Whenever a person or group of people decide that
human life has no value, then such a person or people can commit
the worst form of atrocities without even the blinking an eye.
The taking of an innocent life is a twofold crime.
First, it is taking away the God-given right of that person to
live and second, it is not just a crime against the victim, but
also a crime against all humanity.
Whenever a person or people feel that there is no
punishment on this earth for the taking of an innocent life or
lives and that instead, such crimes will be rewarded, then there
is nothing to stop the killer or killers from murdering at random
whoever they wish.
Ever since the Jewish invaders set foot on
Palestine, they have done their best to wipe out the native
inhabitants of the land. On May 15, Israelis will celebrate the
establishment of their Jewish state. But at what cost did the Jews
create a state of their own and how much sorrow and harm did they
cause and do to the Palestinian people?
Many of their sordid crimes have been swept under
their bloody carpets and with every brutal step of the way, they
have twisted the facts and made themselves look as if they were
the victims of their own crimes.
Some of their massacres have been remembered by
those who survived, such as the slaughter of peaceful Palestinian
villagers in Deir Yassin. But there were many Deir Yassins strewn
along the treacherous path of Israeli conquests of a land not
Jewish at the expense of the Gentiles who inhabited the Land of
Plenty.
On October 29, the day before the Israeli attack
on the Suez Canal, an Israeli Frontier Force entered the village
of Kafr Qasem and imposed a curfew while the villagers were still
out working in their fields. At around 4:45 pm, the Force reached
Kafr Qasem and informed the village mayor that the curfew would be
at 5 pm instead of the usual 6. Approximately 400 villagers were
working in their fields and there was no way that the news of the
changed curfew could reach them in time.
The Israeli guards waited at the entrance of the
village. As the unsuspecting villagers returned from the fields,
they were massacred by the army. That day, 51 Palestinians were
killed and 13 others were wounded. Among the dead were women and
girls, boys between the ages of 14 and 17 and 7 children between
the ages of 8 and 13. Some of the women killed were pregnant.
Their babies died in their wombs.
At first, the Israelis tried to keep their dark
deeds secret, but when news of the massacre got out and it became
known that the soldiers had orders to shoot to kill, the Israeli
government was forced to hold a face saving trial. Three years
later, the men involved, under the command of Lieutenant Dahan,
were brought to trial. The soldiers had been told to shoot to
kill, not arrest, any person moving outside of their homes after
the curfew. The order had been originally issued by Major Melinki
who when asked at the time if the order to kill meant women and
children as well, he replied that there was to be “no
sentimentality.”
But the trial was a mock one. The Hebrew daily
Haaretz stated that, “the eleven officers and soldiers who are
on trial for the massacre of Kafr Qasem have all received a 50%
increase in their salaries. A special messenger was sent to
Jerusalem to bring the checks to the accused in time for the
Passover. A number of the accused had been given a vacation for
the holiday.”
The newspaper went on to say that in court, “the
accused mingle freely with the spectators; the officers smile at
them and pat them on the back; some of them shake hands with them.
It is obvious that these people, whether they will be found
innocent or guilty, are not treated as criminals, but as heroes.”
Colonel Yishishkar Shedmi, the one responsible for
changing the curfew, and was the person who gave his soldiers the
go ahead for the massacre, was found guilty of only exceeding his
authority for changing the time of the curfew. To the survivors of
Kafr Qasem, this piaster meant it was the price Israel was willing
to pay for the lives of the 51 people who were shot down that day.
The rest of the soldiers on trial were given
sentences from 7 to 17 years in prison but all were let go before
the end of the third year of the confinement. Major Avraham
Melinki, the commander of the Border Police force, was promoted
immediately after his release from prison. Lt. Dahan, who had been
convicted of murdering all these Palestinians in one hour, was
pardoned and appointed military officer responsible for Arab
affairs in the town of Ramleh after his release.
Today in Occupied Palestine, there Kafr Qasems
abound everywhere. As before, women and children and civilian men
are shot down and killed. Israeli soldiers aim to kill. Their
targets are not just stone throwing demonstrators, but any
Palestinian that these soldiers deem fit to die. These civilians
being slaughtered are not seen as human beings and they are not
awarded the sanctity of life. Remember, there is to be no
sentimentality for Palestinians.
The siege of Palestinian villages continues.
Nothing much has changed in the 53 years of Jewish occupation of
Palestinian lands and homes. Nothing much but more brutality and
less regard for human life. And every time a Palestinian infant is
killed by an Israeli soldier, the Israelis turn their faces
covered with tears to the world claiming that they are the victims
of Palestinian violence. They continue to sweep their dark
dastardly deeds under their bloody carpet but one day the mountain
of Palestinian skeletons will be too humongous to hide.
In the surreal, a penny for your thoughts. In the
real, a piaster for Palestinian dead bodies.