"An eye for 
				an eye only ends up making the whole world blind." 
				
		 
		
			It is becoming clear that the (Israeli) government, army and 
			security services assumed from the start that the three boys were no 
			longer alive.  Probably, it was no surprise for them that there did 
			not come any claim of responsibility, and no proposal of negotiating 
			their release. The soldiers who conducted the searches on the ground 
			were instructed to turn every stone, quite literally, and also to 
			empty water holes and search their bottoms. The soldiers were sent 
			to look for dead bodies, not for hostages. But on the media were 
			imposed gag orders, preventing them from publishing information 
			pointing to the death of the boys. The Israeli public was called to 
			take part in mass prayers and rallies on city squares with the call 
			"Bring back our boys" and one gets the impression that also the 
			three families going from hope to despair were not informed to the 
			full.
To whom was it worthwhile and why? 
It is not 
			difficult to guess. Long before Gil-Ad Shaer, Eyal Yifrah and 
			Naftali Fraenkel took their fateful ride, 
			Binyamin Netanyahu already marked as a primary target the 
			Palestinian Reconciliation Agreement. He was determined to 
			drive a wedge and break up at any price the "Technocrat Government" 
			created jointly by Fatah and Hamas. From the first day the 
			government of Israel declared Hamas to be responsible for the 
			kidnapping - a clear proof, if it exists, has not been published 
			until this moment.
		
			Under cover of the great outcry "Bring Back Our Sons" the army 
			started a widespread detention campaign, which had no direct 
			connection with the kidnapping. Operation Brother's Keeper was 
			mainly directed against "the civilian infrastructure" of Hamas - 
			starting with the Speaker of the Palestinian Legislature down to 
			grassroots activists of Hamas-linked educational institutions and 
			charity associations. It was clear that the people detained knew 
			nothing about the kidnapping, and nobody expected them to know. But, 
			as was noted with satisfaction by knowledgeable commentators such as 
			Alex Fishman of Yediot Achronot, the kidnapping created "a rare 
			window of opportunity" in which the world kept silent about a 
			massive detention campaign which under different circumstances would 
			have caused a wave of international protest. Nor was there much ado 
			about the killing of several Palestinians, among them boys of the 
			same age as the Israelis which the army supposedly was searching 
			for.
		
			And Netanyahu made the propaganda most out of the "moral high 
			ground" of searching for innocent kids, kidnapped on the way home 
			from school.  It was pushed to the background that the school 
			happened to be in a settlement and that the three students were 
			hitchhiking in the heart of an occupied territory.
		
			It came eve to sending the three mothers to The United Nations Human 
			Rights Council in Geneva, followed by a chorus of  protest in the 
			Israeli media against the "hypocrisy and cynicism" of the Council 
			members  closing their ears to the mothers' heartfelt outcry. 
			Indeed, the UN Human Rights Council is an easy and convenient target 
			of criticism. It is not staffed by Human Rights activists but by 
			official representatives of governments - some of which are 
			themselves responsible for severe violations of human rights and all 
			of which have many political and economic interests and hidden 
			agendas. Hypocrisy and cynicism there are in plenty, but what could 
			compare with the cynicism of giving mothers false hope.
		
		
			When the three bodies were discovered after 18 days, the gates of 
			hate were opened wide. It was not the mothers, or the families that 
			opened them. Exactly they did not demand anything but that those who 
			killed their sons would be caught and punished. But there were 
			enough others who were blowing on the flames of hatred, starting 
			with the Prime Minister himself who used a famous poetry quote 
			"Satan himself has not created a fitting revenge for the blood of a 
			small child." Like most of those who quote this, Netanyahu forgot 
			the other words of Bialik's poem: "Cursed be the one who cries 'take 
			revenge' ."
		
			In the cabinet resolution it was stated "they were murdered by human 
			beasts", and this was quoted in banner headlines. From the official 
			speech at the mass funeral on the following day the media quoted the 
			words: "we sanctify life, while our neighbors sanctify death." In 
			the night in between, between human beasts and life sanctifiers, 
			another Palestinian youth was killed by army fire at the Jenin 
			Refugee Camp, but his death was only marginally reported.
		
		
			"A whole nation and thousands of years of history demand revenge" 
			proclaimed Rabbi Noam Pearl, general secretary of the National 
			Religious Bney Akiva Youth Movement. He demanded the formation of "a 
			corpse of avengers, which will not stop at the mark of 300 
			Phillistine foreskins," referring to one of the most barbaric acts 
			which the Bible attributes to King David. The words of Rabbi Pearl 
			aroused many protests,  also inside the traditionally right-leaning 
			Bney Akiva movement itself, and several of its branches broke away, 
			altogether. Still, the inflammatory calls for revenge spread with a 
			speed which would not have been possible before the creation of 
			electronic social networks. In the "revenge page" created on 
			Facebook there were numerous selfie photos: soldiers pointing the 
			gun at the viewer with the words "let the army smash", and girls 
			carrying the sign "to hate Arabs is not racism but a moral 
			principle".
		
			From Facebook it was but a short distance to the streets of 
			Jerusalem where hundreds were rampaging and shouting "Death to the 
			Arabs!" and "Revenge! Revenge!" and were running all across the 
			city, searching for Arabs to beat up. The police announced that it 
			had mobilized large forces on Jaffa Street and the Machaneh Yehuda 
			Market taking, credit for succeeding in preventing Arab passers-by 
			being killed. But at 4am on the same night two unknown persons came 
			to the Shuafat Neighborhood in East Jerusalem and found there a 16 
			year old boy named Mohammed Abu Khdeir, who was studying to become 
			an electrician and who was on his way to the neighborhood mosque 
			because of Ramadan. These unknowns dragged the boy into a car and  
			later on that morning his burnt body was found in a West Jerusalem 
			park.
		
			The authorities of the State of Israel, which were so clear and 
			decisive about the responsibility of Hamas in the case of the 
			previous kidnapping and murder showed themselves very hesitant in 
			this case. Was it the act of people who were influenced by those 
			very strong calls for revenge, looking for a Palestinian 16 year old 
			boy? That certainly sounds plausible. But from the police came an 
			alternative - i.e. that Mohammed Abu Khdeir was maybe a homosexual 
			murdered by Palestinians and that just by coincidence this happened 
			exactly on the night of the mob attacks on the streets of Jerusalem.
		
		
			Israeli politicians and columnists who refer to this murder are 
			taking very good care to note that the circumstances of the murder 
			and the identity of the perpetrators are still unknown and that one 
			should patiently wait for the results of the police investigation. 
			But it would be difficult to expect the inhabitants of Shuafat to 
			also show such patience. In the last days the Palestinian 
			neighborhoods of East Jerusalem burst out in demonstrations and 
			riots whose like was not seen there even in the days of the first 
			and second Intifada, and during the boy's funeral 35 people were 
			wounded from police fire.  A voice of compassion came from the 
			bereaved  Fraenkel family: “There is no difference between blood and 
			blood, There is no justification, no forgiveness and no atonement 
			for any murder.”
		
			Yesterday evening those who still try to keep their sanity in the 
			madness around gathered for a rally on Habima Square in Tel-Aviv. 
			Thousands of people turned up, and carried the signs "There is no 
			consolation in revenge!" and "No to revenge! Yes to a political 
			solution!" and "Political solution - a deathblow to terrorism!" and 
			"An eye for an eye will make the whole world blind" with a picture 
			of Mahatma Gandhi. They chanted: "We will not let extremists run our 
			lives!" / "Jews and Arabs refuse to be enemies!" / "Government lies 
			will not bring security!" / "All government ministers are part of 
			the incitement!" / "Government of settlers and tycoons has no 
			solution!" and "This is not an extremist minority, it is a racist 
			government!" Yariv Oppenheimer of Peace Now called for silence in 
			order to let speeches of Knesset Members be heard, of Meretz and the 
			Labour Party and the Hadash Communists, and also Amra Mitzna of 
			Tzipi Livni's party, on whom hacklers called to withdraw from the 
			government coalition.
		
	 
	
	Redress, July 7, 2014
	The Jerusalem Post, Rupert Murdoch’s debased outfit in occupied 
	Palestine, has come up with a blood-curdling piece that seeks to criminalize 
	the entire Palestinian people, the victims of Israel’s dispossession and 
	ethnic cleansing.
	On 3 June it published an editorial on 
	the disappearance and killing of three Jewish squatter teenagers which can 
	only be described as incitement to racial violence against the indigenous 
	people of Palestine.
	“There is nothing we can do to stop the Palestinians from choosing, time 
	and again, violence over compromise, destruction over construction, and we 
	should not deceive ourselves that we can, it said.”
	The killing of the squatter teens, it added, “is yet another reminder 
	that swathes of Palestinian society continue to be irreconcilably committed 
	to Israel’s destruction and are willing to condone the most despicable acts 
	of violence, even if by doing they doom to oblivion any chances for national 
	self-determination”.
	This is a scurrilous, criminally irresponsible allegation made with just 
	one purpose in mind: to create an environment for mass violence against the 
	Palestinian people.
	The kidnapping and murder of the 17-year-old Palestinian boy, Mohammed 
	Abu Khdeir, the reported disappearance 
	of a 13-year-old Palestinian child and an attempt by Jewish squatters to 
	kidnap a seven-year-old Palestinian child in occupied Jerusalem are all 
	signs of the criminal Jewish squatter community’s readiness to embark on 
	mass murder.
	The Jerusalem Post’s scurrilous charge was put to Jeremy Bowen, the BBC’s 
	Middle East editor. Speaking on BBC Radio 4’s flagship “Today” programme on 
	3 July, he dismissed it while noting the incitement to violence by Jewish 
	leaders – listen to his four-minute interview below.
	00:00 00:00 Bowen, it should be recalled, is no stranger to Zionist witch 
	hunts for his impartiality, and has tasted first hand the cowardice and 
	betrayal of the BBC’s appeasers of Zionism.