By P. David Hornik on 3.22.04 @ 12:08AM
If George Khoury had been a Jew, no one from the Palestinian Authority would have contacted his family to apologize.
JERUSALEM -- While I was spending Friday evening pleasantly with
a few guests, something not so pleasant happened just down the
street from me. George Khoury, a 22-year-old student of economics
and international relations at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
who was out jogging, was shot dead by terrorists from a passing
car. The terrorists were from the Al-Aksa Martyrs Brigades, part of
Yasser Arafat's Fatah movement. They sped away to one of the nearby
villages, and haven't been apprehended so far.
The "impersonal" nature of most terrorism, its aim of causing as
many random deaths as possible, is its most chilling aspect. In
this act there is a different element that is no less chilling,
almost a "personal" element. Seeing someone jogging quietly by the
road in the evening, getting a good look at him, and killing him
because (supposedly) he's a Jew -- is that personal or impersonal?
And if it turns out he was an Arab, how does that affect the
equation?
Indeed, the Martyrs Brigade was quick to apologize once it found
out its error. Its commander called George Khoury's father, the
well-known East Jerusalem lawyer Elias Khoury, to offer condolences
and say that the group considers George a "Palestinian martyr."
According to one report, Arafat himself called the family to offer
his condolences.
Note: if George Khoury had been a Jew, no one from the
Palestinian Authority would have contacted his family to apologize.
His identity as an Israeli Jew would be considered sufficient
grounds for execution. That's the Palestinian Authority -- an
observer at the United Nations, recipient of generous aid from the
United States and the European Union, currently a litigant against
Israel in the International Court of Justice at The Hague.
BUT THERE IS A FURTHER twist to this story. Elias Khoury, father of
George Khoury, is no stranger to the cruelty of terrorism. On a
summer day in 1975, a booby-trapped refrigerator placed by Fatah
exploded in downtown Jerusalem, and among the fourteen dead was
Daoud Khoury -- father of Elias, grandfather of George. Elias
Khoury, in other words, has lost his father and now his son because
they could have been Jews, or -- to look at it slightly differently
-- were in places frequented by Jews.
George Khoury was jogging, specifically, in the north-Jerusalem
neighborhood of French Hill. He lived in the adjacent Arab
neighborhood of Shuafat and habitually came here to jog, apparently
because of French Hill's relatively open stretches of road. My own
apartment is less than a five-minute walk from where the murder
occurred. Since the outbreak of the Oslo terror war in September
2000, French Hill, which borders the West Bank and is a few
kilometers south of Yasser Arafat's compound in Ramallah, has been
plagued by terror including several bus bombings.
In a statement it released, the Al-Aksa Martyrs Brigade
explained: "Our fighters thought they were dealing with a settler
who went for a jog in his neighborhood." Indeed, French Hill was
controlled by Jordan from 1948 to 1967, and was captured by Israel
in the Six Day War and annexed to Jerusalem. Technically then, as
the term is used, Israelis like me who live in French Hill are
settlers. Actually, like all the PA terror groups, the Martyrs
Brigade kills Israeli Jews in places like Tel Aviv, Haifa,
left-wing kibbutzim, or anywhere else they can find them. But they
know that in much of the world, the word settler connotes a
subhuman being with no right to life.
The United States and Spain are two democracies that have now
known horrific, onetime acts of mass terror. In Israel, terror is
our ambiance, our daily fare. To the long list of things we have to
think twice about doing -- riding a bus, going to a cafe, going to
a crowded place for a holiday celebration -- we in French Hill now
have to add walking in our neighborhood at night, and perhaps even
by day. Our army has the power to crush the terror but, for
geopolitical reasons that remain conjectural, is allowed to fight
it only tactically and partially. Unlike Osama bin Laden, Ayman
al-Zawahari, and others, Yasser Arafat remains a tolerable
terrorist, waging his war from the safety of his compound a little
up the road.
ONE WOULD LIKE TO take heart from the words of the bereaved father,
Elias Khoury: "The Al-Aksa Martyrs Brigades are individuals who are
trying to impose their way on everyone. This is a barbaric act that
will not change my worldview, which includes deep faith in
Palestinian rights. This act was carried out by a group that
undermines the cause of Palestinian justice, and harms the
Palestinian interest and takes it back years."
But he also said: "I am against all violent attacks against
innocent civilians, whether it be against Israeli civilians or
Palestinian civilians. This must stop. I wish the victims of recent
days could be the last ones, and bring the leaders on both sides to
reason."
Well, not quite. There are no violent attacks on Palestinian
civilians by Israeli forces; only accidental victims in the course
of legitimate warfare against terrorism. Israeli civilians who
attack Palestinians --as in the current case centered in Haifa --
are arrested and jailed. Would that similar things could be said
about the Palestinian Authority; would that a single Palestinian
could unequivocally condemn Palestinian terror -- even one so
devastated by it.
As for George Khoury, he was a graduate of the Anglican
International School in Jerusalem and said to be an outstanding
student at the Hebrew University, a participant in
interconfessional dialogue. He is being buried today in the
Christian cemetery on Mount Zion.
topics:
Economics, Law, Israel, United Nations, European Union