The Face of a Boy
By Uri Avnery
September 07, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
THE MISDEEDS of Napoleon's occupation army in
Spain were not photographed. Photography had not yet been invented.
The valiant fighters against the occupation had to rely on Francisco
Goya for the immortal painting of the resistance.
The partisans and underground fighters against the German occupation
of their countries in World War II had no time to take pictures.
Even the heroic uprising of the Jewish Ghetto in Warsaw was not
filmed by the participants. The Germans themselves filmed their
atrocities, and, being Germans, they catalogued and filed them in an
orderly way.
In the meantime, photography has become common commonplace. The
Israeli occupation in the Palestinian occupied territories is being
filmed all the time. Everybody now has cellular phones that take
pictures. Also, Israeli peace organizations have distributed cameras
to many Arab inhabitants.
Soldiers shoot with guns. The Palestinians shoot pictures.
It is not yet clear which are more effective in the long run: the
bullets or the photos.
A TEST case is a short clip taken recently in a remote West Bank
village called al-Nabi Saleh.
Every Israeli has seen this footage many times by now. It has been
shown again and again by all Israeli TV stations. Many millions
around the world have seen it on their local TV. It is making the
rounds in the social media.
The clip shows an incident that occurred near the village on Friday,
two weeks ago. Nothing very special. Nothing terrible. Just a
routine event. But the pictures are unforgettable.
The village al-Nabi Saleh is located not far from Ramallah in the
occupied West Bank. It is named in honor of a prophet (Nabi means
prophet in both Arabic and Hebrew) who lived before the time of
Muhammad and is said to be buried there. His extensive tomb is the
pride of the 550 inhabitants.
Al-Nabi Saleh is build on the remains of a crusader outpost, which
in its turn was built on the remains of a Byzantine village. Its
history probably goes back to ancient Canaanite times. I believe
that the population of these villages has never changed – they just
changed their religion and culture according to the powers that be.
They were in turn Canaanites, Judaeans, Greeks, Romans, Byzantines
and finally Arabs.
The latest occupation (until now) is the Israeli. These new
occupiers have no interest in converting the locals. They just want
to take their land, and, if possible, induce them to go away. On
part of the lands of Nabi Saleh an Israeli settlement called
Halamish ("flint") was set up.
The conflict between the village and its new "neighbors" started
immediately. Between them is an ancient well, which the settlers
have renovated and claim as their own. The village is not ready to
give it up.
Like in many other villages in the area, such as Bil'in, on every
Friday, right after the prayers in the mosque, a demonstration
against the occupation and the settlers takes place. A few Israeli
peace activists and international volunteers take part in them. The
demonstrators are generally non-violent, but on the fringes
teen-agers and children often throw stones. The soldiers shoot
rubber-covered steel bullets, tear gas and stun grenades, and
sometime live bullets.
As in many small Arab villages, most inhabitants belong to one
extended family, in this case the Tamimis. One Tamimi boy was shot
dead in one of the demonstrations, a girl was shot in the foot. It
is a Tamimi boy who features in the recent event.
THE CLIP that rocked the world starts with one lone soldier, who was
obviously sent to arrest a boy who had (or had not) thrown a stone.
The soldiers jumps across the rocky terrain, looks for the boy who
is hiding behind a rock and catches him. It is 12 year old Muhammad
Tamimi, with one arm in a plaster cast.
The soldier puts his arm around the neck of the boy, who cries in
terror. Soon his 14 year old sister appears, and soon after that his
mother and other women. They all tear at the soldier, who tries to
push them away with his other arm. During the wild struggle, the
sister bites the arm of the soldier, the one which holds his gun.
The soldier is masked. This is a new thing. Why are they masked?
What are they hiding? After all, they are not Russian policemen who
fear the revenge of the gangsters. When I was a soldier, long ago,
masks were unknown.
During the melee, one of the women succeeds in ripping the soldier's
mask off. We see his face – just an ordinary young man, recently out
of high school, who is obviously at a loss of what to do. There seem
to be photographers all around. One sees their feet.
Would the soldier have used his gun if the photographers had not
been there? Hard to say. Recently a brigade commander shot and
killed a boy who had thrown a stone at his car. The army condones
and even lauds such acts of "self defense".
For some minutes the scene goes on – the boy crying and pleading,
the women pushing and hitting, the soldier pushing back, everybody
shouting. Then another soldier approaches and tells the first
soldier to release the child, who is seen running away.
WE DON'T know who the soldier is. It is hard to guess his
background. Just a soldier, one of many who enforce the occupation,
who face the demonstrations every week.
Another angle to the event is provided by one of the protesters off
camera, so to speak, who was caught for a fleeting moment. He was
recognized.
He is a teacher who bears the names of two illustrious persons – the
Zionist founder Theodor Herzl and the composer Franz Schubert. Herzl
Schubert is a veteran left-wing peace activist. I have met him in
many demonstrations.
On the morrow of the showing of the footage on all Israeli
television stations, the cry went up to dismiss him. What, a leftist
peace demonstrator in the schoolroom?
Schubert was not accused of preaching his opinions in class. His
peace activities did not take place during working hours. The very
fact that he took part in a demonstration in his own free time was
enough. His case is now "being considered" by the education
ministry.
This, by the way, is no exceptional case. A respected female
educator who was chosen as headmistress of an art school was blocked
by the discovery that many years ago she had signed a petition
calling on the army to allow soldiers to refuse service in the
occupied territories. The petition did not call for refusal but only
respect for the moral decision of the refusers. That is enough. The
ministry, now led by a nationalist-religious demagogue, promised "to
consider the matter".
These cases of a new McCarthyism concern, of course, only leftists.
No one demands the dismissal of the rabbi who prohibits the selling
or renting of apartments to Arabs. Or the rabbi who wrote that under
certain conditions it is permissible to kill non-Jews, including
children. Their salaries are paid by the state.
MANY MILLIONS around the world must by now have seen the Nabi Saleh
footage. It is impossible to assess the extent of the damage.
It is not that this clip is especially revolting. Nothing terrible
happens. It is the face of the occupation, the present face of
Israel, that imprints itself on the minds of the viewers.
For many years now, almost all news footage coming out of Israel has
concerned the deeds and misdeeds of the occupation. Gone and
forgotten is the face of Israel as the progressive state created by
the victims of the most hideous mass crime in modern history. The
state of pioneers who “made the desert bloom”. The bastion of
freedom and democracy in a turbulent region.
That picture has long been wiped out. The Israel that presents
itself to the world now is a state of occupiers, of oppressors, of
brutal colonizers, of soldiers armed to the teeth who arrest people
in the middle of the night and persecute them during the day.
This face changes the perception of Israel throughout the world.
Every TV clip and news item adds imperceptibly to this change. The
attitude of ordinary people around the world, also including Jews,
is changed. The damage is lasting and probably irremediable.
The terrified face of young Muhammad Tamimi may well haunt us for a
long time to come.
Uri Avnery is an Israeli
author and activist. www.avnery-news.co.il