'...raped her and killed her'

Recently I was going through some old news/article clippings and read an article I had saved to read when I had time, finally I came across it after quite a while and read it few days ago. My clipping was from another publication, but in order to share it with you all here I searched it online and found it on another publication’s webiste.

This may have been discussed on these pages before, back in 2003 when the story came up, but what are three years for this story from over 50 years ago?

Columnist Professor M Shahid Alam narrates how a young Palestnian girl was raped and killed in 1949 and unveils the blatant madness that still prevails. What is the significance of 1 rape or 1 murder he asks? It defines the entire scenario, the entire phenomenon, the cleansing, the oppression, the mentality…

Do read this…
God bless innocent Muslims all over the world

http://www.counterpunch.org/alam11142003.html

Voiding the Palestinians

M. Shahid Alam

*“Palestine belongs to the Arabs in the same sense that England belongs to the English or France to the French.”
Gandhi [1] *

*“Palestine will be as Jewish as England is English.”*Chaim Weizman [2]

    On October 29, 2003, a leading Israeli daily,       Ha'aretz, reported a rape-murder that occurred more than       fifty years ago at Nirim, an Israeli military outpost in the       Negev. The victim was a Palestinian girl, in her early or mid-teens,       or younger; the perpetrators of this crime were members of the       Israeli Defense Force.[3] Six days later, The Guardian       also reported this crime, but US papers did not think this was       news that is fit for print.[4] In the United States, the media       prefers to shield Israel from adverse notice.


    **What is the significance of a single       rape-murder in the long and tortuous history of the dispossession       of one people by another?** No dispossession ever makes a pretty       picture. Moreover, the dispossession of Palestinians is no ordinary       dispossession. It is not ordinary because it involved the complete       voiding of one people by another: Palestine had to be       emptied of its ancient Palestinian population to make room for       Jews. It is not ordinary because much of this emptying was telescoped       within a few short months (in 1948) rather than over centuries       or decades. It was not ordinary because the people doing the       voiding had themselves been voided from their spaces in Europe,       a people with brilliant accomplishments, voided from the spaces       they had helped to enrich. It is not ordinary because the voiding,       the violence it demanded, had been carefully planned, orchestrated,       justified, explained, excused, and, after it's success, celebrated       and glorified in Israeli and Western media.


    **What is the significance of a single       rape-murder--I ask again--in the midst of the voiding of Palestine       implemented through the deceit of declarations and the farce       of international laws; through repeated wars and grinding repressions;       through the backing of great powers and support of the world's       organized Jewry; through ethnic cleansings, orchestrated massacres       and obliterated villages; through bombings of cinder block apartments,       hospitals, schools and workshops; through armed settlements built       on hilltops; through house demolitions, curfews, sieges, trenches,       and bypass roads dividing communities; through a million daily       humiliations at a thousand checkpoints; and now through a gargantuan       wall, coiling, advancing, ominous, that dreams of squeezing the       last drop of blood from beleaguered Palestinian communities in       the West Bank?**
    **Perhaps this single rape-murder is       significant. The voiding of a people necessarily involves suffering       on a monumental scale. The Zionists built their Jewish state       by destroying the lives of millions of Palestinians over three       generations. The scale of this suffering has been documented       in reports, in statistics of villages destroyed, houses demolished,       and men, women and children evicted from their homes, robbed,       incarcerated, bombed, shot at, tortured, killed. However, statistics       do not tell stories; they will not grip the reader with the pain       of the victims. As the Holocaust reveals its hellish intent in       images and artifacts, so the narrative of Palestinian voiding       must be conveyed in images, metaphors and allegories, each of       which contains in miniature, in essence, the great pain that       the Palestinians have endured for more than eighty years.**  

We must read the Ha’aretz disclosure of the rape-murder in the Negev as an allegory of the fate decreed by the god-like Zionists for an inferior Arab population. Read with understanding, the report reveals the darkness at the heart of the Zionist project, its racism, its moral obtuseness, its blindness to the irony of the grave injustice the Zionists intended to do to the Palestinians. The rape-murder of a nameless Palestinian girl–most likely a minor–by IDF soldiers graphically conveys the unequal contest between the Zionists and Palestinians, as the Zionists sought to void the Palestinians so that they could resurrect a Jewish state that had been dead for some eighteen hundred years.

    **The only written record of the rape-murder,       before the Ha'aretz report, is to be found in the diary       of David Ben-Gurion, the first prime minister of Israel. He made       a terse but telling entry about this episode. *"It was decided       and carried out: they washed her, cut her hair, raped her and       killed her."***[5] Ben-Gurion could be describing a military       operation, efficiently completed, according to plan, without       hesitation, and without any loss of time. His verbs are active       verbs: they speak of strong men, determined men, confident of       their power to decide, to execute, to wash, to cut, rape and       kill. The decisiveness, the finality of their actions is awe-inspiring.


    **On the morning of August 12, 1949, the       Platoon Commander at the Nirim outpost in the Negev, Second Lieutenant       Moshe, organized a patrol with six soldiers. During their patrol,       they shot and killed a Palestinian after he threw down       his rifle and was running away. Later, they captured two unarmed       Arab men with a girl. The men were driven away with shots fired       over their heads, but the girl was taken back to the outpost       at Nirim. The patrol had decided that she was "****able."       On their way back to the outpost, the patrol shot and killed       six camels, leaving them to rot.**

At the outpost, while Moshe was away on another patrol, the Platoon Sergeant, Michael prepared the girl for rape. He removed her traditional garments, forced her to stand under a water pipe, and washed her with his own hands, while everyone watched. The washing done, he dressed her in a jersey and shorts, and took her back to a hut where he raped her. When the girl complained to Moshe about the rape, he ordered his men to wash her–again–“so that she would be clean for ****ing.” The soldiers cut the girl’s hair, washed her head with kerosene, placed her under the water pipe, and sent her back to the hut in jersey and shorts. She was now clean.

    Later the same day, the soldiers at the       Nirim outpost gathered in a large tent for the festivities of       Sabbath eve. The Platoon Commander, Moshe, inaugurated the Sabbath       by blessing the wine, a soldier read from the Bible, after which       there was singing, eating, drinking, jokes and fun. Before the       party ended, Moshe asked his men to decide the Palestinian captive's       fate with a vote. They had two options: the captive could work       in the kitchen; or they could have her. The girl's fate was decided       democratically. The soldiers chanted, "We want a ****."       Commander Moshe carried out the will of the majority.       He and his sergeant went in first, leaving the girl unconscious.


    The next morning, when the Palestinian       girl protested, the Platoon Commander threatened to kill her.       And, indeed, later, he ordered Sergeant Michael to execute the       girl. They stripped her before execution; a soldier wanted his       shorts back. The Sergeant, accompanied by a medic and two soldiers,       took the girl out in the desert and shot her in the head as she       ran. Overcome by pity, just in case she was alive and in pain,       a soldier pumped a few more bullets into the girl's body. Washed       clean, her hair cut, raped repeatedly, the Palestinian       captive now lay dead in a shallow grave.


    Second Lieutenant Moshe drove down to       Be'er Sheva later that same evening to watch a movie. At the       theatre, he met his Battalion Commander, Major Yehuda Drexler,       who had ordered that the Palestinian captive be taken back to       where she had been found. When the Major asked his subordinate       if he had done so, Moshe replied: "They killed her, it was       a shame to waste the gas." A Palestinian's life is not worth       a gallon or half of gas.
    When Captain Uri, the Company Commander,       asked Second Lieutenant Moshe to explain what had happened to       the Palestinian girl, this is what he wrote in his report:         **"In my patrol on 12.8.49 I encountered         Arabs in the territory under my command, one of them armed. I         killed the armed Arab on the spot and took his weapon. I took         the Arab female captive. On the first night the soldiers abused         her and the next day I saw fit to remove her from the world         (emphasis added)."**

That was all. It was dismissive in its terseness, as if to say it would be a waste of our time discussing the rape-murder of a Palestinian. However, if you insist on a report, here it is: We found an Arab girl, raped her, and “I saw fit to remove her from the world.”

    It is that last phrase that is so haunting,       imperial, Biblical, even divine. It sums up the ethos of a whole       age, an imperial age that took pride in its superior race and       its civilizing mission. An age in which various Europeans nations       "saw fit" to conquer, colonize, enslave, exterminate,       displace, 'liberate' or 'educate' the rest of humanity, anyone       different from them in color or religion. No matter what injury       the Europeans inflicted on the natives, it had to be good for       them. Nothing but goodness could flow from such superior beings.       Zionism and its fruit, Israel, are but late flowerings of that       Imperial age.


    At the trial for this rape-murder, which       was held in secret the same year, Second Lieutenant Moshe denied       raping the girl. "Morally speaking," he argued, "it       was impossible to sleep with such a dirty girl." Most likely,       he knew that this was an argument that would carry weight. It       is a basic premise of the civilizing mission. "The native       is always dirty, his clothes filthy, his manners crude."       There is an added twist here. "It isn't raping an Arab girl       that would have been immoral, but that she was dirty." The       Court acquitted Moshe of rape, though he received a sentence       of 15 years for murder.


    Moshe offered a second defense. He told       the Court repeatedly that Captain Uri, one of the Company Commanders       in the battalion, had told him in private that when it came to       the Arabs, he should engage in "killing, slaughter."       The Court rejected this charge with its own psychoanalysis. The       Judges wrote: "The court believes that the words "killing,       slaughter" originate in a psychosis that seems to have taken       root in the officer's blood, to the effect that Arabs were to       be massacred indiscriminately." The Court chose not to cross-examine       Captain Uri on this point.


    Sergeant Michael pleaded that he was       merely following orders when he executed the girl. The judges       rejected his plea, but passed a "very light" sentence       of five years in prison because of extenuating circumstances.       "At the time there was a general feeling of contempt       for the life of Arabs in general and infiltrators in particular,       and sometimes wanton events occurred in this sphere. All this       helped to create an atmosphere of 'anything goes.' We are convinced       that this atmosphere existed at the Nirim outpost too (emphases       added)." The judges at the Nuremberg trial too could have       urged the same extenuating circumstance when passing sentences       on Nazi criminals. After all, the Nazis too operated in a general       climate of deep hatred against Jews, a hatred that had been bred       for close to two thousand years. Thankfully, the judges at Nuremberg       did not use this argument.


    In addition, when Moshe accused Captain       Uri of urging "killing, slaughter" against Arabs, the       judges dismissed this is as the invention of a psychotic mind.       Yet, in arguing for a reduced sentence, they use the argument       that there existed at the time "a general feeling of contempt       for the life of Arabs in general." Were the judges at the       murder-rape trial of the Palestinian girl schizophrenic? Or,       were they only protecting their own kind?


    Those who are familiar with the tragedy       of Palestinian dispossession will have read--as I have--in the       events of August 12 and 13, 1949, at the Nirim military outpost       in the Negev, an allegory of that dispossession. In two days,       this nameless girl, a minor, was made to suffer the degradation,       shame, abuse, rape and, eventually, death, which has been the       fate--figuratively, and, in many cases, concretely--of the Palestinians       and their homeland for more than eighty years. We observe several       striking parallels between the two gory narratives. We see it       in the girl's capture by a platoon of soldiers; in the Commander's       decision to decide her fate by a vote; in the question about       the girl's fate that is put to vote (use her as a slave worker       or sex slave); in stripping the girl of her traditional garments,       washing her, cutting her hair; raping her, the officers going       in first; in the order for her execution when she protests; in       the secret trial held; in the officer's language ("I saw       fit "); in the acquittal from rape charges; in the light       sentences; and in the judges' use of extenuating circumstances.

  
    And now the parallels are being pushed       towards a final convergence--in the final obliteration of the       national existence of Palestinians--with the building of the       strangulating wall; with levels of unemployment among Palestinians       reaching 70 percent; with malnutrition among Palestinian children       reaching famine levels; with the acceleration in the pace of       ethnic cleansing; the unashamed American backing for the war-criminal,       Ariel Sharon's extreme right-wing policies; and growing demands       for a final round of ethnic cleansing to rid historical Palestine       of all Palestinians. At least, that is the intent of the Neoconservatives,       Christian Zionists and Israel's right-wing Likudniks. It is an       intent that all right-thinking people--including right-thinking       Americans and Israelis -- must oppose before the American-Israeli       warmongers, with their fingers on nuclear buttons, push the world       over the precipice.


    ***Notes:***
    1. Mohandas K. Gandhi, Harijan,       74, November 20, 1938: 239-242.
    2. Chaim Weizmann, Trial and Error       (Greenwood: 1921/1972).
    3. Aviv Lavie and Moshe Gorali, "*(http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/%20355227.html)," Ha'aretz,       October 29, 2003: 
    4. Chris McGreal, "[Israel       learns of a hidden shame in its early years](http://www.guardian.co.uk/israel/Story/0%2C2763%2C1077148%2C00.html)," The       Guardian, November 4, 2003: 
    5. Lavie and Gorali, "I saw fit       to remove her from the world."


    **M. Shahid Alam       is professor of economics at Northeastern University. His last       book, Poverty from the Wealth of Nations, was published       by Palgrave in 2000. He is also a contributor to CounterPunch's       hot new book: [The       Politics of Anti-Semitism](http://www.easycarts.net/ecarts/CounterPunch/CounterPunch_Bookshop.html). He may be reached at [EMAIL="[email protected]"][email protected].       Visit his webpage at [http://msalam.net](http://msalam.net/).        ***

Re: '...raped her and killed her'

BTW, Prof M. Shahid Alam is the brother of the famous war hero and jet fighter ace Sqn Ldr (now Air Cdr retd.) M. M. Alam SJ (Bar).

Re: '...raped her and killed her'

The thing that's shocking is that it was "decided democratically".... it was calculated and cold..
speechless..

Re: '...raped her and killed her'

Sickening !!!

The fact that so called civilized people (the courts) dismissed this like some guy slaughtering an animal tells me what it really means to be a zionist. They will pay one day. Next time it will be worse than the so called holocaust. The world will see fit that they no longer use our oxygen.

Re: '...raped her and killed her'

Just another day in the life of a Palestinian...Just another day in 80 years of excruciating occupation...

Re: '...raped her and killed her'

If you study jewish jurisprudence and religious law, you'd find it to be the most supramcist and racist of all ideologies...the notions of justice, fairness, compassion, and humanity are only valid for Jews, non-jews are not accorded the same luxuries...It is justifiable to maim, kill, rape, pillage and oppress as long as the victims are non-jews...and this whole concept has its genesis in the perverted idea of the chosen people...

Re: '...raped her and killed her'

And they yelled, "My life in exchange for yours."

Re: '...raped her and killed her'

Good post HZ!

Re: '...raped her and killed her'

Merc2K will find a way to defend this too. Lets wait for the genious.

Re: '...raped her and killed her'

Thanks Mo

Re: '...raped her and killed her'

Cold blooded murderers.

Re: '...raped her and killed her'

Wow, interesting.

Re: '...raped her and killed her'

...and with this paragraph you prove yourself spiritual kin to the soldiers described above.

Re: '...raped her and killed her'

[QUOTE]

...and with this paragraph you prove yourself spiritual kin to the soldiers described above.

[/QUOTE]

True story. The article makes me sick and that paragraph makes me sick. Some people never learn from past mistakes...