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   | ‘What Has Happened to the Conscience of the World?' by Siraj Wahaj Arab News —
 JEDDAH, April 30, 2008 — The headlines coming out of Gaza daily stun
 people as women and children are slain by Israeli air strikes and the
 plight of the Palestinians worsens through blockades and embargoes of
 food, fuel and freedom. Pick up any newspaper, turn on any news
 channel and the message is the same: Gaza is a war zone — a war zone
 with only one army and an entire population of victims, struggling to
 stay alive and wondering if they will be alive tomorrow.
 
 Arab News recently gathered four young Saudis to voice their views on
 the current Palestinian situation, and their assessments were both
 brutal and often pessimistic about the future of the Middle East as
 long as Israel disregards human rights and seeks to isolate the
 Palestinians instead of reaching consensus with them.
 
 “Israel is meting out collective punishment,” said Badria Modeer, who
 is studying international relations at Dar Al-Hekma Women’s College.
 “The whole population is being attacked. They are killing infants;
 they are killing children. Why? And the worst part is nobody can stop
 them. What has happened to the conscience of the world? Where is
 humanity? Do other people in the world not see what we are seeing on
 our television screens every day and every night?”
 
 “The whole Gaza Strip is surrounded by Israelis,” said Ahmad Sabri,
 21, who studied political science at Jeddah’s King Abdul Aziz
 University. “Why did they cut fuel supplies to the entire country? Why
 did they cut electricity? Power cuts led to dozens of patients dying
 in hospitals. Isn’t this a massacre? If those patients had been
 Israelis there would have been a flurry of condemnation led by the
 United States, but when it’s Palestinian patients who die quietly in
 the night because there’s no electricity nobody talks about them. This
 is mass murder.”
 
 Most took a dim view of US foreign policy and its unflagging support
 for Israel and the failure of the United Nations to act effectively.
 
 “I am not optimistic. Israel is a bully,” said Khaled Yeslam, 25, a
 graduate of Jeddah’s College of Business Administration who now works
 at a PR firm. “Israel came into being by force, and it will not listen
 to reason. American politicians are completely subservient to the
 Israeli lobby.”
 “I don’t believe in the UN; it is not fair,” said Hidaya Abbas, 20,
 who is a student at Dar Al-Hekma College. “The UN can’t do anything.
 Instead of being busy putting pressure and sanctions on Iran just
 because it is allegedly in the process of producing nuclear energy why
 don’t they impose sanctions on Israel, which has 200 nuclear warheads?
 Iranians are not at war with anyone, but Israel has no qualms about
 bombing civilians. Why can’t the UN slap sanctions on Israel? It is a
 useless organization.”
 
 “America is directly responsible for what is happening in Gaza today
 because they support the Israeli occupation morally, financially and
 militarily,” Sabri said. “They also support Israel in the United
 Nations by blocking all resolutions that condemn Israeli massacres.
 More specifically, the American government’s foreign policy is the
 problem.”
 
 “I am for peace. I fully support King Abdullah’s peace initiative that
 calls for the creation of Palestine on pre-1967 borders,” Modeer said.
 “If we can’t have the entire cake, we can have some piece of cake — at
 least we have something rather than having nothing. Saudi Arabia is a
 rich country. It has good relations with the Americans, and if we
 pressure America, then Americans can pressure Israel to give up its
 occupation.”
 
 Not everyone shared Modeer’s conciliatory perspective.
 
 “I think peace can only be between two equal parties,” said Sabri.
 “I’m against the peace initiative, because it gives legitimacy to the
 occupation. It lends dignity to thieves. Yes, the Israelis are
 thieves. They stole our land. According to the international law,
 Palestinians have the right to resist occupation just like all the
 wars of liberation in history. Nobody can deny them the right of armed
 resistance. This happened everywhere.”
 
 “Anybody who is talking about peace with Israelis does not make sense
 to me,” Abbas said. “Israel is occupying Palestine; how can we make
 peace with them? Let me simplify it. I have a house, and suddenly
 someone comes and tells me ‘I will take your house and then I will
 kill you’. So will I say: ‘OK, OK. Don’t kill me; take half of the
 house?’ That doesn’t make sense to me. Peace treaties are like that.
 If somebody wants to kill me and take my house, I don’t give him half
 of my house — I fight back. They are Zionists at the end of the day,
 and they are occupying our lands. They are taking something that
 doesn’t belong to them. They are killing children. So it is the right
 of the Palestinian people to fight back, and they are fighting. They
 are not terrorists — the occupiers are.”
 
 The extreme events in Gaza are leading to worries about a conviction
 among some young people that the horrific situation requires a violent
 response.
 
 “Islam stands strictly against killing civilians, but any occupier is
 not a civilian,” Sabri said. “He is stealing my land; he is stealing
 my water. There are five million Israelis living on my land, and there
 are six million Palestinian refugees all over the world. It doesn’t
 matter whether he is holding a gun or not. The most important fact is
 that most Israelis are reservists and will be called to service
 whenever required. So every Israeli has to be resisted.”
 
 “This is creating a new generation of extremists,” Yeslam said. “We
 see blood being spilt in Palestine, and here are our people talking
 about business, economy and peace. So naturally, they are getting
 attracted to the extreme point of view: that of violence. You can’t
 blame the youth. They are frustrated — very, very angry at their
 helplessness. Remember, the Bin Ladens and the Al-Zawahiris emerged
 out of this chaos. They exploited the frustration of our youth. The
 world should wake up and tell Israel to stop its barbarity.”
 
 All of them long for the rarest commodity in the Middle East, which is
 peace.
 
 “Those Israeli settlers have the right to live in Palestine like all
 Christians in Palestine and like all the Jews in Iraq, like the Jews
 in Tunisia and Egypt and the Christians in Yemen,” Sabri said. “They
 have the right to live as Palestinian citizens like all the Jews and
 Christians living in the Islamic world. There are a lot of Christian
 Palestinians. They are our brothers and sisters. They are not
 occupiers; they are part of the country. This is what should happen.
 There should be coexistence. But the Israelis came as an armed force,
 so they are occupiers, and they need to be resisted.”
 
 “Every European and every Americans should log onto
 IfAmericansKnew.org website to know what is happening in Palestine,”
 Abbas said. “All of us would stop thinking in a selfish way. This
 earth belongs to all people. We are all brothers and sisters in this
 world and share this world, and it is important that we find solutions
 for our grandchildren.”
 
 “Israel should lift the siege immediately,” Modeer said. “Commit to
 the peace deal — open the borders. Let there be free trade. Let the
 Palestinians live in peace.”                                                            http://groups.yahoo.com/group/aawaz-e-dost/message/5443
 
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