Ari Morgenstern
For the Journal-Constitution
Published on: 07/24/08
In April 1979, four members of the Palestine Liberation Front boarded a small rubber boat and sped down the coast of Lebanon. They landed on the beach of a small Israeli town and promptly killed a police officer who approached them. Then they went hunting for any life they could take. As they approached an apartment complex, they divided themselves into two death squads, one of which broke into the home of Danny and Smadar Haran. Danny grabbed his 4-year-old daughter, Einat, and tried to flee. Smadar and the couple's 2-year-old baby, Yael, hid in a crawl space in their home.
Yael died when her mother accidentally suffocated the baby in a frantic attempt to muffle her cries. Danny and Einat were taken prisoner by the terrorists. Father and daughter were led down to the beach, where Danny was shot in the head and Einat was beaten to death with the butt of a rifle. Yael died when her mother accidentally suffocated the baby in a frantic attempt to muffle her cries. Danny and Einat were taken prisoner by the terrorists. Father and daughter were led down to the beach, where Danny was shot in the head and Einat was beaten to death with the butt of a rifle.
One of the perpetrators of this depraved act was Samir Kuntar. He was captured by Israeli authorities and effectively sentenced to life in prison (Israeli law allows for the death penalty only in the case of convicted Nazis). Last week, as part of a prisoner exchange, Kuntar was handed over to Lebanon, where he received a hero's welcome. The men Israel sought in return were kidnapped Israeli soldiers Ehud Goldwasser and Eldad Regev. Upon receipt of the soldiers' coffins, it became evident that the two men had been dead for some time.
After viewing the stark contrast between the somber images of an Israeli nation in mourning and the massive rally in Beirut honoring Kuntar, I am compelled to wonder what society would glorify a child killer. How can a nation honor a man who, in the dead of night, slaughtered virtually an entire family? There are things that we do not wish upon even our worst enemy. Killing a man in front of his daughter's eyes and beating a defenseless child to death certainly are among these; and yet at the rally, as Hezbollah claimed Kuntar as one of their own, shouts of joy and support filled the streets of Beirut.
Far too often, we in the West are deaf to the implications of such rallies. We pass off the threats and vitriol as a subcultural phenomenon, ignoring that we ultimately seek peace and relations with that subculture. Calls for the West to engage in increasing dialogue with the advocates of Islamic imperialism that dominate the Persian capital and much of the Arab world grow louder each day, but last week's events show the fallacy of this position.
The enemies of Israel wish to wipe that nation off the map and then, undoubtedly, move on to the next Western target. Today, this conflict is not only about territory or political power. Rather, it is rooted in the viewpoint held by some followers of Islam that those who worship God differently than they should be killed for their religious beliefs or submit to Islamic rule. Hezbollah's embrace of murderers like Kuntar is the practical application of Islamic imperialism's genocidal philosophy.
However, the crowd of tens of thousands that rallied to Kuntar's support last week in Beirut does not view itself as advocates of genocide or supporters of a child murderer, because it does not acknowledge the victims' basic humanity.
History has shown that peace is achievable only when one side in a conflict is fully defeated or both sides make the conscious choice to at least begin to behave honorably. The West may not be perfect, but we seek peace and aspire to treat our enemies justly. Until certain portions of the Islamic world choose to regain some semblance of honor by rejecting rather than hailing the murderers in their midst, peace will remain beyond our grasp. Meanwhile, in the West, we can certainly discuss ideas for reaching a diplomatic solution to the conflict with Islamic imperialism, but it is presently a futile endeavor, as our existence and humanity are simply non-negotiable.
> Ari Morgenstern is an Atlanta media relations consultant.
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