Relay-Version: version B 2.10 5/3/83; site utzoo.UUCP Posting-Version: version B 2.10.3 4.3bsd-beta 6/6/85; site cad.UUCP Path: utzoo!lsuc!watmath!clyde!burl!ulysses!ucbvax!cad!hijab From: hijab@cad.UUCP (Raif Hijab) Newsgroups: net.politics Subject: Re: Anti-Moslem Bigotry (back to terrorism) Message-ID: <115@cad.UUCP> Date: Tue, 25-Mar-86 20:15:05 EST Article-I.D.: cad.115 Posted: Tue Mar 25 20:15:05 1986 Date-Received: Sat, 29-Mar-86 09:20:28 EST References: <16@mit-vax.UUCP> Organization: U. C. Berkeley CAD Group Lines: 76 Summary: Significance of Deir Yassin In article <16@mit-vax.UUCP>, oaf@mit-vax.UUCP (Oded Feingold) writes: > Re Deir Yassein: As an intelligent man told me recently, it's > interesting that it receives so much concern, 36 years afterward. > It's an evidentiary point that the Zionists are not as terroristic as > some would have you believe. Else there would be a plethora of cases. > -- There have been many other Israeli massacres of Palestinians in this century. The significance of Deir Yassin lies in its triggering of the mass exodus of Palestinians from their homes two months before the British withdrawal from Palestine, and the creation of the Jewish State. This is best exemplified by the words of Chaim Weizmann, who became Israel's first president, "it was a miraculous cleaning of the land; the miraculous simplification of Israel's task." Some examples (of many): - Nasiruddin, April 1948. Irgun-Stern forces attacked this village in the Tiberias region, and killed most of its inhabitants. - Mazraat el-Khoury, May 1948. Haganah troops killed and multilated men, women and children. Some who locked themselves inside a house were burnt to death. -Beit Drass, May 1948. This village in the Gaza region was totally wiped out. Bodies were mutilated and the village was levelled. - Qibya village, October 1953. Unit 101 commanded by Ariel Sharon crossed the border into the West Bank village, and shot up dozens of homes. UN observers stated, "Bullet-riddled bodies near the doorways and multiple bullet hits on the doors of the demolished houses indicated that the inhabitants had been forced to remain inside until their homes were blown up over them .... Israeli soldiers moved about blowing up buildings, firing into doorways and windows with automatic weapons and throwing hand grenades." Sixty six Palestinian men, women and children died in this operation. Israeli excuse: reprisal for the killing of a mother and two children in an Israeli village by a solitary intruder not connected with the village of Qibya. (In the four decades since the creation of Israel, the total number of Israeli victims of 'Palestinian terrorism' s comes to a few hundred. During the same period, Palestinian victims of Israeli terrorism have reached the tens of thousands, not counting the hundreds of thousands displaced by Israeli raids and war actions against cvillians.) - Kafr Qasem, October 1956. On the eve of Israel's invasion of Egypt, a curfew was imposed on Arab villages WITHIN Israel's borders. Within half an hour of informing the village Mukhtar (mayor) of the curfew, forty seven men, women and children were shot at close range by a detachment of the Israeli Frontier Guards with automatic weapons as they were returning from their fields. Eleven officers and soldiers were put on trial for the massacre. At the same time, they received a fifty percent increase in salary. The two officers receiving the 'harshest' sentences were released in less than a year, due to the efforts of 'the Committee to Free the Prisoners' and Israel's head of State. Nine months later, Officer Dahan, convicted of killing forty three Arabs in one hour, was appointed 'officer responsible for Arab Affairs' in the town of Ramle. - Samu', November 1966. Israeli army crossed into the West Bank village on the Jordanian side, and virtually demolished the village, killing many men, women and children. - Nabatiyeh, May 1974. Israeli Air Force raided this Southern Lebanese town 'in retaliation for Maalot'. A UN report states that the Palestinian refugee camp in the town was "60 percent destroyed, 20 percent badly damaged, 20 percent badly destroyed. Not one house had a roof left." This was part of a continuous pattern of raids on South Lebanon in the Seventies in which Lebanese and Palestinian civilians died by the hundreds, and tens of thousands were made homeless. In Nabatiyeh, a Lebanese district center, there clearly was no evidence of any armed guerillas. - Sabra & Shatila, September 1982. Phalangists working in close cooperation with, and under the direction of the Israeli army led by Ariel Sharon, massacred an estimated two thousand Palestinians in the two refugee camps in Beirut. (The estimate ranges from a low of 400 dead according to Israel, to a high in the thousands. The exact number will probably never be known, as mass graves were being filled in even as the massacre was in progress.) Israel has engaged in an effective whitewash, blaiming the episode entirely on the Phalange. In fact, it was part of a failed joint plan to expel the half million Palestinians from Lebanon, by creating a mass exodus.