate a society to sacrifice its children, its
future? A Family's Badge of Pride The pressure to
sacrifice oneself in the intifada often originates
at home. Stoked by Arafat's speeches lauding the role
of children in the struggle and the importance of
martyrdom, many Palestinian parents have come to view
the role of youth in the uprising as useful and, indeed,
honorable. Thus, after 15-year-old Ahmat Omar Abu
Selmia was killed on his way to attack the Israeli
community of Dugit, his father celebrated his "martyrdom"
at a street festival attended by about 200 men. Martyrs
people who die for the sake of jihad (holy war) and
Islam are held in such high regard by the Palestinian
people that at times parents accept the death of their
children as a badge of pride. Parents of toddlers
proudly recount their little children saying they
want to become martyrs, and a father of a 13-year-old
said, "I pray that God will choose him" to be a martyr.
One mother told a journalist from The Times in London,
"I am happy that he [her 13-year-old son] has been
martyred. I will sacrifice all my sons and daughters
(12 in all) to Al-Aksa and Jerusalem." Another reason
Palestinian parents allow and even encourage their
children to get involved is the financial incentive
offered to families of "martyrs." The PA furnishes
a cash payment $2,000 per child killed and $300 per
child wounded. Saudi Arabia announced that it had
pledged $250 million as its first contribution to
a billion-dollar fund aimed at supporting the families
of Palestinian martyrs. In addition, the Arab Liberation
Front, a Palestinian group loyal to Iraqi President
Saddam Hussein, pays generous bounties to the injured
and the families of the dead according to the following
sliding scale: $500 for a wound; $1,000 for disability;
$10,000 to the family of each martyr; and $25,000
to the family of every martyr suicide bomber. Lavish
sums, given the chronic unemployment and poverty of
the majority of the Palestinian residents of the West
Bank and Gaza Strip. A Society that Sanctifies Death
Violent death is sanctified throughout the Palestinian
areas. The streets are plastered with posters glorifying
the exploits of individual suicide bombers. Children
trade martyr cards, purchased at their local shops,
instead of Pokemon or baseball cards, and necklaces
with pictures of martyrs are also very popular. One
favorite wall slogan reads: "Beware of death by natural
causes." Suicide bombing is considered a source of
neighborhood pride, as streets are named after the
perpetrators of these atrocities. There is even a
band named "The Martyrs," whose lyrics espouse the
virtues of "sacrificing yourself for Allah." Under
these cultural influences, many children readily admit
that they want to become suicide bombers. Some draw
pictures and fantasize about the day when they will
achieve their goal. The young are taught that, as
suicide bombers, they will ascend to a paradise of
luxury staffed by 72 virgins waiting to gratify the
martyrs as they arrive. An American psychiatrist with
22 years of experience studying and treating suicidal
patients stresses that suicide bombers both children
and adults are "tools used by terrorist leaders" with
"a whole culture encouraging [them] to die." The PA
the entity established, empowered, funded, and armed
to carry out the Oslo peace process uses diverse vehicles
to incite the youth to participate in anti-Israeli
street violence and even outright terrorism. Incitement
in Palestinian society is both authoritative and omnipresent.
Palestinian columnist Ashraf Al-Arjami agrees that
the patriotism of Palestinian youth is being exploited,
and the schools and mosques under Palestinian control
are influencing the children. The campaign to incite
children emanates straight from the top of the PA.
Documents signed with the PA emblem and Arafat's office
feature inciting words referring to Israelis as "land
plunderers" and "creators of international terror."
Arafat himself refers to the children as "the generals
of the stones," playing to their pride and young egos.
In a PA-run summer camp, a New York Times reporter
observed campers staging the kidnapping of Israeli
leaders, stripping and assembling Kalashnikov assault
rifles, and learning techniques for ambushes. One
PA television program clip, aimed at young viewers,
features a boy killed in Gaza arriving in heaven where
there are beaches, waterfalls, and a Ferris wheel.
He is saying, "I am not waving goodbye, I am waving
to tell you to follow in my footsteps." On the accompanying
soundtrack a song plays, "How pleasant is the smell
of martyrs, how pleasant the smell of land, the land
enriched by the blood, the blood pouring out of a
fresh body." In an October 2001 interview in a PA-controlled
newspaper, Youssef Jamah, the Palestinian minister
of holy sites, stated, "The suicide bombings are a
legitimate means through which the Palestinians fight
the enemy....The attacks are the command of Allah."
Although some Islamic authorities oppose suicide bombing,
Sheikh Ikrimi Sabri, the PA-appointed mufti of Jerusalem,
said, "There is no doubt that a child [martyr] suggests
that the new generation will carry on the mission
with determination. The younger the martyr the greater
and the more I respect him." Not surprisingly, senior
PA officials attend the funerals of the "martyrs."
Educating the "Martyrs of Tomorrow" Even in the PA's
public schools, incitement to violence plays a major
role while interest in reconciliation with Israel
is notably absent. The PA's deputy minister of education,
Naim Abu Humus, called on school administrators to
dedicate the first class to praying for the souls
of those killed during the intifada, saying, "Today
we glorify Al-Aksa and Palestine, and remember the
Palestinian martyrs." Signs on the walls of kindergartens
proclaim their students as "the shaheeds [martyrs]
of tomorrow," and elementary school teachers and principals
commend their young students for wanting to "tear
their [Zionists'] bodies into little pieces and cause
them more pain than they will ever know." Posters
in university classrooms proudly remind the world
that the Palestinian cause is armed with "human bombs."
Sheikh Hassan Yosef, a leading Hamas member, summarized
this process of incitement by saying, "we like to
grow them from kindergarten through college." Palestinian
Brig. Gen. Mahmoud M. Abu Marzoug reminded a group
of 10th-grade girls in Gaza City that "as a martyr,
you will be alive in Heaven." After the address, a
group of these girls lined up to assure a Washington
Post reporter that they would be happy to carry out
suicide bombings or other actions ending in their
deaths. These factors cumulatively explain why young
Palestinians are so excited at the prospect of "martyrdom."
"When I become a martyr, give out Kannafa [sweet cake],"
one 14-year-old boy was reported to have told his
friends in the days prior to his death in the riots.
A 12-year-old boy who died in the fighting was reported
to have so yearned for martyrdom that he wrote his
own death announcements on the walls of his home.
An injured 13-year-old boy was reported as having
said, "My goal is not to be injured, but rather something
higher martyrdom." A 13-year-old girl from Egypt tried
to sneak into Gaza in order to "join the Palestinian
children in anything, even throwing stones." A week
earlier, a 12-year-old boy was stopped at the Israeli
border after attempting the same thing. But why does
the PA encourage Palestinian children to become involved
in this violence? Clearly, sympathy for the Palestinian
cause has been generated as Western media reports
have often highlighted instances in which Palestinian
children have been killed or injured by Israeli troops
or policemen. These knee-jerk reports have generated
criticism of Israeli policies, but few in the Western
world have thought through the chaos they see on the
television news to consider whose interests are served
by the casualties. Shoved into the Front Lines There
seems to be no end to the list of Palestinian children
killed after being shoved into the front lines of
the conflict by the Palestinian leadership. In February,
Nora Shalhoob, a 16-year-old Palestinian girl, was
killed while charging a group of Israeli soldiers
at a military checkpoint with a knife in her hand.
Andaleeb Taqataqah was only 17 when she was recruited
by a terror squad and sent to her death in a suicide
attack on a crowded Jerusalem market on April 12.
As a result of the increasing frequency of such attacks,
two points have become clear. The first is that Palestinian
children and teenagers are lining up to throw their
lives away, and the second is that there is an across-the-board
effort by Palestinian leaders, parents, clerics, and
educators to turn youthful energy into deadly violence.
And contrary to the above-mentioned Amnesty International's
report, that apparently seeks to equate the killings
of Palestinian and Israeli children, numerous dissimilarities
cry out for attention. To mention just a few: Israeli
parents are not paid rewards by their government or
foreign governments when their children are wounded
or killed. IDF soldiers do not use Israeli children
as human shields when they initiate a firefight with
Palestinian gunmen. There is no doctrine in Jewish
law akin to that guaranteeing Muslim shaheeds that,
after death, bountiful rewards await them in paradise.
Israeli schools and synagogues never brainwash children
to undertake life-threatening violence against Palestinian
civilians. The government of Israel does not have
thousands of armed terrorists on its payroll. Israeli
parents have never been quoted in the media urging
their children to sacrifice their lives for a political
or religious cause. Nor do they send their children
to the front to riot before the television cameras.
Israeli summer camps do not indoctrinate children
to kill or instruct them on how to ambush or use firearms.
Israeli television children's programming never features
teachers smiling and clapping hands as their pupils
sing of their intent to become martyrs. Israeli children
do not collect or exchange martyr cards, or listen
to music by a group called "The Martyrs." Senior Israeli
political and religious figures do not laud, or pander
to, children who engage in violence. And most importantly,
Israeli soldiers do not intentionally target Palestinian
children (or others not involved in the violence),
on buses, in restaurants, discos, etc. Recently, six
children armed with M-16 and Kalashnikov rifles took
part in a pro-Iraq rally in the Gaza Strip. Exposed
to such shocking images, including those of Palestinian
toddlers wearing mock suicide bomber's vests, Western
public opinion began to shift. Revulsion increasingly
replaced curiosity. But rather than fulfill its professional
obligation to publicize newsworthy and controversial
issues, in August, the Palestinian Journalists' Association
warned its members that it would punish any journalist
or photographer who took photographs of armed or masked
Palestinian children. This intimidating message, which
was faxed to journalists and news agencies, stated
that Palestinian journalists employed by foreign news
agencies are even responsible for making sure their
colleagues act according to the warning. The association
further added that it would not defend any journalists
who do not implement the new policy, should the PA
decide to punish them. Blatant child abuse of this
kind, and efforts to cover it up, would not be tolerated
anywhere else in the civilized world. Where are the
children's welfare advocates to condemn the practices
that poison the minds and imperil the bodies of young
Palestinians?
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