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A
Palestinian woman sitting on what remains of her home in
Jenin
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What
does it take to call killings a massacre? What does it take to call
killings genocide? Is it a numbers game? I hope not. However, much
of the debate surrounding Jenin or Gujarat seems to indicate so.
While all major religious traditions speak eloquently against the
killing of innocent civilians, the Qur’an goes further and says,
“Whosoever kills a human being without [any reason like]
manslaughter, or corruption on earth, it is as though he has killed
all of mankind and whosoever saves the life of one, it shall be as
if he saves the life of all humanity [5:32].”
Despite this unambiguous and clear directive in the Qur’an, people
with sinister agendas continue to vilify the Muslims by using
phrases like “Islamic terrorism” while never (and rightfully so)
linking terrorism to any other faith. Terrorism smells just as bad
no matter who commits it. The issue of terrorism is not just in the
counting of the dead but intrinsically linked to the cloud of fear
and hopelessness that hangs over the living.
An
action that dehumanizes the essential dignity of human beings is
terrorism. War may become a way of preserving human dignity when
engaged against evil. But war does not imply an excuse to terrorize
innocent people. The art of humane and just war is part of every
religious tradition and it is part of Article 48 of the Geneva
Convention. Any war or resistance must distinguish between combatant
and non-combatant populations. Currently two regimes stand out as
having abandoned these principles. Israel and India together
comprise the tale of two renegades.
Israel’s
latest brinkmanship over the Jenin inquiry is baffling. The debate
over Jenin should not just be over the numbers who died but of the
lives that may have been permanently altered. The inquiry process
must ask the question, was the excessive force/massacre avoidable?
Was the excessive application of force a pre-planned attempt to
terrorize millions? Certainly firing missiles from Apache
helicopters into a city block looks like nothing more than
deliberate targeting of civilians.
Further,
Israel’s refusal to allow humanitarian aid during and in the days
following the end of fighting in Jenin, its insistence on
“dictating” the composition of the U.N. fact-finding team and
its claim that only a few fighters were killed, helps to harden
world opinion that a cover-up is perhaps underway. The world needs
to know, what dark secrets lie under the rubbles of Jenin? Moreover,
do the capture of a few fighters require the flattening of a few
city blocks? Guilt by association is dehumanizing; dehumanization is
terrorism.
Just
as the Israeli tactics are reprehensible so are the suicide bombings
directed towards civilians. Especially when people were engaged in
remembrance of their Creator. Such actions serve no cause, no matter
what the justification. It too represents a crime against humanity.
However, it must be borne in mind that suicide bombers are not born
to be so but made by the circumstances they inherit.
Suicide
bombers are the result of Israel’s brutal occupation that has now
spanned decades. Nobel Peace Laureate Desmond Tutu describes the
dehumanization of Palestinians as akin to “apartheid.” In his
words, Israel will “never get true security and safety through
oppressing another people.” Let us not forget that the occupation
preceded the suicide bombings. Thus, the suicide bombings are indeed
desperate acts of defiance by individuals, not the seemingly
systematic, pre-meditated and cold-blooded murder perpetrated by the
Israeli Defense Forces under the auspices of a ruler spuriously
labeled “a man of peace.”
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A
Muslim Indian woman weeps over her burnt home in Gujarat |
In
spite of the incalculable sufferings faced by Palestinians, my
advice to them is that the use of violence against non-combatants
serves to only undermine their noble cause of fighting injustice.
They must look beyond this immediate conflict. Some day they will
have a homeland. But what homeland will it be if erected on the
graves of innocent civilians?
While
much of the world attention is being focused on the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, another “genocide” is almost
slipping under the radar screen. A European Union investigation into
India’s worst religious riots in a decade concludes that the
violence in Gujarat was not spontaneous but a pre-planned policy
involving state ministers to “purge” Muslims and destroy their
economy.
One
EU source suggests the killing of over 2,000 Muslims and displacing
another 140,000 into refugee camps is “ethnic cleansing.” As the
EU ponders what to do next, the United States government must also
take a hard look into the matter. The political parties in India who
are responsible for this crime must be labeled as terrorists and
dealt with appropriately.
At
one time the world community did successfully deal with nations that
embarked upon the path of “apartheid” and “genocide.” South
Africa and Yugoslavia both were ultimately made to comply with the
collective opinion of the world community. Today Israel and India
both use the same rhetoric of “this is an internal matter” to
defend their status quo. Just as Somalia, Rwanda and Kosovo invited
external intervention because of their “internal” crimes against
humanity, so should Israel and India.
Source:www.yellowtimes.org
The
author encourages your comments. Please e-mail him at pahmed11@comcast.net