OCCUPIED
JERUSALEM, April 24 (IslamOnline.net) - There is a stark difference
between suicidal and "self-bombing" operations as the latter
are rather an attempt to "secure a better life for others", an
Israeli psychologist said on Wednesday, April 23.
"The
psychological incentive for committing suicide shows up as an internal
unbearable pain and hopelessness the only way to stop is thought to be
killing oneself," Yisrael Oran said in a recent research published
by Yediot Aharonot on April 22.
"Away
from the absolute state of selfishness implied in the suicide attempts,
self-bombing operations are carried out with the situation of others in
society etched in the psyche of the doer," Oran added.
"But
the "self-bomber" feels the only way to change the tough
conditions others are inflicted by is to take it hard and give up his
life as a last-ditch attempt to evade permanent threatening
danger," he said.
"Vision
Of Future"
The
Israeli psychological expert went on to draw another sort of difference
between suicidal people and self-bombers.
"Those
who feel positively suicidal only think of their past; not future. They
never think of marriage and family in example, but the would-be
‘self-bombers’ conjure up a vision of future," he said.
Oran
concluded that the "self-bombers" showed no desire for death
whatsoever, as conclusively demonstrated through television interviews
or recorded or written messages they deliver before blowing themselves
up.
"Many
of the self-bombers used to say before their attacks 'we just want to
join the struggle for national liberation' and 'I chose to be a
martyr'," he said.
Kamikaze
Likes
Searching
for a related link between Palestinian "self-bombers" and
Kamikazes, the Israeli psychologist said the two sides hit the same
ground with an inclination for life by walking the road of self
sacrifice.
Kamikazes
are a group of Japanese pilots who deliberately crashed on a military or
naval target, killing themselves as well as damaging the building or the
ship attacked. They were regarded as dying a hero's death in the service
of their county.
Seeking
a response to a nagging question - why a youth chooses to kill himself
in a bomb operation as the Palestinians and Kamikazes did, the Israeli
expert said that "It is a last-ditch resort".
"The
Kamikazes saw it as the only way to turn Japan away from defeat and
their compatriots from death. And the Palestinians find it is the sole
means to end a long occupation."
"The
Palestinians were even led in their self-bombing by a religious
obligation; resisting occupation".
Israeli
forces reoccupied all of the Palestinian areas since last year and still
keep a policy of house demolitions, assassination and abduction against
the Palestinians, many of whom feel the only way of influence available
is martyr operations organized by resistance groups.
Oran
quoted a Palestinian in an Israeli jail as saying: "If a
Palestinian state was established, there would no need for carrying out
martyr attacks against targets in the Jewish state. But as long as
occupation persists such resistance would keep up."
Palestinians
also find it hard to stomach the Jewish state's promises for dismantling
settlements on their land and ending an occupation dating back to 1948.
A
Solution
In
the meanwhile, a Palestinian study revealed that most Palestinian male
children said that the tension with Israel could draw a close via martyr
operations.
The
study, conducted by the Gaza Program for Psychotherapy, found that 67.8
percent of the 1000-strong children polled said these operations could
solve the problem in their society.
Upon
seeing a photo of a Palestinian girl with a hand down her face, 66
percent of both sexes said that she is thinking of her studying while
24.7 per cent said she thought of carrying out martyr operations. Some
8.7 per cent said she imagined a peaceful solution to the crisis with
Israel.
The
study also disclosed that 32.7 percent of the children interviewed have
symptoms of psychological problems because of being exposed to severe
shocks that require treatment.
The
vulnerability to these shocks is rated higher among the inhabitants of
the refugee camps, 84.2 percent, and lesser in towns, 2.9 percent,
according to the study.