Sitting on the few cushions remaining in the small hilltop house [Hammad's] mother Samya, 42, complied with photographers who clamoured for her to pose with a poster but the house was unadorned with militant propaganda.
Why would
'photographers' want to portray an image
that doesn't reflect reality? to demonstrate cold glorification of senseless murder?
βHe was a hero and I am proud of Samir but I have suffered from his loss,β she said of her eldest son.
βI have seen their soldiers killing our children and destroying our home, making everything bad, so how can I see them sympathetically or kindly?β
The woman is in pain - just like the pain
Israelis or
Americans feel at the loss of their sons. Or, is that too
in the eye of the beholder?
1 Comments:
The woman's pain is real, no doubt. But her son is no hero, and elevating him as such is repulsive. Suicide bombing - aiming at women and children - is a cruel, cruel tactic to use, and never justified against women and children - who the Palestinian suicide bombers routinely aim for. It is also an unfair battle tactic against a soldier, but at least you can claim some justification if it is only the soldier they go after for.
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