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Like Israel, India
finds itself in the cross-hairs of terrorists, the depths of whose
hatred and barbarity defy comprehension.
Last month in
Mumbai, India's most important commercial centre, 207 people were
murdered in a series of co-ordinated terror bombings on commuter
trains during a period of eleven minutes in the morning rush hour.
(For those with a strong constitution, there's a powerful collection
of images
here.)
Thousands more were injured. And hundreds of millions of Indians
were left wondering - along with the citizens of Bali, Madrid,
London and Tel-Aviv - what could possibly motivate such boundless,
unfathomable contempt for human life. A few days later, a journalist
for the Times of India, visited Israel and interviewed Arnold
Roth. The interview was published in the 25th July 2006 paper
edition of the Times of India, and is now available on-line
(click
here). We
have extracted the text below.
LIVING WITH TERROR IN ISRAEL
‘Terrorism is connected to hatred and intolerance’
Nina Martyris |
TNN
On August 9, 2001, when 15-year-old Malki Roth was at a Jerusalem
pizzeria for lunch, a young Palestinian walked in with a guitar
strapped to his back. Minutes later, the bomb concealed within the
instrument exploded, killing 15 people, including Malki, her friend
and the Palestinian man.
It was a suicide bombing that made
headlines the world over. Malki’s distraught parents
Arnold and Frimet subsequently started the Malki Foundation, an organisation
that funds Israeli parents who have severely handicapped children,
whether they are Christian, Muslim, Druze or Jewish.
In this
interview with the Times of India, Arnold Roth talks about terror
and politics in Israel. Excerpts:
Q:
How are you dealing with the loss of your child?
A: Our child’s life was stolen from us and from
her by people of hatred. From where I stand, I can testify that
coping is a daily process that goes on for years. It’s not like an
illness where you get curedit’s a permanent pain and a deep change
in almost all your relationships.
Mindless hatred made the act of
terror possible, and awareness of this hatred stays in your mind and
causes you think differently about almost everything.
Q: After the tragedy, were you terrified of the outside world?
Did you consider counselling?
A: Malki was the middle child of our seven
children - she called herself the meat in the sandwich. After her
murder, we made permanent changes in our daughters’ routine - they
are not allowed to travel by public transport or go to public places
without our permission. They hate the restrictions but they
understand. My wife and I spend a lot of time taxi-ing our children
around.
However, we also know that there
are no guarantees. No one can say where or how the terrorists will
strike next. Everyone knows that terrorists are not limited by any
sense of fairness or self-restraint. If there is any way for them to
hurt us, they will try.
Counselling was offered to all of
us by the social security authority. For some of us it proved to be
tremendously helpful (for instance, for my wife and me); others did
not even take up the offer. Sometimes people (like our children) in
their 20's are too proud or perhaps lack self-awareness to know that
they can be helped. In those cases, the support of others like
themselves [in peer support groups] can be remarkably constructive.
Q: What has the government done to protect its citizens?
A: Since the earliest days, it has been
obligatory for almost every building in Israel to have a bomb
shelter or a public shelter in a nearby public space. After the 1991
Iraq missile attacks, every new building must have an internal room
with thicker walls to serve as a shelter.
There are also ‘security holes’ in
buildings and public spaces - a vacuum embedded in concrete where
explosive material can be safely dropped without hurting people.
We have security guards
everywhere: outside supermarkets, schools, buses. My daughter’s
murder was one of the last to happen before that big change. If the
murderer had attempted his strike just a few weeks later, he would
been unsuccessful, since his guitar case would surely have been
searched.
Q: Although full of anger, you say you do not feel hatred towards
those who killed Malki.
A: I’m not at all unusual. Our culture, our
education, the very institutions of Israeli life are all based on
our respect for diversity and the idea that that democracy can
absorb a wide range of diverging viewpoints.
Thus, we know there are people who
have fundamentally different viewpoints from us and who don’t
tolerate our presence. Does this mean we have to hate them? We have
nothing against them except their actions. There is a firm belief in
this country that Arab society suffers from exploitation at the
hands of its own civil and religious leadership.
Most Israelis, including me, are
therefore both optimistic and pessimistic at the same time. We’re
optimistic that with the introduction of democratic and enlightened
education, Arab society will eventually develop a respect for the
rights of the other and that this will include respect for Israelis
and Jews. We’re pessimistic because there is simply no sign that
this is even beginning to happen. This is not something to hate.
It’s something to pity and to protect oneself against.
Q: Don’t you think the Palestinians have a genuine grievance?
Isn’t their right to a country a basic human right?
A: There’s a lot of support in Israel for a
Palestinian state and has been for years. I used to march in the
streets, as a university student in Australia, demonstrating for the
right of self-determination of the Palestinians. Back then, we hoped
they would develop a strong leadership that would bring them towards
their own state, their own national achievements.
I’m personally disappointed at the
repeated failures of the Palestinian leadership in creating
something of value for their people. But even more than my personal
disappointment with their leadership -- and especially with Arafat
-- I am disappointed at the lack of disappointment on the part of
the Palestinians. They are so busy being angry and resentful at what
is, in their view, being done to them by us and by others that they
have failed to see what they have done to themselves.
Terror from the Arab world has been
happening to us long before Israeli policies could be blamed -- even
before there was an Israel. I frequently see analysts and critics of
Israel referring to what they like to call ‘underlying causes’. The
favourite such cause is ‘the occupation’. I like to point out that
when the PLO was created, and even when Arafat took over its
leadership, the total number of ‘occupied’ Arab towns, cities and
houses was zero. (This was in 1964-’65.)
As terrorism acquires more victims, it
will become clearer that it is tightly connected to hatred and
intolerance. For these phenomena, there will never be a political
solution. Indeed, there might not be any solution at all other than
to do everything in our power to keep the practitioners of terror
far away from us. And if that fails, then good societies must
destroy them without mercy before they destroy everything good in
our lives.
For more information on the foundation,
visit www.kerenmalki.org |