Several
years ago when I visited Cana, my guide walked me to the graves of the victims
killed by Israel in the known massacre of 1996. Their collective graves were dug
next to each other testifying to the inequity and silence of the world's
nations. This time I saw the pictures of the children being carried out by
rescue workers of the Red Cross. I saw their tender bodies killed; it wasn't
said where they were buried or if their relatives, many of whom were no doubt
killed too, received their bodies. All this happened because a dry Israel has a
problem with tenderness, has a problem against the presence of a thriving life
in those whom it calls "gentiles".
Those who, in
times of troubles, call upon Christ, like to quote Him in one or another stage
of His earthly ministry. My reader should know that the Bible talks little about
the childhood of Jesus; I enjoy reading the childhood passages of the Lord as it
appears in Luke, who relates: "And the Child grew in spirit, filled with
wisdom; and the grace of God was upon Him." (2: 40).
Israel
prevented the children of Cana of "growing in spirit" because they were from the
gentiles (goim in Hebrew); whether they lived or died didn't matter for Israel,
for they are not the sons of the promise. It is enough for the children of the
Jews to grow physically and spiritually and to be educated in the Hebrew
University of Jerusalem (Al-Quds) or elsewhere and to be trained on weapons to
slaughter all those who may interfere with their conquests.
One loves the
buds because of the longing for roses; one fears the destruction of buds for the
love of their blooming. All of us weep over the buds if slashed out. Israel
doesn't weep except for itself—a testimony for its god who was in the beginning
of its history the god of a tribe—destroying other gods. The death of Lebanon's
children is no profit to any god. These children have no advanced technologies
and shall not acquire warplanes in their small country. Their sole existence is
encompassed around holding faithfully to their poor land. Didn't a Hebrew poet,
in days of old, sing in Iraq: "O daughter of Babylon, who are to be destroyed, Happy
the one who repays you as you have served us! Happy the one who takes and dashes
your little ones against the rock!" (Ps 137: 8-9).
After this
damned war who shall teach the Jews to love the children of gentiles like they
love their own? Who shall repeat unto them the words of the Nazarene: "Let
the little children come to me, and do not forbid them; for of such is the
kingdom of heaven." (Matt. 19: 14).
***
Our great
problem with those who assaulted us is not merely the peace for Lebanon, which
is not known when or if it shall arrive. Their problem with themselves is the
issue. The issue is this: will God inspire them one day, despite their tradition
of hatred, to believe in the childhood and to treat all human beings with
compassion? I don't deny any of them the right to love their children—this is
from nature. And I don't deny any Jew, outside Israel or not Israelized
ideologically, the right to love all children. But what if this militant nation
sows the conviction: that every Arab child shall grow and shall carry within
oneself the power of becoming a soldier which is to be feared and dealt with
accordingly—upon the basis of "preventive" war adopted by George Bush junior? In
the logic of the American neo-conservatives the preventive killing of children
is very reasonable. And if preventive war required deceit as it happened with
Iraq, then the annihilation of foreign children involves hate.
We love
individual Jews according to our tradition even if we don't agree among
ourselves on appreciating their theology. In this context, Islam has no issue
against Jews even if it had a problem with them in the days of prophet Mohamed.
Generally, Jews did not enjoy greater freedom than that under Islam; we, the
elderly, remember well the extreme freedom they enjoyed in Egypt and Morocco.
But now, between them and us stands Cana; this problem can't be resolved easily
if they don't repent openly and admit that our children and theirs are equal.
Better for them was to lose the battles than to kill one child of the south.
Henri Bergson said once: if I am told that I have to kill a child in order to
save the earth I shall reply let the earth be devastated but spare the child.
No nation can
be as militarized as the one which is destroying us and embrace any trace of
kindness. It can build war factories but its heart shall remain stained and
manipulated by devils. In Hebrew tradition, not only foreign children are to be
maltreated, but adults too are not to be shown mercy. In Deuteronomy it is said:
"When you go near a city to fight against it, then proclaim an offer of peace
to it. And it shall be that if they accept your offer of peace, and open to
you, then all the people who are found in it shall be placed under tribute to
you, and serve you. Now if the city will not make peace with you, but war
against you, then you shall besiege it. And when the LORD your God delivers it
into your hands, you shall strike every male in it with the edge of the sword.
But the women, the little ones, the livestock, and all that is in the city, all
its spoil, you shall plunder for yourself… Thus you shall do to all the cities
which are very far from you, which are not of the cities of these nations. But
of the cities of these peoples which the LORD your God gives you as an
inheritance, you shall let nothing that breathes remain alive, but you shall
utterly destroy them…" (20: 10-17). And in the book of Joshua: "…Then the
people went up into the city, every man straight before him, and they took the
city. And they utterly destroyed all that was in the city, both man and woman,
young and old, ox and sheep and donkey, with the edge of the sword." (6:
20-21).
A nation with
such a philosophy, which was deployed in Palestine by the gang of Irgun and
Stern during the British mandate, needs to be preached to in order to refute
Zionism completely; otherwise good will for this nation shall continue to be
condemned and mercy shall continue to be refused; all its military actions shall
then continue to have Cana as its model.
The crime of
Cana must be punished; there is no escape from an international committee to
investigate the responsibility of Israel, because it was a massacre against
human rights; shall it go unpunished, it shall then open the way for the guilty
to commit more massacres whenever he wishes to. "And in punishment you shall
live". Those wounded and the families of the victims must not fall prey to
hatred, but must recover from hatred lest the murderers repent.
Only then, not
sooner, peace shall come; but peace alone cannot heal the wounded hearts. The
Lebanese, who tasted what none of the Arabs did in these later days are the last
to sign a peace accord to save themselves, time after time, from the horrors of
bombardments and destructions and death. How shall our country be resurrected?
How shall the tragedy not be repeated? This requires from us to become a unified
society with no divisions among ourselves lest any city or town receive what has
befallen Cana, lest the childhood dies in our hearts. This requires an
international appreciation—an appreciation of the existence of Lebanon as a
beautiful and kind nation—a nation which is not asking for anything other than
to be spared the cycles of assaults. It is a catastrophe for the whole world if
we become a totally destroyed country.
Israel's pride
must disappear lest our country be torched. Israel won't find rest if we wept "bitterly
in the night" as proclaimed Jeremiah in his Lamentations. Our children
mustn't walk as captives and orphans. O Lord, lift up Your wrath from our
homeland and console us with the mercies of Your Spirit, lest we're swallowed.
Have mercy on us O God, the Lord of our salvation. "Young and old lie on the
ground in the streets." Forbid, O Lord, the smashing of the bones of our
youth and children. Your mercies, O Lord, are endless. Preserve our dignity of
life because we love You. "Fear and a snare have come upon us, desolation and
destruction." "The young children ask for bread, but no one breaks it for
them."
Don't stop our
singing, O Lord, for this is the country of joy. Do not hide Your face from Your
servants in these days of distress. Do not forsake us, O Lord, and repay us all
that we have lost, for we believe that You are the resurrection and life. Do not
forsake us utterly in Your wrath. Come, O Lord, come and accept our beloved who
were scorched in Cana, in the south, in the suburb of Beirut and the people of
every devastated area; and grant us back, O Lord, our childhood; and account us
worthy, by repentance towards You, to become innocents like the children of the
beloved Cana.