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"Martyr" Screening at Liberty Film Festival, Dennis Prager to host Q&A with Brooke Goldstein

I am happy to announce that "The Making of a Martyr" will be screening at this year's Liberty Film Festival in Hollywood, California.

The screening will take place on Thursday October 18th and renown KRLA talk show host, Dennis Prager, will be guest-hosting the evening as well as conducting a Q and A with myself.

Please visit the Liberty Film Festival's website for more information and to purchase your tickets.

Liberty Film Festival
http://www.libertyfilmfestival.com/

Hope to see you there!


Op Ed in NY Daily News: Blame UN for Brainwashed Palestinian Kids

Please see the link below for my Op Ed in the NY Daily News (text is also pasted below)

Blame UN for Brainwashed Palestinian Kids

http://www.nydailynews.com/opinions/2007/07/19/2007-07-19_blame_un_for_brainwashed_palestinian_kid.html


Blame UN for brainwashed Palestinian kids



Be Our Guest

This week, Hamas TV introduced children to a new character, Nahoul the honey bee, which it will use to indoctrinate innocent Palestinian youth to hate, violence and suicide bombing. Two weeks ago Farfour, Hamas' abhorrent radical Mickey Mouse clone, signed off: He was beaten to death by an actor portraying an Israeli soldier. The bee, apparently his predecessor's cousin, dedicated himself to, in his own words, "continuing the path of Farfour - the path of Islam, of heroism, of martyrdom, and of the mujahedeen."

The sickening lengths to which terrorists will go to encourage Palestinian children to kill themselves as suicide bombers and child soldiers - through teachers, textbooks, cartoons, music videos, sticker albums and summer camps - is well known and in direct violation of these children's human rights.

What is less understood is the fact that, despite widespread evidence of this child abuse, human-rights organizations such as Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International have failed to consistently condemn the Palestinian Authority for inciting and enabling the murder of their own children. Despite admissions by terrorist groups who claim responsibility for child bombers, organizations like the Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers have denied the existence of the phenomenon.

More disturbing is the fact that the United Nations itself is not only complicit, but active in teaching innocent Palestinian children to hate others and martyr themselves. According to its mandate, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), the UN arm responsible for providing aid and education in the Palestinian territories, employs the school curriculum of its host, the Palestinian Authority (run by the supposedly secular Fatah and Hamas, partners in indoctrinating children).

This means that the 658 elementary and preparatory schools funded and operated by UNRWA in the West Bank and Gaza use the hate-filled and murderous curriculum produced by the PA - and hire teachers straight off the Hamas payroll. UNRWA educates future terrorists in line with Hamas ideology, hanging martyr posters depicting dead children brandishing weapons on its classroom walls.

At best, UNRWA is turning the other way while known terrorists radicalize Palestinian children in its schools. At worst, it is guilty of aiding and abetting the premeditated murder of innocent children.

This is not an academic criticism; the real-world consequences are deadly. For example, 20-year-old Shadi Zakayira Tubasi and 21-year-old Faud Ismail Mohamad Al-Horani, both of whom had been students at UNRWA schools, carried out their lessons by committing suicide attacks in Israel. Prominent Hamas leaders such as Ibrahim Maqadama, founder of the military wing of the Muslim Brotherhood in Gaza; Salah Mustafa Shehada, who has openly endorsed suicide bombings; and Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh were educated at UNRWA schools.

Having spent time myself visiting Palestinian schools and interviewing dozens of Palestinian children, I have seen first-hand that a culture of death has taken hold of the youth. Not one of the children I interviewed denounced suicide bombing. Most told me that they aspired to be future martyrs.

Governments funding UNRWA - chief among them, the U.S. and the European Union - must condition their funds on a new curriculum that teaches peace and coexistence. If this incitement to hate and violence continues, there is absolutely no hope for peace.

Goldstein is director of the documentary film "The Making of a Martyr."

"Martyr" on CNN and FOX News

For those of you who missed it, please see the links below for our CNN and FOX News interviews uploaded on YouTube:

CNN's The Situation Room:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2UqAleLGKh4


FOX News' Hannity's America:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yIdPfEYMXQ4

"Tales of a Fourth Grade Suicide Bomber" - An Interview With Yours Truly

Please visit the following site to see our most recent press, an interview with yours truly on Jewcy.com, which is also copied below:

"Tales of a Fourth Grade Suicide Bomber"

http://www.jewcy.com/interview/2007-05-09/the_rorschach_test_of_the_middle_east

Tales of a Fourth Grade Suicide Bomber

Brooke Goldstein's exploration of child martyrs

Suspicious of his oversized clothes and nervous movement, Israeli soldiers at the checkpoint ordered Hussam Abdu to stop and lift his hands. "I don't know how to get this off," Abdu shouted, tugging at the explosive belt around his waist. "I don't want to blow up." It was March 24, 2004 and the would-be suicide bomber, subsequently sentenced to eight years in prison, was fifteen.

This unsettling scene sets the tone of Brooke Goldstein and Alistair Leyland's documentary The Making of a Martyr, a look at the recruitment and induction of child suicide bombers. At the time the film was made in 2004, there had been 28 Palestinian suicide bombers aged 18 or younger, comprising roughly 30 percent of all Palestinian suicide attacks since 2000. Over the course of 60 minutes, the film makes the case that it is not only the extremist Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigade or Islamic Jihad who are responsible, but Muslim society at large. Goldstein and Leyland look at the way cartoons, school curricula, and local murals throughout the West Bank propagate the myth of the martyr. The pair spent hours interviewing parents of suicide bombers, school-age children, psychologists, teachers, and Jihadists to demonstrate how unwitting children are indoctrinated and exploited.

Body of evidence: The Making of a Martyr posterBody of evidence: The Making of a Martyr posterThe film itself is not unlike watching the nightly news-we are shown upsetting, chaotic footage coupled with overwrought voiceover. The strongest moments are the interviews in which young Palestinians, including Abdu, speak as casually about martyrdom as if talking about sports, and Jihadist leaders freely admit to welcoming children into their ranks. Suicide bombers have become folk heroes in parts of the Muslim world, so recruiting children is not difficult. Indeed it took all of 48 hours, and $20 dollars, to convince Abdu to go to the checkpoint.

Goldstein is not religious but considers herself a Zionist. She made the film as her senior thesis for Cardoza Law School, and she's fanatic about the subject. While there is no excuse for sending children to their deaths, one wonders if she isn't being somewhat disingenuous when she argues that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is "completely irrelevant" to the issue. The film itself is filled with charged images of the conflict-bloodied bodies from the Second Intifada, Sharon on the Temple Mount, the failed Camp David Accords. Arguing on behalf of children will always be the right thing to do, but it is impossible to forget that this troubling situation is the outcropping of a complicated war.

Jewcy recently sat down with Goldstein, 26, at a café near Washington Square Park in New York City to discuss the film.

When did you first consider taking on this issue?

I was in my second year of law school studying international human rights law when I heard about Hussam's case. It occurred to me that there was a legal argument that nobody was making about the incitement and recruitment of children to become suicide bombers. Instead of seeing Hussam as a murderer, I viewed him as a child victim of state-sponsored infanticide. From infancy, he was taught that the greatest thing he could amount to was a shaheed.

So I decided to do my thesis on it. I wanted to collect visual evidence from the perpetrators and victims in order to raise public awareness, with the ultimate goal of getting together a group of attorneys to prosecute this case.

Goldstein's inspiration: Hussam AbduGoldstein's inspiration: Hussam AbduWho would you prosecute?

You could go after the direct criminal perpetrators-the terrorist groups, people like Zachariah Zubedi, Al-Aqsa, Fatah-but obviously you can't exactly go to the West Bank and slap handcuffs on them. It's easier to pursue the financiers and the government parties that are enabling it. The Palestinian Authority (PA) creates television programs and buys school textbooks encouraging martyrdom, so you could sue them for libel. The United Nations Relief Works Agency (UNRWA) funds schools run by Islamic Jihad and other terrorist groups without regard to curriculum. This has been done before: The Holy Land Foundation was taken down because it had financial ties to terrorist groups.

Attorneys can also help raise public awareness by getting groups like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch to condemn the issue, or at least speak in a language that signifies to the public that this is an abuse. Instead of calling Al-Aqsa "militants," they should be called "child murderers" or "terrorists" or "criminals." The Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers has actually gone on record stating that there's no proof that children are recruited to become suicide bombers, regardless of all the evidence collected by people like me.

Why do you think that is? Why hasn't there been a critical mass, or at least why hasn't it received the kind of media attention of child soldiers in Africa?

It could be intentional, willful ignorance by organizations like the Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers, whose bias against Israel is so strong that they won't even condemn the murder of Palestinian children by their own community. These are organizations that advocate themselves as the defenders of the Palestinians against Israeli aggression. Surely they should also be outraged by the murder of Palestinian children by the very people who are supposed to be protecting them.

Why wouldn't Israeli or even other American news outlets exploit this? It's so sensationalist.

Certain further-right organizations do cover it. I think the New York Sun does a very good job covering international issues, as does Fox, but other news outlets are biased. Look at the way the BBC covered the quote-unquote massacre in Jenin. They have a policy of using the term "militants" as opposed to "terrorists." So does the New York Times.

But the reason we focused on children is to get around that political issue-to say, "Even if you have your opinion about the Pandora's box of the Israel-Palestine conflict, can you at least bring yourself to condemn this?" That way you can see the true motivations of people who do condemn it and those who don't.

How did you get access to Zubedi?

Initially we didn't intend to go into the West Bank, but we were introduced to a Palestinian fixer who was able to get us access to the things we wanted to see. He liked who we were, he liked that we were young (I was 24 when we started filming), and he thought that it was a worthy cause. For a daily rate, he operated as our friend, our translator, guide, driver, and security guard.

Who was that masked man?: Not the most comfortable interview experienceWho was that masked man?: Not the most comfortable interview experienceWere you afraid at any point?

Terribly afraid. There are such horrific scenes in the movie that here in North America, we can't show it to children under a certain age. It's ironic-we can't show a movie about how children live elsewhere to children here because it's too disturbing. There was one scene where we're talking to five masked men. There's a loaded gun on the floor facing me, and if I make one move they just lift it up. In interviews with Zachariah Zubedi we regularly had five or six armed men watching us. It was a petrifying experience.

Did you have to agree to any conditions in order to speak with certain people? Or were you ever threatened?

Well, obviously there were conditions about what I wore and how I acted. As someone collecting evidence you need to present yourself as a party who's willing to listen. I wasn't going to argue with a bunch of armed crazies who kill people for a living. At the same time, they were reluctant to speak openly with us. Zachariah knew I was Jewish. Our interview with him lasted three hours, and the first two were all anti-Israeli propaganda. But by the third hour he opened up and told us, "Yeah, of course children come to me, yeah I push them away, the first, second, third time, but the fifth time I give them a bomb belt, I send them to the field."

Our subject matter afforded me the opportunity to be completely honest with people with whom I would otherwise disagree on every single level. I was there to protect their children. It was a subject that we were able to talk about at great length without having to go into the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in general.

You say that the desperation and the politics are irrelevant to the issue, but it's impossible to watch your film and not notice the IDF's destruction of so much of the West Bank.

Faced with an ultimatum: Wafa Idris (on right)Faced with an ultimatum: Wafa Idris (on right)That's why we separate child bombers from the argument about adults. The adult suicide bomber is a completely different species than the child suicide bomber.

As a side note, though, you have to steer clear of making generalizations about why people kill themselves. Look at Wafa Idris, who is pretty much the only adult suicide bomber who we talk about. She's a divorced, barren woman, an adulteress threatened with an honor killing but given an ultimatum: Either we kill you and you bring shame upon your family, or you can go blow yourself up in an Israeli pizza parlor, we'll pay your mother $30,000, and your family can hold its head high again. For adults it's various reasons: pressure, politics, religion. But this is a whole different species and I'm not an expert on that.

What's very important to me is the motivation of the child suicide bomber. It's not out of desperation; it's out of aspiration. Not one child-and I interviewed tons of children in school, children in prison, their families-told me that he was doing it because of Sharon's policies or because of the failed Camp David Accords. They were doing it to kill Jews, for religious reasons, for Allah; they were doing it to secure places for their family in Paradise; they were doing it for fame, for candy, for money. The child suicide bomber is purely a result of a shrewd brainwashing and recruitment strategy by the PA, its affiliated terrorist organizations, and societal influences. If the children were taught peace they would not be blowing themselves up.

In the film you show Wafa's mother's home after Wafa has killed herself, and it's been half demolished by the IDF. Do you think that's a good strategy to demolish the homes of suicide bombers' families?

It's Israeli policy to discourage families from encouraging their children to blow themselves up. But that's also where the money from Fatah or Al-Aqsa comes in. Those organizations give the families an exorbitant amount of money to rebuild their homes. Then again, that's another reason why children are now being used by terrorist organizations: Because they're cheaper. Hussam was paid $20. You don't need to give children much incentive, because they are so easily manipulated-but that's why children are afforded special protection under international law. These children are being manipulated and murdered by their own community. That is unprecedented in human history.

What about the child soldiers in Uganda or Sudan?

Manufacturing dissent: A Bethlehem martyr posterManufacturing dissent: A Bethlehem martyr posterChild soldiers are stolen from their parents by non-governmental military groups in village raids. You do have instances where governments are recruiting children as soldiers-even Britain did it at one point-but the societies aren't advocating the death of their own children. Their goal is to give the child a weapon and have that child live to fight the next day. Whereas the primary goal of child suicide bombers is to kill that child. And it's not just Palestinian children but Muslim children throughout the world.

Also, in this case, it's systemic; it's society encouraging its own children to die. They're not being kidnapped. You could argue that some more fanatic members of society are hijacking the children of moderates, like Hussam's parents. Because he has the hold of Jenin that he does, Zachariah Zubedi can take children against their parents' will. But ultimately this is a societal problem.

In the film you show cartoons advocating martyrdom.

Yeah, they're being produced by Iranian TV, Hezbollah, Saudi Arabia. Egypt is horrible when it comes to printing children's textbooks.

How often are the cartoons aired?

They're inescapable. "Little Moon" is played every single Friday when the kids get out of school-primetime. The issue is systemic. Zachariah Zubedi said it to me himself: "This is the culture of Jenin. This is what we believe in. It stems from religion." Okay? And it's pervasive-you walk through the West Bank and there're martyr posters of dead children brandishing weapons everywhere,

What has the response been to the film among Palestinians?

Well we did a very interesting thing at Cardoza, my alum. I invited Alan Dershowitz to speak with me, and we debated Hamid Dabashi. Hamid Dabashi is a professor of Iranian studies at Columbia University, a very controversial figure.

As is Alan Dershowitz.

Positive publicity: DershowitzPositive publicity: DershowitzObviously Dabashi had brought his cronies along. I can't say if they were Palestinian but they were Muslim, and they shouted horrible things like, "You're the type of Jew that should have died in the Holocaust" in my direction and Alan's direction, or "You should be assassinated." Then we played the film. It was quite calm after that.

When Hamid tried to engage me in a debate about how the IDF is supposedly injuring Palestinian children or violating human rights, we were able to say that's completely irrelevant. The argument against child suicide bombers is so powerful that even people from the completely opposite spectrum of the debate will agree.

Do you think it's really going to be possible for people to divorce themselves, ideologically, from the conflict?

They have to. These ten-year-olds are the ones who are going to control the future. If the Muslim community itself isn't willing to save its own children, then there's nothing we can do politically that is going to help with the situation.

Child suicide bombing is not the result of any IDF policy, any American policy. Also, you have to note that when you talk to a child and he talks about "infidels," he doesn't just mean Jews. He also talks about Americans, the British, non-Muslims who don't agree with their fanatical way of thinking. So it's not just an Israeli-Palestinian problem, it's not a Muslim-Jew problem, it's a clash of two ideologies.

What kind of responses have you received at synagogues, when you screen the film to Jewish audiences?

Jews, like human beings throughout the world, like to have faith in humanity, and agree with me that there is no justification for the intentional murder of any innocent child. So obviously there's sympathy and sadness and horror.

To return to the film once more: Do you have any idea what's going on right now with Hussam and with other children who have been involved with planning for these bombings?

Voter fraud: During the Palestinian electionVoter fraud: During the Palestinian electionI keep in touch with my fixer, who has visited Hussam a couple of times with other journalists. He told us that during the election, Hamas adults in the prison would tell the child prisoners to call their parents and say, "Hey Mom and Dad, I'm having a good time in jail, no one is harming me, but that's because of Hamas. Hamas is protecting me, so vote for Hamas or I'm not going to have that protection in jail any longer."

Hussam is still in jail. Like you saw at the end of the film, he became more cocky, more sure of himself. There's no real rehabilitation in the prisons because Israel doesn't have the funds to set up a fancy rehabilitation center. And then what? When they get released they just go straight back into the community that tried to murder its own children.

Why do they become more militant in jail?

You have a bunch of delinquents, so to speak, festering in very small areas, talking to each other freely. Like you would in any jail, you join a group. Here in America you join the Blacks, the Hispanics, the Neo-Nazis, or whatever group. So in Israel you have Al-Aqsa, Fatah, Hamas, etc., and that's how they live.

You interviewed one young man, Nasir, who convinced Hussam to do this. And he said that he was told that he wouldn't have to worry about prison, or that it wouldn't be more than one or two years.

Another example of how these kids are being abused. He was lied to! Kids aren't doing this because of their huge desire to be politically active against the Israelis; they're doing it because they're a bunch of teenagers looking for cool things to do. They get manipulated by older cooler kids who are giving them money, saying "Hey, you want to be a big shot?" They give them live ammunition, they give them guns, they let them play with explosives. It's like any fourteen-year-old boy's fantasy, and they exploit that. If they're willing to go and strap a bomb on a kid-and now, by the way, they're using remote control bombs-then of course they're willing to lie to them and tell them they're not going to be punished.

Nasir seems more thoughtful, or self-reflective than the others.

Heaven is a place on earth: Child bombers are promised earthly delights in the afterlifeHeaven is a place on earth: Child bombers are promised earthly delights in the afterlifeNasir is interesting because he regrets what he did-not because he thinks it's wrong, but because he was caught. Same with Hussam. We asked him in the first interview, why didn't you blow yourself up? "Because I'm going to miss my family, out of love for my family." But do you still believe in martyrdom? "Of course I believe in martyrdom!" They've succeeded in brainwashing these kids to make them think that death is not martyrdom, it's two completely separate things. When you blow your limbs apart you're not going to die, you go to heaven and heaven is actually a real place with Ferris wheels. Children have no problem describing to you what their house is going to look like in heaven, how they're going to have a marble floor, how there's going to be lots of candy.

Hussam liked to talk to us about the virgins. He was obviously a marginalized teen, he's dwarfed, he's a "loser," he was excluded, he never had a girlfriend, so he took pleasure in describing the virgins to us. It's a child's notion of what a fairy-tale paradise is. That's the crime. It's important to know that the crime isn't blowing yourself up; the crime being committed against the children is this brainwashing. It's a dangerous crime because at a certain point it becomes irreversible and it's destroying the Palestinian community.

Why would society make such an effort to indoctrinate and prop up this myth? Is this because of the efficacy of a child suicide bomber-that's it's less complicated, that they're cheaper?

Technically, it's because they're cheaper, they're more impressionable, they're less detected by the IDF at checkpoints-which is changing now. First we had men, then the IDF started getting used to men; then they used to women; then we had pregnant women; then we had children; and now we have mentally handicapped children, so what's next? Infants?

What are the motivations of the adults of the PA? What was the motivation of Arafat when he held a child over his head and he said a million die on the way to Jerusalem? Now you're getting into the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as a whole, but I'm focusing as a student of the law, and as an advocate of children's rights. These people who are killing children in this matter are child murderers regardless of what the motive is. And guess what? I don't care. I don't care what the political motive is, I don't care what the religious motive is. Why? Because there is no justification whatsoever for the intentional murder of an innocent child.

Do you see any positive developments since the release of the film?

If they continue to educate their children in this fashion and we continue to ignore it and allow it to be funded, then the future looks very bleak. If they're not willing to save their own children, what can we do? There are two quotes I like to repeat a lot. Nelson Mandela says, "There can be no keener revelation into a society's soul than the way in which it treats its own children." And another quote that I think rings very true is what Golda Meir said: "There will be peace when terrorists love their children more than they hate whoever their perceived enemy is."

Mickey Mouse Used as a Tool of Hate by Hamas TV

Visit the link below to see how Hamas has stolen the image of Mickey Mouse to teach children hate.

http://pmw.org.il/bulletins_may2007.htm#b060507

Disney's attorneys should be suing Hamas TV for trademark infringement, amongst other things...

POLL ON CHILD SUICIDE BOMBING

PLEASE VISIT THE SITE BELOW TO CAST YOUR VOTE IN OUR POLL ON CHILD SUICIDE BOMBING!


http://poll.pollcode.com/gl8f

"The Making of a Martyr" on DVD

I have had requests for direction to the site on which one may purchase the documentary on DVD.

Here you go, and THANK YOU for your support!!

http://www.vipshoppingmall.com/martyr/


The disease spreads

As we see in this article, the disease is spreading. Insurgents in Iraq are now blowing up their own children...

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/21/world/middleeast/21iraq.html

Unrelated but bizarre

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,261243,00.html

New Link

First off, I want to thank those of you who tuned in for the FOX piece, and for all your supportive comments, they are much appreciated!

Second, I came across this link that I find particularly disturbing, it is a clip of an interview with two children of a suicide bomber, talking about their parent's martyrdom....

http://www.memritv.org/search.asp?ACT=S9&P1=1398#

Hannity's America - Sunday March 11th, 9pm

Please tune in at 9pm this Sunday March 11th when I will be appearing for a short interview with Sean Hannity on FOX News' "Hannity's America."

Thanks for your support!

Bias

I received the following comment from a viewer/reader:

What do you think is the reason why the media and the UN haven't addressed this issue? You raise the question but you haven't offered a theory as to why such acts of brutality and psychological warfare against children are not given front and center attention.

_____________________________

My response:

I think that there is a heavy bias in the UN, in international human rights organizations and in the media against reporting negatively on the Palestinian community. Unfortunately this remains true even when it comes to the deadly abuse of Palestinian children at the hands of their own government and society. While there are hundreds of UN resolutions condemning the actions of Israel, not one bothers to include the use of Palestinian children as human bombs, or the state-sponsored education of children to become suicide bombers as a crime against humanity. While every day there seems to be a news report on what the IDF is doing, there are little to no media reports on the constant out-in-the-open incitement of Palestinian children to engage in a violent Jihad. Despite the well-documented instances of Palestinian child suicide bombers, some organizations including the Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers and Human Rights Watch have gone as far as reporting that there exists NO evidence of the use of Palestinian children as human bombs. Willful ignorance?

Those who claim to be the protectors of Palestinian children, those who toil to expose what they have deemed as human rights violations occurring against these children, must expend the same amount of effort to exposing the abhorrent and deadly abuse of Palestinian at the hands of the Palestinian government and society. While there is nothing wrong with leveling criticism, especially when criticizing those who are killing innocent children, when you focus your criticism so narrowly on only one state and ignore those wrongs committed out in the open by others, you are acting with bias. Unrelenting criticism of Israel by those who purposefully ignore the direct and daily abuse of Palestinian children by others, does not stem from an unprejudiced consideration of an issue and exhibits extreme partiality.

Hussam was not the first nor is he the last Palestinian child to be subject to hate education and then abuse at the hands of terrorists, and this phenomenon remains active throughout the Palestinian territories, while the same incitement to hate exists throughout the fanatical Muslim world. At the time of Hussam's arrest, some groups like Amnesty focused on the case specific incident, releasing statements condemning those who recruited Hussam. This distinctive reaction was a result of the efforts by the IDF to publicize Hussam's surrender and invite photographers to witness his arrest. By inviting international photographers in advance (the IDF was tipped off that a child bomber would appear that day) the IDF pressured them to pay attention to the issue and provided dramatic footage for the media to report on. This move somewhat backfired when certain people in the international media and in the Muslim community took the opportunity to claim that the whole incident was staged due to the presence of those photographers.

We need to continue to ask the media, the UN and international human rights organizations why they aren't paying attention to the incitement and use of Palestinian children as human bombs and child soldiers. Why they aren't condemning the brainwashing and abuse of these children at the hands of their own government and state-sponsored terrorist groups. We also need to pull back the magnifying glass to include criticism of all parties who are inciting Muslim children to hate and to partake in a global holy war against Americans, British and the West at large. These issues are integral to one another and should not be examined in a vacuum. The documentary was meant to spark awareness of a sliver of the problem, which is what we had access to with cameras at the time. But the broader issue remains that Muslim children are being taught by all different types of state media (Iranian, Egyptian, Jordanian, Saudi Arabian, Syrian, Lebanese TV) to hate. These children deserve better. They deserve to be taught that their lives are meaningful and that they have a purpose other than that of martyrdom. They need to be taught that political, religious and territorial conflict must be resolved in peaceful manners, through negotiations with mutual coexistence as a top priority, and not by blowing yourself up in civilian areas.

We must also ask why more Muslims are not speaking out against the incitement targeting their own children? Maybe it is out of fear of a Fatwa, or death threats like those given to Irshad Manji, Brigitte Gabriel, to Ayaan Hirsi Ali, or because of what happened to Theo Van Gogh!?
Either way, people need to start talking about the use of children as human bombs and child soldiers, or the phenomenon will continue with devastating results.

Two sites of interest

Two sites that may be of interest are:

MEMRI

http://memri.org/

and

Palestinian Media Watch

http://www.pmw.org.il/

The Making of a Martyr

"There can be no keener revelation of a society's soul than the way in which it treats its children." - Nelson Mandela -

Armed with a death wish and strapped with explosives, Palestinian children are being sent to commit murderous suicide, killing themselves and other innocents by blowing up their young bodies. In the West Bank and Gaza, impressionable children are being taught from infancy by their state-run media, schools and religious institutions to hate all Infidels (Jews, Christians and other non-Muslims), to participate in a global Jihad (holy war), and that the greatest thing they can amount to is Shahada, or Martyrdom. The incitement and recruitment of children to take their own lives as suicide bombers is the most egregious crime of all: the pre-meditated murder of one's own children. Nevertheless, state-sponsored infanticide, and what I see as a form of societal suicide, continues to occur out in the open, unpunished and without any meaningful condemnation by the United Nations, governments, western media and human rights organizations.

On March 24th 2004, fifteen-year young Hussam Abdu was caught at an Israeli border check point with live explosives strapped around his waist. Physically a dwarf, marginalized by his classmates and considered mentally handicapped by his family, it took only forty-eight hours and twenty American dollars to convince Hussam to violently kill himself as a suicide bomber. The Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, the Palestinian terrorist group that recruited him, did so using two of Hussam's elementary school classmates, each of which they paid one hundred dollars for the job. In an ironic twist of fate, he who had been considered slow and socially inept turned out to be the smartest kid on the block. For at the very last minute, out of fear of death and love for his family, Hussam voluntarily gave himself up to the Israeli Defense Force (IDF) and was subsequently arrested. Charged and convicted with attempted murder, Hussam is now serving out an eight-year sentence in the Ha-Sharon Prison, Israel.

The summer after Hussam's arrest, Alistair and I traveled to the Middle East to interview those involved in Palestinian child suicide bombing. These interviews and others comprise our documentary film, "The Making of a Martyr," which explores the causes behind this deadly phenomenon. We visited Hussam for the first time about six months after his arrest. He was shy, soft spoken and visually nervous. When asked why he had been willing to take on a suicide mission in the first place, Hussam replied, "I knew that if I died as a martyr I'd go to paradise. I'm in grade ten and at school we learned about the meaning of Martyrdom." When pressed further, the child revealed his conflicted feelings. On the one hand, Hussam wanted to be popular. He desired the fame and glory that came with blowing his limbs apart in a crowd of Israeli citizens. He yearned for the Ferris-wheels and candy paradises as depicted in children's television programs on Palestine TV. He fantasized about his likeness being plastered all over Nablus on Martyr posters and hoped to guarantee his family a place in paradise. Yet on the other hand, Hussam's love for his parents, his desire to live and his fear of death overcame his lifetime of indoctrination. Hussam saved himself. When asked why, instead of committing suicide he chose to turn himself in, "I was concerned about my life, my mother and father...why should I die if there is peace tomorrow?" was his reply. We asked Hussam, what would be better, to live as a normal boy in Nablus, to go to school and have friends and live with his family or to die as a martyr? Hussam told us that "it is better to become a Martyr, because god offers the Martyr that which is better than a sister, friends, father, and even what is better than all of Nablus, there (meaning in heaven) one would never even think of these things." Since Hussam's arrest, to prevent children from repeating his act of sanity, Palestinian terrorist groups have been sending out some of their naive child bombs with remote control detonators. They have even gone as far as giving children bags of remote controlled explosives without informing them of their contents!

Filming Martyr, we also sat with Zachariah Zubeidi, Israel's most wanted man in the West Bank and the leader of the Al-Aqsa Martyr's Brigades in Jenin. At that time, Al-Aqsa had been directly linked to the recruitment of sixteen child suicide bombers. We spoke with Zachariah in the company of four of his heavily armed friends and a preschool child who sat beside him, fingering his loaded weapon during the interview, switching the safety latch on and off. Zachariah claimed that children came to him so eager to become suicide bombers, that if he "didn't give them a bomb they would use a knife instead." He also told us his opinion of Hussam; "The true martyr...is the one who puts on the bomb belt, presses the button and detonates the bomb. The true martyr picks up his weapon and never comes back. All those imprisoned for attempting martyrdom operations were not actually seeking martyrdom." The twenty-eight year old father has survived five assassination attempts, sleeps in a different home every night and is physically scarred with black burn marks from a bomb that exploded while he was assembling it. When asked about opposition within his community against child suicide bombing, Zachariah responded that anyone who tried to stop him "would be considered a collaborator. That is the culture of Jenin." Zachariah and his counterparts within Hamas, Fattah, Islamic Jihad and the myriad other Palestinian terror groups all too frequently mete out lethal punishment against such 'collaborators.' Other masked members of the Al Aqsa Brigades in Tulkarem told us they enable children as young as ten to carry out suicide missions. Nonetheless, the men that compose these death squads serve as role models to the very children they send to die. This is the mindset that has hijacked the Palestinian culture. This is indeed the culture of Jenin.

This culture produces a steady stream of questionable 'role model's for their children to emulate. One example is twenty-seven year old Wafa Idris. After being threatened with an honor killing for adultery and divorce, Wafa 'chose' to die a Martyr's death restoring honor to her family and cementing her position in the community as the first female Palestinian suicide bomber, killing one, wounding one-hundred others. Wafa's name continues to be glorified throughout the Muslim world, with children's summer camps named in her honor, popular songs composed singing her praise and annual children's parades held complete with fake coffins. Al-Quds Al-Arabi, a London-based Arabic language newspaper, praised Wafa's criminal actions "in the heart of the occupied city." (Wafa detonated herself in Jerusalem.) Thus she joins the convoys of the martyrs and sets a precedent [for women] to take pride in the history of the Arab and Islamic woman..." [January 28, 2002] The Egyptian government daily Al-Ahram, recalled Wafa's "dreamy eyes and the mysterious smile on her lips, that compete with the famous smile...on the lips of the Mona Lisa." [February 10th, 2002] In Jordan, a journalist wrote in the Al-Dustour daily; "Wafa carried her suitcase [of explosives] which is...the most beautiful prize any woman can possibly win...her mind unconvinced by the calls for peace and coexistence..." [February 24th, 2004].

When interviewed, Wafa's mother, Hadji Idris, like other parents of suicide bombers, refused to condemn her child's actions on camera. Sitting under the gaze of a wall-sized martyr-poster featuring her daughter, Hadji exclaimed that Wafa "did nothing bad by God! My mind tells me that she did nothing wrong. It is something that raises the head." Hadji's Idris' attitude is moderate compared to other parents of suicide bombers whose fervent praise is broadcast on television throughout the Arab world. Outside the family home, we spoke with Wafa's three adolescent nieces. They told us that Wafa was their hero and that every girl, including them, wanted to become just like her. One girl admitted she had asked her mother if she could become a suicide bomber but, was told no, not because it was wrong to kill herself, but because it wouldn't have any effect. "Even if you killed 40 or 50 Jews, they would still come back as they used to," was her mother's advice.

Hadji had been promised financial compensation for the life of her daughter. However, she complained that the payments from the Palestinian government and militia groups had stopped coming. Israel seeks to discourage these arrangements by responding to suicide attacks with, in part, the destruction of the family home, making the financial cost of homicide bombing far more expensive. Thus, Hadji lives in her living room and kitchen, with the top floor of her house in rubble, the bottom half spray painted with slogans such as "We congratulate our hero Wafa on her Martyrdom operation."

A cold economic calculus favors the use of children as suicide bombers over adults. In this equation however, little consideration is given for the value of human life, especially the life of a child. For one, children are cheaper than adults. The adult homicide bomber's family is paid tens of thousands of dollars to compensate for the income gap that results or to rebuild the family house should it be demolished. Alternatively, young children are lured with mere promises of heaven, some candy and only a couple hundred if not tens of dollars to sacrifice their own lives as political pawns. Palestinian children these days are easy picking for rogue terrorists as they come pre-conditioned with notions of Martyrdom fed to them by their media, schools, religious leaders and their society at large. Children have fewer reservations about taking their own lives, and it takes less time and resources to facilitate this crime when the victim is a child.

Dr. Shafiq Masalhah, a Palestinian child psychologist, conducted a study analyzing the dreams of over three hundred Palestinian children. When we interviewed him he explained the psychological effects the constant barrage of hate education and incitement to murder is having. Palestinian children, he said, are being brainwashed to think "collectively" and are being taught to make false distinctions between death and Martyrdom. This means, when children go on suicide missions they do not realize that they are actually killing themselves as individuals. They have been educated to believe that once they blow themselves up, they will not die and it is not their body that is bombed. The result is that since September 2000, an alarming number of suicide attacks against Israel have been carried out by Palestinian children aged eighteen and under, with hundreds more sitting in Israeli jails caught participating in missions, and thousands more taught to revere and copy their actions.

Faced with this horrible reality, we must ask ourselves; where is the U.N. and its human rights commission on this issue? Where are liberal Muslim intellectuals and religious leaders and why aren't they speaking out against the incitement to murder their own children, by their own states? Why isn't the media reporting on this crime? The silence thus far exhibited by the legal, political and international community speaks volumes. Either they don't care enough to speak out against the intentional murder of Palestinian children by their own government, they condone the murder of Muslim children, or their bias is so great they will not criticize the perpetrators of this crime at any cost. Could you imagine what would happen if the Israeli, American or British governments unleashed dogs strapped with explosives into areas crowded with civilians and blew them up? These actions would be met with immediate outrage, disgust and condemnation, and this outrage would continue, and rightly so, until the practice ceased. But when it comes to Palestinian children being victimized in the same manner, no one seems to care. Why aren't more people outraged and speaking out against the use of Palestinian children as human bombs?

Just before we finished filming Martyr, we went back to interview Hussam in prison. It had been about a year since we last spoke and it was impossible not to notice how much he had changed. He had taken to gelling his hair a certain way, rolling up the sleeves of his uniform, sat up with more confidence and spoke to us is quite a cocky manner. Quickly after the interview began, Hussam dropped a bomb. He tried to convince us that on that fateful day in March he had intended to explode but his detonator failed him. Hussam said he pressed the button two or three times but to no avail, the fuse was broken. While he watched the mechanical arm detonate his explosive belt, a Palestinian man asked Hussam if he understood that he could have been blown up with it. "Isn't that what I'm here for?" the child responded with laughter. This fabricated story was Hussam's final attempt at acceptance. What is important, he said, was that he at least tried, that he did it in the name of Allah and that he harbors no regrets.

The saddest part of this story is that when Hussam is released he will go right back into the community that attempted to kill him, and may likely try to commit murderous suicide again. In the meantime, Muslim children all over the world are being fed the same steady diet of hate education that Hussam received. If this continues it may not be much longer until we see these methods copied and child suicide bombing happening in other places around the world, as we have in the past by Iran, the Vietcong and the Tamil Tigers. Education aimed at children, teaching them to aspire to Jihad and suicide bombing, combined with a systemic means of recruiting children for suicide attacks, is equal to the direct murder of children, and is occurring to varying degrees in all Muslim countries and now amid widespread reports, in some western countries. The teaching of children to take their own lives as suicide bombers is a systemic and cultural problem that must be condemned and halted. There is absolutely no political, moral, religious or ethical justification for the intentional murder of children, nor for the recruitment of children as human bombs. I hope that when public awareness of this issue is raised, we will see widespread condemnation of this crime and a push to declare the incitement and recruitment of children to become suicide bombers and child soldiers a crime against humanity.




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