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Issues
of Our Days
How
Suicide Bombers Are Made
By Fiamma Nirenstein
During
his historic visit to Syria last May, Pope John Paul II was unexpectedly
upstaged by the countrys young new president, Bashar al-Assad.
Greeting the pontiff at the airport in Damascus, Assad used the
occasion not to declare his own hopes for mutual understanding among
the worlds great faiths butrather less in keeping with
the spirit of the momentto mount a vicious attack on the Jews.
They have tried, he inveighed in the presence of the
Pope, to kill the principles of all religions with the same
mentality with which they betrayed Jesus Christ, and in the
same way they tried to betray and kill the prophet Muhammad.
So
spectacular a venting of hate could hardly pass unnoted, and thus,
for the duration of a news cycle, the usual fare of Middle East
reportingrock-throwers and settlers, bombings and retaliatory
strikes, ceasefires and confidence-building measuresgave
way to tongue-clucking over the charged words of the Syrian president.
As the lamented, Assad had not only marred the Popes
visit but had reinforced his own growing reputation for irresponsible
leadership. So the coverage generally went, admonishing a
new leader whose inexperience and immaturity had seemingly led him
to embrace, as the Times put it, bigotry.
Largely
ignored amid all this was a far bigger storya story not about
a petty tyrant but about the poison that rose so readily to his
lips. As few journalists either knew or thought it worthwhile to
relate, such sentiments as Assad expressed are hardly uncommon in
todays Arab world. Wherever one looks, from Cairo and Gaza
to Damascus and Baghdad, from political and religious figures to
writers and educators, from lawyers to pop stars, and in every organ
of the media, the very people with whom the state of Israel is expected
to live in peace have devoted themselves with ever-greater ingenuity
to slandering and demonizing the Jewish state, the Jewish people,
and Judaism itselfand calling openly for their annihilation.
Only by turning a determinedly blind eye to this river of hatred
is it possible to be persuaded that, after all, everybody
in the Middle East really wants the same thing.
The
anti-Semitic propaganda that circulates in such abundance in the
Arab world draws its energy in large part from the technique of
the big liethat is, the insistent assertion of
outrageous falsehoods about Israel or the Jews, the more outrageous
the better. The examples are truly numberless. In Egypt and Jordan,
news sources have repeatedly warned that Israel has distributed
drug-laced chewing gum and candy, intended (it is said) to kill
children and make women sexually corrupt. When foot-and-mouth disease
broke out recently among cattle in the Palestinian Authority (PA),
the Israelis were quickly accused of intentionally spreading the
illness (despite the immediate mobilization of Israeli veterinary
groups to treat the animals).
Especially
garish have been the fabrications directed at Israels response
to the now year-old intifada. Earlier this year, at the world
economic forum in Davos, Switzerland, a thunderstruck audience heard
Yasir Arafat himself declare that Israel was using depleted uranium
and nerve gas against Palestinian civilians. Official PA television
obligingly furnished evidence for this charge, broadcasting
scenes of hapless victims racked by vomiting and convulsions. Another
recent film clip from Palestinian television offered a re-enactment
of an assault by the Israeli army on a Palestinian house, culminating
in the staged rape and murder of a little girl in front of her horrified
parents. As for Israeli victims of Arab terrorists, the PAs
Voice of Palestine radio assured its listeners in April that Israel
was lying about the assassination of a ten-month-old girl by a Palestinian
sniper in Hebron; in fact, the commentator explained, the baby was
retarded and had been smothered by her own mother.
The
Arab press has also helped itself to the rich trove of classical
European anti-Semitism. Outstanding in this regard has been Al-Ahram,
Egypts leading government-sponsored daily. One recent series
related in great detail how Jews use the blood of Gentiles to make
matzah for Passover. Not to be outdone, columnist Mustafa Mahmud
informed his readers that, to understand the true intentions of
the Jews, one must consult The Protocols of the Elders of Zion,
in which the leaders of the international Jewish conspiracy acknowledge
openly their limitless ambitions, inexhaustible greed, merciless
vengeance, and hatred beyond imagination. . . . Cunning, they
allegedly declare, is our approach, mystery is our way.*
In
a class of its own is the effort of Arab and Islamic spokesmen to
distort or dismiss the record of Nazi genocide. Indeed, nowhere
else in the world is Holocaust denial more warmly or widely espoused.
A conference of scholars held in Amman in mid-May concluded
that the scope of the Nazi war against the Jews had been greatly
exaggerated, a claim enthusiastically parroted by the Jordan
Times. On Palestinian television, Issam Sissalem of the Islamic
University of Gaza recently asserted that, far from being extermination
camps, Chelmo, Dachau, and Auschwitz were in fact mere places
of disinfection.
On
April 13observed in Israel as Holocaust Remembrance Daythe
official Palestinian newspaper Al-Hayat al-Jadida featured
a column by Hiri Manzour titled The Fable of the Holocaust.
Among his claims: that the figure of 6 million Jews cremated
in the Nazi Auschwitz camps is a lie, promulgated by Jews
in order to carry out their operation of international marketing.
A few weeks later, at a well-attended pan-Islamic conference in
Teheran, Irans supreme leader, the Ayatollah Khamenei, used
his opening remarks to make a similar point. There is proof,
he declared, that the Zionists had close ties with the German
Nazis, and exaggerated all the data regarding the killing of the
Jews . . . as an expedient to attract the solidarity of public opinion
and smooth the way for the occupation of Palestine and the justification
of Zionist crimes.
Occasionally,
to be sure, the same organs of anti-Semitic opinion that deny the
Holocaust do find it necessary to affirm that it took placebut
only so that they can laud its perpetrators. A columnist in Egypts
government-sponsored Al-Akhbar thus expressed his thanks
to Hitler, of blessed memory, who on behalf of the Palestinians
took revenge in advance on the most vile criminals on the face of
the earth. Still, we do have a complaint against [Hitler], for his
revenge on them was not enough.
Another
variation on this theme is the now incessant comparison of Israel
itself to Hitlerite Germany. In the eyes of Al-Ahram, the
atrocities committed by the Israeli army show . . . how those who
complain about Nazi practices use the same methods against the Palestinians.
For its sister Egyptian paper, Al-Akhbar, the ostensibly
dovish Israeli foreign minister Shimon Peres is in actuality a
bird of prey, a master in the killing of the innocents, and
a man responsible for deeds that make Israel worse than the
Nazis. In May, a columnist for Egypts Al-Arabi
wrote, Zionism is not only another face of Nazism, but rather
a double Nazism. Unsurprisingly, President Assad of Syria
also favors such language, recently asserting that Israel
is racist, [Prime Minister] Sharon is racist, the Israelis are racist.
They are more racist than the Nazis.
The
effect of this relentless vilification is not difficult to discern.
In the Arab world, where countervailing sources of information about
Jews and the Jewish state are rare to nonexistent, Israel has been
transformed into little more than a diabolical abstraction, not
a country at all but a malignant force embodying every possible
negative attribute aggressor, usurper, sinner, occupier, corrupter,
infidel, murderer, barbarian. As for Israelis themselves, they are
seen not as citizens, workers, students, or parents but as the uniformed
foot soldiers of that same dark force. The uncomplicated sentiment
produced by these caricatures is neatly captured by the latest hit
song in Cairo, Damascus, and East Jerusalem. Its title: I
Hate Israel.
From
such hatred it is but a short step to incitement and acts of violence.
Arab schools teach not just that Israel is evil, but that extirpating
this evil is the noblest of callings. As a text for Syrian tenth
graders puts it, The logic of justice obligates the application
of the single verdict [on the Jews] from which there is no escape:
namely, that their criminal intentions be turned against them and
that they be exterminated (emphasis added). In Gaza
and the West Bank, textbooks at every grade level praise the young
man who elects to become a shahid, a martyr for the cause
of Palestine and Islam.
The
lessons hardly stop at the classroom door. Palestinian television
openly urges children to sacrifice themselves. In one much-aired
film clip, an image of twelve-year-old Mohammed al-Durathe
boy killed last September in an exchange of fire between Israeli
soldiers and Palestinian gunmenappears in front of a landscape
of paradise, replete with fountains and flowers, beckoning his peers
to follow.
In
early June, just two weeks after the fatal collapse of a Jerusalem
wedding hall, PA television broadcast a sermon by Sheikh Ibrahim
Madhi praying that this oppressive Knesset will [similarly]
collapse over the heads of the Jews and calling down blessings
upon whoever has put a belt of explosives on his body or on
his sons and plunged into the midst of the Jews. Slogan-chanting
mass demonstrations, with Israeli and American flags aflame and
masked gunmen firing shots into the air, reinforce the message.
One need look no further to understand how children grow up wanting
to be suicide bombersa pursuit that won a fresh wave of media
acclaim after a bombing at a Tel Aviv discothèque took 21
Israeli lives and that according to a recent poll has the approval
of over three-quarters of Palestinians. This missile,
wrote an ecstatic Palestinian columnist, meaning the bomber himself,
carried a soul striving for martyrdom, a heart that embraces
Palestine, and a body that treads over all the Zionist invaders.
Virulent
anti-Semitism is no less essential in maintaining the regions
most militant and totalitarian-minded regimes. Such standing as
Syrias Bashar Assad now enjoys in the wider Arab world derives
in large part from his unceasing denunciations of Israel and the
Jews. For his part, Iraqs Saddam Hussein has repeatedly made
known his readiness to destroy the criminal Zionist entity.
Should his own efforts not suffice, he has even sought divine aid,
ending his speech at the recent Arab summit with the pithy entreaty,
God damn the Jews.
As
for moderates like King Abdullah of Jordan and President
Mubarak of Egypt, offering a wide latitude to anti-Semitic vituperation
enables them to demonstrate their own populist bona fides, to show
their sympathy with the Arab street. Do they themselves
endorse such views? Of course not, they hasten to declare, disingenuously
suggesting that nothing can be done about it since under their regimes
even government-owned newspapers and television stations possess
the right to speak their mind.
That
moderate Arab leaders have remained mum in the face of rising anti-Semitism
may be all too understandable, considering their overall records
as statesmen. The Wests moral and political leaders should
be another matter, but they are not. In the days after Assads
anti-Semitic diatribe in Damascus, one waited in vain for the Popethe
same Pope who has recognized the state of Israel and visited the
Holocaust memorial in Jerusalemto utter a word of protest.
The incident was, in many respects, a replay of then-First Lady
Hillary Clintons refusal to confront Suha Arafat when, at
an event in Ramallah two years ago, the wife of the PAs president
accused Israel of deliberately poisoning Palestinian air and water.
And if any of the assembled leaders at the world economic conference
in Davos thought to protest Yasir Arafats lies publicly, their
intervention has not been recorded.
One
source of the general silence may be a subtle form of racism, or
what George W. Bush in another context called the soft bigotry
of low expectations. The Arabs, it is implicitly suggested,
are a backward people, not to be held to the civilized standards
of the West. In this reading, rabid anti-Semitism is just another
feature of Arab culturethe same ancient culture that is often
also portrayed, with reason, as one of the worlds most civilized
and sophisticated.
Many
Westerners who fastidiously ignore the Arabs outrageous lies
and insults about Jews also believe that the Arabs do, after all,
have a legitimate grievance against Israel, however excessively
they may at times express it. Once the substantive demands of the
Palestinians or the Syrians are met, this line of thought goes,
their hatred of Israel and the Jews will likewise subside, it being
just a form of politics by other means. Throughout the Oslo years,
the government of Israel itself seemed to share this attitude, systematically
ignoring or explaining away the Arabs unremitting verbal incitement.
But
if we have learned nothing else from the latest intifada, it is
that the Arab worlds grievance against Israel has little to
do with the minutiae of dividing up territory and political authority.
It has to do instead with the entire Zionist project, with the very
existence of a Jewish state in the Middle East. What Westerners
(including some Israelis) dismiss as so much unfortunate rhetoric
is an exact articulation of that grievance, whose goal is not to
achieve but to prevent accommodation. For how can one accommodate
a people who are nothing but murderers of children, instruments
of world conspiracy, sworn enemies of religious and historical truth,
and perfecters of Nazi brutalitya people who according to
Islamic authorities must be driven out and killed, their body parts
spread all over the trees and electricity poles? No,
anti-Semitism in the Middle East is not just politics by other means;
it is an end in itself.
* These
and other translations from the Arab press have been made available
by the Middle East Media and Research Institute (MEMRI), whose website
is located at www.memri.org.
FIAMMA
NIRENSTEIN, is an Italian journalist who writes from Israel for
the daily La Stampa and the weekly Panorama, is the author of Israel:
Peace in War. Her article, The Journalists & the Palestinians,
appeared in our January issue.
*
From Commentary Magazine
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