The unrepentant, unjustly freed
murderer Tamimi with the unrepentant, unjustly freed murderer Tamimi at their June 2012 wedding in Amman, Jordan |
After receiving some offline
comments on the Tamimi speech we publicized yesterday, we have a few further thoughts
to share. The urge to do this is triggered by a sense that something deeply disturbing is
going on; it's being ignored or willfully not noticed by people who ought to be
noticing.
When a politician or public figure on our side of
the fence makes an ignorant or dumb or smart or incisive statement, particularly
when it's about the Arabs (you know the examples), his/her comments are greeted
with near-instant analysis and frequently with condemnation from a global array
of press and politicians. The Arab media focus obsessively on such things.
Outside the Arab/Islamic world, we frequently see European, American, Australian
and other critics drawing wide inferences about how those specific Israeli views
are going to bring on the next Black Plague or an increase in pogroms in France.
The claim, at minimum, is that irreparable harm is going to be caused to the
souls and DNA of innocent Israeli children, to world peace and so
on.
To illustrate: when a posse of Israeli delinquents
(it happens to be a very current issue here) beat up an Arab youth in a street
fight, the New York Times says the event has led to "a stark national
conversation about racism, violence, and how Israeli society could have come to
this point" That's an actual quote: check it out. We think the Times' journalist's conclusion is
overwrought nonsense, but that's not the point. Israel is not, never has been and should never be,
immune to criticism, or even object to it, and mostly doesn't.
Now think for a moment about how Ahlam Tamimi and
her hundreds of published interviews and speeches are treated by global public
opinion. Pay attention in particular to how Arabs view her, since they are her
principal audience.
No one - certainly not the woman herself - denies
the fact that she planned and carried out a premeditated killing on a large and
vicious scale, which was the whole point of doing it. The law convicted her on
the basis that she's a murderer; she says (more or less) that she did it for the
freedom and honour of her nation. The fact that she planned to kill and
succeeded mightily has never been in dispute. She does not miss an opportunity
to say that it was children, and specifically Jewish children, and even more
specifically orthodox Jewish children like ours, who were the target. She
regrets that she did not kill more - it's there in yesterday's video and in numerous other
speeches and earlier videos recorded in her Jordanian freedom.
She appears on television and in front of adoring
crowds (ask us if you want to view the video files) and expresses the vilest
kind of racist hatred of Jews, Israelis and Zionists. She has done this many
times since she unjustly got her freedom in October and her message is hugely
amplified by the social media. She is a star on YouTube, a hero on Facebook. She is globally broadcast via satellite television into every corner
of the Arabic-speaking world. It's arguable that she has the largest footprint
of any ordinary murderer (ignoring "celebrities" like Hitler, Mao, Stalin et al)
in human history. If that seems like an overstatement then we urge you to
concede that she is in the major leagues. The fact that most people don't know
this is largely because most people don't speak Arabic.
She smiles warmly when she says she killed those
Jews, and her god wanted her to do it. She points to how she has subsequently
been rewarded with freedom, fame, a wedding that received live television
coverage. The adoring crowds applaud and ululate. The encouragement (and probably the will) to
emulate her actions is clear.
How many Arabic speakers are
there in the world? A quick query on the web turns up these numbers: "280
million native speakers, and an extra 250 million non-native speakers"
[source].
How many Arabic newspapers? Many.
Here's our point: We have searched and have not yet
found a blog, article, published speech or op-ed in her language, Arabic, which
criticizes the woman or her views. So far, not one. If our readers can point us
to exceptions, please do.
This is deeply shocking. Tamimi's message resonates
throughout the Arab and Islamic world. Her views don't even rise to the level of
controversial. She's simply a hero, wall to wall. She and her vile deeds,
opinions and intentions appear to represent some sort of global consensus in the
Arab and Islamic world. There is no public debate, no expressions of outrage
- not even concerning the passivity of the Kingdom of Jordan where she lives and
from where a vibrant Tamimi-focused industry of online and broadcast videos
sends its message of hatred and death out to the world.
Does the absence of criticism throughout the Arab world mean they support the deliberate killing of the innocent people among their enemy? Does their silence mean they support the murder of children as Tamimi certainly does, and they want to see it happen again and again as she certainly does?
Does the absence of criticism throughout the Arab world mean they support the deliberate killing of the innocent people among their enemy? Does their silence mean they support the murder of children as Tamimi certainly does, and they want to see it happen again and again as she certainly does?
What does this say about the discourse underway in
the Arab world? What light does it throw on the global news
media?
What can we learn from here about the chances of ever making peace?
What can we learn from here about the chances of ever making peace?
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