Fri Aug 31 2012 |
Reprinted from 2003. Published in Makor Rishon and in the Jerusalem Post (2003).
A news story which shocked the world this week
dealt with the crushing of American citizen Rachel Corrie by an IDF
bulldozer, who ostensibly blocked with her body a bulldozer about to
demolish the home of a Palestinian terrorist in Gaza, made huge
headlines all over the world. I asked to speak with the spokesman of
International Solidarity Movement Mike Shaik, who passed me on to Lynn
Clausen, a 24-year old resident of Washington from the Christians
Peacemakers Team based in Hebron, which trains the ISM volunteers.
Shaik and Clausen sent me to speak with Corrie's
friends who were with her at the time she was crushed. Corrie's friend
Joe Smith described me how Corrie sat on a mound of dirt facing the IDF
bulldozer making its way to the house it was about to demolish.
"Rachel had two options", Smith says. "When the
bulldozer started to dig in the dirt pile, the pile started to move, and
she could have rolled sideways quickly or fallen backwards to avoid
being hit. But Rachel leaned forward to climb to the top of the dirt
pile. The bulldozer's digging drew her downward, and its driver could
not see her anymore. So without lifting the scoop, he turned backward
and she was already underneath the blade"
Smith's description is very important, since the
picture published by Reuters shows Corrie standing to the left of the
bulldozer, in a location where the driver can see her very clearly, as
she holds a megaphone in her hand. Beneath the picture's caption is
written: "Photographed before Rachel Corrie was run over by an IDF
bulldozer." Everyone who looks at the picture and the text understands
that the driver, who sees the American civilian standing in front of
him, just kept on going, crushing her to death. But Joe Smith says that
the picture was taken hours before she was run over, which happened at
5:00 p.m., and not a few minutes beforehand. Smith emphasizes that at
the time of the incident and during it, there were no photographers in
the area.
After I checked the pictures that Reuters
distributed to the world's newspapers, I noticed the difference between
the colors of the sky in the picture where Corrie stands with the
megaphone and the one that shows the body after the incident. The time
the picture was taken also appears in text on the Internet site, saying
that it was in the morning. It is not noted that the incident took place
hours later.
I called Reuters's photography department and asked for an explanation.
The photography editor said that the pictures
were not taken by his agency, which had no photographers in the area at
all, and that the pictures came to them via ISM.
The Reuters photography editor added that he wrote clearly that the pictures had been taken by ISM.
I pointed out to him that no such notice appeared
in the pictures I saw on the Reuters site. I asked the director general
of Reuters in Israel, Tim Heritage, whether Reuters has a set policy of
using pictures provided by political organizations, and Heritage
replied that it is widespread.
Heritage promised into check the matter of the
misleading picture that was taken before the incident and asked me to
call him back in an hour.
After an hour, Heritage was no longer available
to speak with me. I went into the Reuters website and was amazed to find
that the pictures of Corrie had been removed.
Thus the American woman who came to protect the
homes of Palestinian terrorists with her own body was wiped out twice:
once by an IDF bulldozer and then by the Reuters agency, which came to
"document" the incident.
The damage the agency caused still requires
repair. A picture is worth a thousand words. The picture of Rachel
Corrie with the megaphone, standing before the bulldozer of the "cruel
Zionist occupier", who was "crushed after this picture was taken", as
Reuters falsely wrote, will be engraved in the memories of those who
follow events in the Middle East.
[By no strange coincidence, the web site of the
International Solidarity Movement, at www.palsolidarity.org, features
the picture of Rachel Corrie, holding her proverbial megaphone, with a
caption which says that Rachel was in the clear sight of the bulldozer
driver before he ran her over. Yes, five hours before...]
Rachel Corrie in front of IDF vehicle, five hours BEFORE she was crushed by another IDF vehicle
Rachel Corrie at the time of her death
search.news.yahoo.com/search/news?p=Rachel&b=41&c=news_photos
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