Why is an Israeli soldier worth more than a Palestinian child?

sister herb

Official TTI Chef
Dana Halawa

The Electronic Intifada

8 November 2011


Not one Palestinian child detainee in Israeli jails was released during the prisoner swap last month. More than 160 remain behind bars.


I have read countless articles and watched numerous videos about Gilad Shalit being reunited with his family five years after his abduction. One typical report noted he was “just 19 years old in 2006 when he was cruelly and illegally abducted by Hamas.” I have been hearing of him for the past five years. I know Gilad Shalit’s name better than I know the names of my classmates.

What I have already forgotten, however, is the names of the 477 Palestinians that were freed. What I will never know are the stories of the thousands of Palestinians who are spending their entire lives behind bars away from their family and friends. The thousands of children, women and men still captivated unjustly in Israeli jails. The children that grew up in cages. The parents that watched their children seized out of their hands and taken away without their consent, forced to watch from afar awaiting news on their child’s whereabouts, praying that their child wouldn’t be tortured — too much. Those are the things, the stories the world has never learned and will never learn. Those are the nameless, faceless heroes that were freed in this exchange, while thousands more continue to languish in Israeli jail.

Ashraf Baluji, Imad Abu Rayyan, Imad al-Masri and Yusuf al-Khalis were only 18 and 19 years old when they were arrested back in 1991. They were part of the first 477 prisoners of war to be released in exchange for Gilad Shalit after spending over 20 years in Israeli jails. Crazily, 1991 was the year I was born. Every breath I have ever taken, every moment I have known of life, they were locked up and tortured.

In every article I’ve read referring to Shalit by his name and the 1,027 Palestinians being released in exchange as a number or as “militants,” the journalist has forgotten to mention that Shalit was an armed and trained soldier that was “kidnapped” from a military occupation vehicle, that the majority of Palestinian prisoners never engaged in military or criminal acts against Israel, and were only accused of resistance to the Israeli military occupation. They have conveniently left out the numerous Palestinian children abducted from their homes and taken far away, usually denied even visits from their parents or lawyers.

In 2009, Time magazine published a story about Walid Abu Obeida, a Palestinian farm boy who was only 13 years old when he was stopped on his way home by two Israeli soldiers aiming their rifles at him. They punched, beat, and arrested him while his parents wondered where he was and why their son wasn’t home yet (“Does Israel mistreat Palestinian child prisoners?,” 30 June 2009).

Alas, Abu Obeida’s treatment was far from an isolated incident. As of the latest figures recorded by Defence for Children International-Palestine Section, as of October 2011, 164 Palestinian children between the ages of 12 and 17 years old are behind bars, including 35 aged between 12 and 15 years old (Child detainees, accessed 7 November 2011).

Many are being held without trial or conviction, while others are — often falsely — convicted of throwing rocks at Israeli tanks occupying their land and demolishing their homes.

Key facts forgotten

Israel has arrested more than 650,000 Palestinians, a number equal to about 20 percent of the population, since the occupation of the West Bank began in 1967. We tend to forget that Israel is occupying Palestine when we speak of the two. Palestinians are killed and arrested every day under the pretext of “protecting Israeli security.” Palestinians are kidnapped from their homes and stand trial in Israeli courts, where even Palestinian witnesses have no right to testify, while others are jailed, without trial or charge, under “administrative detention”.

Looking through the list of released prisoners, I found the name of Akram Mansour, who was arrested at the age of 18. He has spent over three torturous decades languishing in Israeli jails for resisting the Israeli occupation of Lebanon. At 51, he finally gets to taste a bit of freedom — although without his mother, father or sister who died while he was in Israeli custody — before the brain tumor he developed in Israeli jails takes life itself from him. In an online Arabic-language interview with Mansour, he says he currently suffers from paralyzed fingers, missing teeth and blackouts because of the torture he was subjected to, which varied from hammering his fingers to a nail in his forehead to having urine spilled over him and, after filing a complaint, being forced to strip naked in the cold as buckets of freezing water were spilled over him (“The suffering of the liberated prisoner Akram Mansour,” 24 October 2011 [Arabic]).

Robbed of childhood

Twelve-year-old Palestinian boys are robbed of their innocence and childhood behind bars. Sixteen-year-old Palestinian children are tried as adults by Israel, even though the legal age under international and even Israeli law (for Israelis) is 18. Mothers and sisters are arrested and convicted of terrorism for standing up to the occupation. Children are forced to grow up without parents. Men are convicted and sentenced to as many as 36 life sentences for resisting their genocide. In total, 1,027 will be freed while 5,000 remain captive.

Gilad Shalit will be remembered as a hero that endured five years of kidnapping, during which he had regular medical checkups and was placed in as good a condition as Gaza could provide under the Israeli blockade. This is more than I can say for the Palestinian prisoners, who have often been deprived of basic services, including medical attention when needed.

Today, Shalit is a free man with no conditions on his freedom. However, the 477 Palestinians freed in the first part of this exchange were either allowed home, provided they report to Israel monthly and not travel between Palestinians cities; or exiled to Gaza where they may not see their families in the West Bank (who are not allowed into Gaza); or even exiled outside the entire country and banned from ever returning home. Through preventing released prisoners from returning home, Israel violates the most basic of human rights. Article 12 of the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights states: “No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of the right to enter his own country.”

A life is a life, and a human being is a human being. So, many now ask why Gilad Shalit’s life is worth 1,027 Palestinian lives. To ask that is to not understand Israel. An Israeli life’s value cannot be estimated, whereas a Palestinian life is of very little to no value. I think I speak for most Palestinians when I say, I’m glad Gilad Shalit is home, safe and with his family, that Palestinians more than anyone understand what it’s like to lose a father, mother, brother, sister, daughter and son. More than anyone, Palestinians understand the joy he and his family must feel now that his back.

Personally, I believe a fair exchange would have been to release all Palestinian prisoners for all Israeli prisoners, namely just Gilad Shalit, rather than making one life worth 1,027 lives. However, knowing that Israel would never agree to that, I congratulate Hamas and the Palestinian people on their victory. And I pray for the remaining 5,000 Palestinians in Israeli custody, and many more currently being arrested to fill the cells being emptied of 1,027 prisoners.

Dana Halawa is a twenty-year-old American-Palestinian medical student at the Jordan University of Science and Technology in Jordan.

http://electronicintifada.net/content/why-israeli-soldier-worth-more-palestinian-child/10566
 

Aapa

Mirajmom
Assalaam walaikum,

Sister,

He was an embarrassment to Israel. His release and interviews showed the world how Israel will take a gentle soul like Gilad Shalit and make him a solider.
 

Islam!!yay

Junior Member
:salam2:

Ya Allah SWT what can i do to help them.I always remind myself the more the palestinians suffer the closer they get to Allah SWT.And the more painful punishement israelis will get. We must not forget though of the young israelis who REFUSE to serve and then jailed because they know of their govs treatment of Palestinians.
 

Abdul Hasib

Student of Knowledge
It's because those Yahud value their brethren from the Children of Israel. The same way that a guy would sacrifice his life to save his beloved nephew/aunt/uncle etc., a Yahud (who is loyal to their family from Banu Israel) would sacrifice THEIR life for another Yahud who could come from a differant family line (because all the (pure blood) Yahud are descendents of Yaqub (AS), and so they love each other).

But as for the Ummah, we have traitors, hypocrites, devaints, apostates, and disbeleivers from amongst us (who claim to be our brothers/sisters), and so that's why there are many from (amongst us) who don't care about the blood of our bretheren in Felastin, and across the globe (but there's an exception for those who are part of Ahlus Sunnah wal Jamah).

Anyway, this is my thought on this matter.
 

sabina isa

Junior Member
:salam2:

Exactly my thoughts too. We are talking to deaf ears. Israeli pays for its detainees, no muslim pays for their brothers, not even raise voice for them.
We simply cry in our desolution, in the best scenario. If we act for our brothers, then their blood would the true worth.

On the other side of the coin, a muslim life is for good a worthier than any jew or otherwise life.

We salam
 

Aapa

Mirajmom
Assalaam walaikum,

This man did not have the skills to be a solider. It was yet more shame on Israel.
 

msmoorad

mommys boy
It's because those Yahud value their brethren from the Children of Israel. The same way that a guy would sacrifice his life to save his beloved nephew/aunt/uncle etc., a Yahud (who is loyal to their family from Banu Israel) would sacrifice THEIR life for another Yahud who could come from a differant family line (because all the (pure blood) Yahud are descendents of Yaqub (AS), and so they love each other).

But as for the Ummah, we have traitors, hypocrites, devaints, apostates, and disbeleivers from amongst us (who claim to be our brothers/sisters), and so that's why there are many from (amongst us) who don't care about the blood of our bretheren in Felastin, and across the globe (but there's an exception for those who are part of Ahlus Sunnah wal Jamah).

Anyway, this is my thought on this matter.


salaams to all

theres mainly 2 types of Jews
the Sephardic- who are semites
they have olive complexion & slightly wavy hair- like many Palestinians.

then theres the Ashkenazi who are originally from Khazaria-which was in the area Armenia is in today.
they are the blonde, blue eyed ones.

the vast majority of the zionists are from the Ashkenazi
they are so racist that they consider themselves to be better than even the Sephardic jews

check out this article from an Israeli newspaper website:
http://www.haaretz.com/print-editio...irls-have-a-bad-influence-on-our-girls-1.1513

insha allah, their time is coming-when even the stones & trees will speak:

Sahih Muslim 6985: Abu Huraira reported Allah's Messenger (may peace be upon him) as saying: The last hour would not come unless the Muslims will fight against the Jews and the Muslims would kill them until the Jews would hide themselves behind a stone or a tree and a stone or a tree would say: Muslim, or the servant of Allah, there is a Jew behind me; come and kill him; but the tree Gharqad would not say, for it is the tree of the Jews.

thats why they are planting so many of these Gharqad trees

and Allah ta'ala knows best
jazakallah
 
Top