Cowardly Brutality Exposed: The Viral Video That Should Change The Israel/​Palestine Debate Forever

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It’s no won­der that this video clip went viral ear­li­er this month. It shows a masked Israeli sol­dier throw­ing a sob­bing Palestinian child to the ground, hold­ing him in a head­lock, squash­ing him, and then grap­pling with an assort­ment of women and girls as he tries — and ulti­mate­ly fails — to wrest the ter­ri­fied boy away from his mother.

Those few moments of footage revealed for all the world to see the sor­did real­i­ty of Israel’s every­day war against the Palestinian peo­ple. An army that is equipped and osten­si­bly pre­pared to take on oth­er armies — but that was last test­ed against a real army over four decades ago — con­tin­ues to be unleashed against a large­ly defense­less civil­ian pop­u­la­tion. And it con­tin­ues to fail abysmal­ly at its assigned task of bring­ing that pop­u­la­tion under con­trol and break­ing its will to resist. Indeed, in polit­i­cal terms, the end­ing of the video is as instruc­tive as the begin­ning: as the child is final­ly freed, the Israeli sol­dier, stripped of his coward’s face­mask, is forced igno­min­ious­ly to slink away, defeat­ed — though not before sul­len­ly and gra­tu­itous­ly fling­ing a part­ing stun-grenade into the faces of the child and his fam­i­ly, hav­ing, for all his bru­tal­i­ty, accom­plished pre­cise­ly nothing.

The scene sums up on a small scale the past decades of Israeli vio­lence, and it cap­tures the les­son that the Israelis seem inca­pable of get­ting into their heads once and for all: that the sheer capac­i­ty for brute force — at which they admit­ted­ly excel — does not, in itself, trans­late into polit­i­cal gain, and can, indeed, back­fire polit­i­cal­ly to pro­duce the oppo­site result from what was intend­ed: courage instead of fear; stead­fast­ness instead of col­lapse; defi­ance instead of submission.

One would have thought that the video would have occa­sioned some cir­cum­spec­tion, or at least awk­ward silence, among Israelis and what remains of their rapid­ly thin­ning fan club in the U.S., but no — of course not. Israel’s min­is­ter of cul­ture took to the media to declare that the army’s open-fire reg­u­la­tions ought to be changed to offi­cial­ly per­mit shoot­ing unarmed Palestinians in order “to put an end to the humil­i­a­tion.” Better, then, for the sol­dier to have gunned the fam­i­ly down in cold blood than to have failed to snatch their 12-year-old. Such are the choic­es to which Israel now finds itself reduced.

Meanwhile, the usu­al sus­pects on lone­ly late-night blogs and scarce­ly read third- and fourth-rate web­sites tried to recu­per­ate the tat­tered rem­nants of Israel’s dig­ni­ty by trot­ting out their cus­tom­ary clum­sy attempts at char­ac­ter assas­si­na­tion, in this case accus­ing the child’s father, Bassem Tamimi — a com­mu­ni­ty orga­niz­er at the fore­front of Nabi Saleh’s week­ly demon­stra­tions — of run­ning a “mas­ter­class” on polit­i­cal manip­u­la­tion and even a “media empire.” How, they ask in feigned shock, could a father put his chil­dren at such risk? (Note that they are, as always, more inter­est­ed in the rep­re­sen­ta­tion than in the real­i­ty, about which they have noth­ing to say.)

The answer, of course, is that Bassem did not choose the risk; the risk came to him and to his fam­i­ly. They did not choose to live under occu­pa­tion; the occu­pa­tion was imposed on them. They did not choose to have their vil­lage, Nabi Saleh in the West Bank, encir­cled by Jewish colonies implant­ed there in defi­ance of inter­na­tion­al law. They did not choose to lose more than half of their village’s land to decades of fur­ther ille­gal land-grabs by those colonies in pur­suit of a naked­ly racist project of colo­nial appro­pri­a­tion. They did not choose to be sur­round­ed by heav­i­ly armed for­eign fan­ta­sists who, claim­ing to be in direct com­mu­ni­ca­tion with their god, reg­u­lar­ly wreak hav­oc on Palestinian lives. They did not choose to be encir­cled and cut off from the world by a net­work of ditch­es, gates, walls, road­blocks and check­points manned by the Israeli army in order to pro­tect the very same fan­ta­sists who steal their land, defile their water wells and burn their olive groves to the ground.

I asked Bassem Tamimi about the choic­es that he felt were avail­able to him and his fam­i­ly. He summed it up very sim­ply: When you live under this kind of trans-gen­er­a­tional mil­i­tary occu­pa­tion, he said, the only choice you have is whether to sub­mit to the occu­pa­tion, yield­ing to it your land, your home, your lib­er­ty, your con­science — or to refuse its arbi­trary dic­tates, its end­less lita­nies of thou-shalt-nots, and to resist it by what­ev­er means are avail­able to you. Like the over­whelm­ing major­i­ty of Palestinians, Bassem and his fel­low vil­lagers choose to resist non­vi­o­lent­ly, by protest­ing and by doc­u­ment­ing the nature of their every­day lives to a world that is final­ly begin­ning to sit up and pay atten­tion on a large scale (as the viral spread of this video demon­strates). And above all by per­sist­ing, refus­ing to give up and dis­ap­pear into the obliv­ion of cold anony­mous silence to which the Israelis would con­sign the entire Palestinian peo­ple as they go on col­o­niz­ing their land.

As for chil­dren, not only does the occu­pa­tion not spare them, it tar­gets them direct­ly on a dai­ly basis: if not at protest march­es then at check­points; if not at check­points then at school; if not at school then in their beds at home. And so they too, Bassem points out, have to learn to be strong, or be rolled over by the occu­pa­tion before they are even able to walk.

Clearly, indeed, this isn’t just about Bassem and his fam­i­ly. Throughout the occu­pied ter­ri­to­ries, Israel’s war on the Palestinians has inevitably meant a war on Palestinian chil­dren. Sometimes this takes the form of out­right vio­lence, as in last summer’s assault on Gaza, when, through its utter­ly indis­crim­i­nate bom­bard­ment of dense­ly packed neigh­bor­hoods, Israel killed 2,205 Palestinians, the vast major­i­ty of them civil­ians, among them 521 chil­dren. Such episodes of out­right vio­lence are not the norm, how­ev­er, and Israel’s war pri­mar­i­ly takes the form of its sys­tem­at­ic occu­pa­tion and suf­fo­ca­tion of every­day life — its impo­si­tion of an array of rules, per­mits, cur­fews, road­blocks, check­points, walls, tun­nels and gates hem­ming in and par­a­lyz­ing the Palestinian pop­u­la­tion in order to facil­i­tate the growth and devel­op­ment of Jewish colonies in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. Accompanying this rigid array of pro­hi­bi­tions and restric­tions are mid­night raids into Palestinian towns — the Israeli army burst­ing into fam­i­ly homes in the mid­dle of the night and snatch­ing sleep­ing peo­ple from their beds. According to the United Nations Office for the Coördination of Humanitarian Affairs (UN OCHA), the Israeli army con­ducts an aver­age of 79 such raids a week: 11 each night.
Read more here :Cowardly bru­tal­i­ty exposed: The viral video that should change the Israel/​Palestine debate forever