Dear friends,
Today's edition of
The Australian, Australia's national daily
newspaper, carries a feature article written by John Lyons, the paper's
Middle East correspondent. The full article, sparked by a campaign
launched in the last 3 weeks by Frimet and Arnold Roth, appears online
here.
Below is the article's text. In addition to some minor editorial
corrections, hypertext links have been added to this version; they do not
appear in the original.
Good wishes,
The Team at Keren Malki
Israel's bloody choice
John Lyons, Middle East Correspondent, The Australian
Published in The Australian December 16, 2009
- AT lunchtime on August 9, 2001, the lives of two women intersected at
a pizza restaurant in Jerusalem.
Malki Roth,
15, from Melbourne, walked inside to have pizza with a friend. Outside,
Ahlam Tamimi, a Palestinian television news presenter, dropped off
Izzadin Al-Masri at the restaurant, which she had chosen as a target for
an act of terrorism. Al-Masri walked into the restaurant with a guitar
case on his back. What nobody at the scene would have realised, apart
from Tamimi, was that the guitar case was loaded with explosives that
would tear apart the restaurant in
one of the worst
attacks of the second intifada. Malki and 14 others were killed and
scores were injured or maimed. One woman remains in a coma.
- But while the restaurant was being blown apart, Tamimi was on her way
back to her TV studio. In
one of the most
chilling stories from the entire period of bombings, Tamimi walked
into her studio and broke the news of the bombing to her viewers. Tamimi
was convicted for murder and is serving 16 consecutive life sentences in
an Israeli jail.
- But she's again making news, this time as one of the 1,000 prisoners
who militant group Hamas wants released in return for captured Israeli
soldier Gilad Shalit, who has been held in a secret location in Gaza
since 2006. Tamimi's possible release in the coming weeks has prompted
Malki's parents, Arnold and Frimet Roth, to
write to the Israeli cabinet to urge Tamimi not be freed.
- Referring to the "indescribable pain" with which they read
of an imminent prisoner release,
the Roths write:
- "While she is a woman, and for this reason accorded
relatively compassionate coverage by the media, Tamimi is a far more
prolific murderer than most of the men she will accompany. She
slaughtered seven men and women and eight babies and children in cold
blood. Tamimi personally led the suicide bomber, Al-Masri, right up to
entrance of the target she had selected, Jerusalem's Sbarro restaurant,
made a hasty getaway to save her own skin and then, in effect, fired her
weapon."
- For Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the Shalit issue
could be his most difficult decision. The emotions it is evoking both
ways are deep-seated. On the one side is Shalit, the 23-year-old staff
sergeant who in Israel is a household name. His supporters have a
permanent marquee next to the PM's residence where a number is changed
each day to show the length of his captivity. The desire to bring him
home is powerful because of the country's military culture. Israel has
been at war in one way or another from the day it was formed in 1948, and
the military culture imbues society. Most young people join the army at
18.
- Most parents know the experience of having a child out of contact if
they are fighting a war. An understanding the army has with its soldiers
is that if they are captured or killed, the government will do everything
to bring them home. But as the public has begun focusing on the price
that will be paid for Shalit -- the release of up to 1000 Palestinian
prisoners -- the debate has become more complicated.
- Tamimi's
name is in the media as being on Hamas's wish list.
- "Take a look at what were about to hand over to them,"
Arnold Roth tells The Australian. "We're going to release from
prison people who not only have done the most hideous, barbaric things
but are deeply committed to doing them again. "I can't find a better
example of that
than
the woman who engineered the massacre at the Sbarro restaurant. It's
hard for me to say her name.
- "She has never made any secret -- and to her great good fortune
she's been given plenty of opportunity to say these things -- that she is
proud of what she did. She certainly doesn't seek to be forgiven and she
will do it again and help other people to do it again just as soon as she
has the opportunity. This is not hyperbole. It is literally the case.
What are we doing putting people like that back out on the
street?"
- For Arnold and Frimet Roth the pain of that day in 2001 clearly has
not subsided.
- "For all practical purposes my daughter's murder took place this
morning," Arnold Roth says. "I don't mean that in a hyperbolic
way.
- "I'm not a morose individual. Nor is my wife, and certainly none
of our children are. But the act of losing a child to an act of murder,
you can never get your mind around it. You deal with it in a functional
way, but you can never fully grasp it. What, Malki's not coming back? I
can't believe that. It's not possible."
- Arnold Roth's description of that day as "an incredible
nightmare" surely is no understatement. For 12 hours the family did
not know where she was. They searched local hospitals, given that the
scores of dead and injured were taken to different places. The hospitals,
says Roth, were like Dante's Inferno. At 11 o'clock that night their
neighbour, a senior doctor, ran into their house: "There's a girl
on the operating table at Hadassa, let's go." They drove to the
hospital, where their neighbour rushed into emergency but returned with
the news: "It's not Malki."
- Another doctor told them: "There's a dead girl over there, go
and have a look, and there's another girl over there who's about to be
operated on."
- Roth recalls: "I have to say I caught myself at that moment. It
was like somehow, right then, it all became real. He's telling me to go
have a look at that dead girl over there. And if it's not her, maybe it's
the other one over here they're about to operate on. I cannot tell you
how difficult that was."
- The Roths' lives were changed forever. They grew apart from some
friends who were unable to deal with their loss but gained new ones.
Arnold Roth estimates the family has "a couple of hundred
friends" who have lost relatives to terrorism. "We have a
common language with people who have been through this experience,"
he says.
- In the first intifada of 1987, many of the clashes were stone fights
between Palestinian youths and Israeli soldiers. But in the second
intifada, which began in 2000 under Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, a
decision was made to target Israeli civilians. It is an insight into how
deeply that intifada has worked itself into the Israeli psyche -- and why
trust has broken down between Israelis and Palestinians -- that five
children in Roth's street in Jerusalem have been killed.
- "People call it intifada but I really resist that," Roth
says. "I call it the Arafat War. I think that Arafat single-handedly
brought on this war and I want people to relate the war to him.
- Roth has developed an avoidance mechanism. "You identify
situations and people where you're just not going to talk to those
people, you just don't want to hear what they have to say because they
don't understand what the effect of the loss of this beautiful child and
the hundreds of others like her is," he says.
- "On the other hand, you are forced to listen to some of the
arguments that are put forward, like: `Why were you here?' or `She's an
enemy agent just as much as the soldier in the tank', or `This is what
you get for messing with other people's lives and territory' and many
other assertions [that] to me are superficial or wrong, or both. So
you've got to figure out where you stand on these issues. You've got to
figure out avoidance; to figure out how to deal with some of these
things. You've got to be careful before you say things and you've got to
also remember that no matter what you say many people will simply never
understand what you are talking about."
- Roth says Israel should look at alternatives to a prisoner swap for
Shalit. One option for instance could be that the large amount of money
channelled to the Hamas regime through foreign governments could be
stopped.
- The terrorism that claimed his daughter, he says, has not made him
anti-Palestinian. He and his wife have set up the
Malki Foundation, which provides
therapies to disabled children whose parents choose to keep them at home.
So far the foundation has provided about 30,000 therapy sessions,
one-third to Palestinian children. [Correction: Overall, about
one-third of the families helped by Keren Malki are drawn from Israel's
Arab population.] The cause of disabled children was chosen because
of the affection Malki had for her disabled younger sister.
- "She's very disabled, she's blind, she has no communication with
the world. She suffered profound brain damage when she was a year old as
a result of uncontrolled epilepsy, so she's a big burden in our lives.
Malki loved her and was very involved with her and spent many nights with
her," Roth says. "She goes to school, but we were told very
early in the piece: `You should institutionalize this child and get on
with your lives.' " [Comment: The Roth family refused the
suggestion and their disabled youngest child continues to live with her
family at home.]
- Roth says the release of Malki's killer would be "a deep
embitterment".
- "We have moved on," he says. "We have rich lives.
We're doing a lot of good work in our daughter's name. I have a
professional life that gives me a great deal of satisfaction. We made a
wedding in August, and another wedding in March, all being well. We have
a rich, contributing, loving life as a family. We're not stuck at all.
However the release of this woman would be a deep embitterment in our
lives. Not just because of the woman but because of the confusion in the
minds of other people who say: `Oh well.' That's very upsetting to me,
but it's no more than that. Our lives won't stop and if we stop them
[the release of the terrorists in a deal] it won't bring Malki
back, it won't make us whole. But it's upsetting. It's very upsetting.
It's more than upsetting, it's enraging."
- Wherever Roth travels he seeks to talk about terrorism. Last year
he addressed
the UN. "I look for opportunities to come and present in a
non-political way, non-ideological way, some things that I think people
aren't intuiting or learning from the media or from any other
means," he says.
- What is his basic message? "That terrorism is a major issue in
our lives that's not going away. No matter what direction it's coming
from, we've got to put it higher up on the list. It's a major issue and
it's going to get a lot worse for all of us before it gets better.
Terrorism is a function of education, not of politics, not of territorial
arguments. It's a function of education and we've got to deal with the
education that produces terrorism. Education towards hatred; I see it
everywhere.
- "Some of the things that people say about terrorism are plainly
wrong. Like: they're underprivileged people at their wits end; they don't
have any other direction to go in, therefore you've left them with no
alternative. This is rubbish. Everyone that I've ever looked at among
terrorists turns out to be someone who's highly motivated. The suicide
agents among them are the highest motivated. They're not depressed
people, and so on."
- The bomber who killed his daughter was from a wealthy family, a
fanatic who became religious only in the last year of his life.
- "Terrorism is a really serious issue. It's everywhere and it's
spreading and we're not doing enough to stop it," Roth says.
"And if things aren't worse today, it's only because of our good
luck and not because of our good management."
----------
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