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Let
me make it clear from the start: Army of Roses is a book of dubious
analysis and bias, and very clearly lies within the now very prolific
genre of post-9/11 books by so-called Middle-East/terrorism experts.
The fact that the author, Barbara Victor, cites from her interviews
with Sheikh Yassin and Abdul Aziz Rantisi, both recent victims of
Israeli assassinations, does not mean it is unbiased. In fact, she
makes the Palestinians appear somehow synonymous with Hamas, the
Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade and other such 'terrorist' organisations
who will not refrain from stooping so low as to use women. The name
of the book is taken from Yasser Arafat's reference in 2002 to the
women in the struggle for independence, as his "army of roses
who will crush Israeli tanks." Later that same day, Wafa Idris
became the first female suicide-bomber of the intifada.
So
while Barbara Victor talks of women not being able to withstand
the pressure from their own society and offers a simplistic analysis
of 'what makes a suicide-bomber,' there is conspicuous silence on
the overwhelming role of the unjust Israeli occupation. Not only
is the possibility that the atrocities of the Israeli occupation
might have contributed to the rise of suicide-bombers completely
ignored, but, according to Victor's reckoning, there are apparently
no ordinary people in Palestine who struggle to make a living and
live peacefully in the shadow of Israeli tanks. The author plays
her role in reinforcing the dangerous stereotype created by the
'free media.'
Everyone
who believes in freedom and the right to fight for it, admits that
first it was the 'children of stone' and now the 'army of roses'
who are powerful modern symbols of the Palestinian quest for regaining
the land taken away from them. But the author gives the acts of
defiance by Palestinian women against a powerful and brutal occupying
force, a pseudofeminist perspective - that of men exploiting women.
Victor
presents the intimate personal histories of the first five female
bombers who succeeded, and of some who failed. At times the stories
want to make you weep, and at other times they fill you with anger.
According to the author, Palestinian women are merely puppets of
their male handlers. The implication is that men make suicide-bombers
in the name of Islam; they are responsible for transforming women,
the bearers of life, into killing machines. The female suicide-bombers
are shown as having personal problems or 'mental instabilities'
as a result of sterility or illegitimate pregnancy. " If we
take Wafa Idris," explains Dr Tzoreff, [of the Ben Gurion University,
no less!], " the ultimate shaheeda, who is she after all? She
is a talented young woman, married and divorced because she was
sterile, desperate because she knew perfectly well there was no
future for her in any aspect of the Palestinian society
"
Victor has obviously not heard of the first suicide-bomber against
the Israeli forces, Loula Abboud, who was a 19-year-old Christian
Lebanese girl, commanding a small resistance cell in southern Lebanon
against the Israeli occupiers. Loula was a beautiful, popular and
well-educated middle-class girl, apparently without any social or
emotional problems. When she blew herself up in front of a group
of Israeli soldiers in 1985, she became a role model for Palestinian,
Chechen, Tamil and Kurdish suicide-bombers. In the Tamil and Kurdish
movements, women are responsible for more than a third of the suicide
attacks, including the one that killed the Indian premier, Rajiv
Gandhi.
Of
course, it is a tragedy when children have to come out with stones
to confront tanks and sophisticated weapons, which the Israelis
use against the Palestinians on a daily basis. Of course we weep
at the idea of human beings turning themselves into bombs against
the fourth largest army in the world. Is the author going to condemn
the Palestinians for 'using' children? Moreover, can women remain
passive spectators in a conflict situation where even children are
drawn in? To try to prove that the women agreed because of some
deep problems in their personal lives is to belittle their sacrifice.
Besides, all those who join any fighting force do so with the knowledge
that they might die in the battlefield. Is it kosher for Israeli
women soldiers to daily harass and kill Palestinians? Where is the
author's indignation at that? Also, don't the women who join the
Israeli army have any family problems? All women and men do at some
point in their lives. What drives them over the edge are circumstances
in which there is no hope - and the Israelis have created such circumstances
in the West Bank and Gaza. Suicide attacks have become the ultimate
'smart bomb' of the poor living in these areas. They are regarded
as efficient and there is no fear of the perpetrator being caught
and interrogated.
War
in the twenty-first century is either so sophisticated and high-tech
that it becomes almost banal, or it is so crude and primitive as
to be almost unbelievable. The tragedy therefore lies not in the
west's inability to define terrorism or guerilla warfare or even
in the morality or justification of war itself, but rather in its
failure to rid the world of injustices perpetrated by the so-called
democracies. Where the author implicitly condemns Hamas and others
for using God as their symbol, she lets the Israeli leadership off
the hook because they kill and maim in the name of a homeland for
the Jews. Who is to judge what is more justified and honourable?
If focusing on military targets [according to the Geneva Conventions
all settlers in occupied land are combatants] makes suicide-bombers
evil, then a regular army that kills civilians is equally evil.
How about the daisy-cutters, the MOABs, the smart bombs and depleted
uranium - are these less atrocious because these are used almost
exclusively by Israelis on Palestinians and now by the coalition
forces in Iraq and Afghanistan?
The
author's apparent agony over the young suicide-bombers, Wafa Idrees,
Darine Abu Aisha, Ayat Al-Akhras and Andaleep Suleiman, who lost
their lives in pursuit of their mission, rings false when weighed
against her total silence on the stockpiles of sophisticated weapons
developed in the military industrial complex of the US and sent
without any preconditions to Israel. Do these not kill women in
far greater numbers than the suicide bombers do?
There is a crucial connection between the first intifada and the
current wave of martyrdom within the Palestinian society. The children
who threw stones and Molotov cocktails and confronted Israeli soldiers
in 1987, and who watched their fathers and other male relatives
being beaten and humiliated by Israeli forces, are the young men
and women who are the martyrs of today. This fact escapes Victor
when she recounts the lives of these beautiful young women who make
the ultimate sacrifice for their homeland.
The author's political agenda is apparent throughout the
book. She condemns Yasser Arafat at every turn of the page, whilst
absolving the Israeli leaders just because they do not use suicide-bombers.
When she supports Abu Mazen as the Prime Minister, she forgets that
it was not the Palestinians who made him a leader but the American-
Israeli combine who want to desperately sideline Arafat, the chosen
leader of the people. According to Victor, it's all his fault. The
horrendous conditions in which the Palestinians live is all the
result of his inabilities to negotiate a Palestinian state on the
square centimeter of Holy Land the Israelis are prepared to relinquish.
Unfortunately, Victor's analysis has got nothing to do with the
hell-hole into which Israel has pushed the Palestinian economy and
society.
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