Hamas War

Sunday, October 16, 2011

The World Doesn't Care About Gilad Shalit or Israeli Terror Victims.

While we in Israel and the Jewish World are waiting in suspense and subsequent dread for Gilad Shalit's liberation and the dreaded terror upsurge from the freed Arab terrorists, I read nothing about it in recent editions of the International Herald Tribune and caught no news about it on BBC TV.

A Jewish email list I'm on has gone "off-topic." The only topic of recent emails has been the pros and cons of the Shalit deals.

In a neighor's succah yesterday, there was a rather heated discussion about the wisdom of the deal by people who generally agree on Israeli politics.

Both debates kept/keep going back to the unpleasant thought that there was an anti-government agenda by whomever was funding the Shalit Family protests. 




Why didn't the Shalit Family focus their protest on the International Red Cross and other humanitarian organizations and demand the Arabs keep to the Geneva Accords?  Why did they put the blame and responsibility on the Israeli Prime Minister?

  • The Israeli Government isn't the guilty party here. 
  • The Israeli Government hadn't kidnapped Shalit. 
  • The Israeli Government isn't holding Gilad Shalit incommunicado.
How many United Nations Security Council resolutions/condemnations have there been concerning the capture and imprisonment of Gilad Shalit?

Imagine if Israel had done something similar... The world would be enraged.  There would be none of this silence.

Davka on Shabbat, when Jews like myself are off-line busy observing the Day of Rest, the list of Arab terrorist prisoners was released.
The list contains includes Walid Anajas, who was convicted for his involvement in the bombing of the Moment Cafe in Jerusalem in 2002. Twelve civilians were murdered and 54 injured in the attack.

Also on the list is Nasser Yataima, convicted of planning the 2002 Passover Seder suicide-bomb attack on the Park Hotel in Netanya, in which 30 civilians were killed and 140 were wounded.

Also included is Chris al-Bandak, the only known Christian member of the Fatah Tanzim terror group, convicted of several shooting attacks which claimed the lives of two Israelis and seriously injured a third in 2002.

Musab Hashlemon, of Hebron, sentenced to 17 life sentences for dispatching two suicide bombers to Beersheba, will be released. Sixteen civilians were murdered when the bombers detonated themselves on two buses in central Beersheba in 2004. (complete article)
The List of Arab terrorists who are slated to be released includes many murders.  Family members of victims are taking advantage of the forty-eight hours before the release to petition the Israeli Supreme Court and are also asking that we sign petitions.

Following is the New York Times article which interviews bereaved Israeli parents, Arnold and Frumet Roth and Esther Wachsman and the orphaned Shvuel Schijvesschuuder.
In Israel, Swap Touches Old Wounds
By ETHAN BRONNER
Published: October 14, 2011
JERUSALEM — Arnold Roth had just returned from synagogue on Friday morning when the phone rang. It was Israel’s Justice Ministry, telling him that two of the people who murdered his 15-year-old daughter Malka at a Jerusalem pizzeria a decade ago would be freed next week as part of an exchange of 1,000 Palestinian prisoners for an Israeli soldier held by Hamas.
It was not an unexpected call but it was, for Mr. Roth, a horrifying one.

“This deal is a disaster,” he said of the exchange for the Israeli soldier, Staff Sgt. Gilad Shalit, as he sat with his wife, Frimet, on the balcony of their Jerusalem apartment. “Some of these people will go back to murdering. They pose an existential threat to all of us.”
Blocks away, Esther and Yehuda Wachsman were absorbing similar news — that a man who took part in murdering their son, Nachshon, in 1994 was to be freed for Sergeant Shalit. By cruel coincidence, it was the anniversary of the killing — Oct. 14. But Mrs. Wachsman had a different response.

“I’m willing to pay the price for another woman’s son to come home and end the agony,” Mrs. Wachsman said, sitting near a corner of her living room devoted to Nachshon’s memory. “Our hurt will never go away, but I just hope and pray with all my heart that Gilad comes home healthy in body and soul.”

The contrasting responses from two couples who have known and comforted one another were part of the highly charged emotional and political atmosphere in Israel since the announcement on Tuesday about the exchange aimed at ending more than five years of captivity for Sergeant Shalit, 25. Early on Friday, a man who lost both his parents and three siblings in the pizzeria attack that killed Malka Roth defaced the Tel Aviv memorial to Yitzhak Rabin, the slain prime minister. The man, Shvuel Schijvesschuuder, 27, said he was protesting the freeing of his family’s killers.

“People don’t understand the horror of what has been going through my mind,” he said in an interview at his home near Tel Aviv after being detained and freed by the police. His brother, Meir, 32, said all five remaining members of the family would leave the country forever after the deal was completed.

“We feel betrayed and we are going back to Holland,” he said.

As the details of the exchange become public, the near universal joy that greeted the original announcement is being tempered with concern. Israel Radio reported that Sergeant Shalit would be handed over to the Red Cross in Gaza on Tuesday, taken from there to Egypt and then flown to a military base in central Israel, where he will be reunited with his family. They will then be flown to their home in the country’s north.

The full list of Palestinians to be released will be posted on an Israeli government Web site by Sunday, although the Justice Ministry’s calls and lists published by Hamas provided some idea of who is on it. About 477 prisoners will be released in the first round, with 550 to follow two months later. Several hundred of those to be released are serving life sentences, and most of them will go either to the Gaza Strip or go into exile to other countries.

Among those is Ahlam Tamimi, a 31-year-old woman who was a key figure in the pizzeria attack. She is often described as the driver of the car that brought the suicide bomber to the Sbarro restaurant and killed 15 people. But the Roths say her role went far beyond that, to the actual planning of the attack.

In interviews from prison, Ms. Tamimi, who was a journalist, has told of having brought the suicide bomber to Jerusalem and then going on Palestinian television’s afternoon broadcast to announce the news of the attack without acknowledging her involvement.

“I’m not sorry for what I did,” she told an Israeli news organization in 2006. “I will get out of prison, and I refuse to recognize Israel’s existence. Discussions will only take place after Israel recognizes that this is Islamic land.”

The Roths said their anger over the prisoner exchange was focused on Ms. Tamimi, who is being sent to Jordan. She is young, fervent and charismatic, Mr. Roth said, and proud of what she did. In a documentary on Palestinian prisoners, she was asked whether she knew how many children had been killed in the attack. She did not. When told the number was eight, she smiled.

The Roths recalled that their daughter, known as Malki, was a dedicated volunteer for disabled children. In her memory they started and still run a foundation that helps families keep their disabled children at home by providing equipment and therapy. About 30 percent of the foundation’s beneficiaries are Israeli Arabs, Mr. Roth said.

“This is not a political issue for us,” he said. “I am not some raving right-winger. We too share the joy of the Shalit family. But the victims are being marginalized. We object on principle. We see ourselves as agents of the children who will be killed by the graduates of this release.”

For the Wachsmans, the return of Sergeant Shalit is especially poignant. Like Sergeant Shalit, their son was a 19-year-old corporal in uniform when he was seized by Hamas militants. But in their case, the Israeli military tried to rescue him six days later and failed, leading to his death.

“It happened 10 minutes from this apartment,” Mrs. Wachsman said. “I heard the helicopters.”

One man being freed next week was the driver in the abduction plot, she said. His parents have been interviewed on television saying that it is about time that he was freed. Mrs. Wachsman did not share that sentiment.

“I wish him nothing but ill for the rest of his life,” she said, her gaze steady.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

i can only say, as a noahide, for the cruelty they did to G-d's people, jail life perhaps is too easy. i remember one of the sages wrote that when evil get together its for their fall. i dont feel proud to be part of the gentile nations, knowing how our world has continuously tortured and killed the jews at every generation. and in return the jews pray for us 3 x a day in the shemoneh esri prayers and in succos now on going. The tanach says Hashem does not delight in losing even one wicked person, perhaps the time given is to try to bring us all to the laws of human decent behaveiour enshrined in the 7 laws. i know we dont deserve this mercy. this hoshana rabba may everything be good for israel and may Hashem call the wicked to judgement. may all evil be brought to one place by Hashem, only for destruction. G-d bless and protect israel.

Batya said...

Jailing a person is also expensive. Israel spends an outrageous amount of money keeping Arab terrorists, fed, healthy, entertained and educated.

a, being a Noahide must be quite a challenge.

MAOZ said...

My (admittedly rhetorical) question is, when the released terrorists go on to murder more Jews, will the Shalit family:
a)make a point of attending the funerals;
b)make a point of avoiding the funerals; or
c)be totally oblivious to the matter -- now that they will already have gotten their own precious boy home, who cares about anyone else?

Batya said...

Maoz, and who says that the Shalit family will be immune. One can be struck by lightning more than once.