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- <text id=93TT2256>
- <title>
- Dec. 20, 1993: When Revenge Comes First
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Dec. 20, 1993 Enough! The War Over Handguns
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MIDDLE EAST, Page 42
- When Revenge Comes First
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Eye-for-an-eye violence between settlers and Palestinians mocks
- the idea of coexistence
- </p>
- <p>By Kevin Fedarko--Reported by David Aikman/Tel Aviv and Robert Slater/Hebron
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps the most significant thing about Mordechai Lapid's
- death was not who killed him, but where they did it. A Jewish
- settler from the West Bank town of Hebron, Lapid was standing
- at a bus stop with four of his 15 children last Monday night
- when several Palestinian gunmen opened fire from a passing car,
- cutting down Lapid and his eldest son. Just a few yards from
- where their bodies lay, bloodstains marked the spot where 48
- hours earlier a group of Lapid's fellow settlers had stopped
- a car for no reason and shot into the passenger seat, killing
- Talal al-Bakri, a Palestinian vegetable seller and himself the
- father of 13 children. The eye-for-an-eye vengeance is making
- a mockery of what is supposed to be a new era of peaceful coexistence.
- </p>
- <p> The sight of Jews killed by Palestinians is always guaranteed
- to provoke outrage in Israel. But many Israelis have little
- sympathy for extremist settlers in the occupied territories,
- a minority whose vigilantism has done as much as their fanatical
- counterparts on the Palestinian side to threaten the peace process.
- For two groups who can't work together on anything else, their
- collaboration at keeping violence alive has been remarkably
- successful: five days before Israel was scheduled to begin pulling
- its forces out of the Gaza Strip and part of the West Bank,
- Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was forced to pour 5,000 more soldiers
- into the region to control the cycle of murder and reprisal
- that has killed 41 Palestinians and 14 Israelis since the signing
- of the Sept. 13 pact.
- </p>
- <p> Benumbed at first by the suddenness of the peace accord, the
- settlers became increasingly restive. But their noisy protests
- had little impact on the rest of the population until last week,
- when the killings pushed the government to treat their demands
- for protection with fresh urgency. At the same time, Rabin knows
- he must tame his own rampaging citizens if he is to work out
- security arrangements with the Palestinians.
- </p>
- <p> Once a powerful force under Likud governments, the settlers
- have seen their leverage weaken since Labor's rise to power
- last year. Rabin made it clear that the settlers represented
- only 4% of the population, and he cared more about the other
- 96%. Although many Jews in the occupied territories are young
- married couples originally drawn by tax breaks and cheaper housing
- to the bedroom communities outside Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, a
- core of hard-liners are fired by a messianic fervor that charges
- them with settling the biblical lands where the Jews once lived.
- </p>
- <p> Among the most ardent are thousands of Americans, many of whom
- have found solace for the dislocation that plagued them in the
- U.S. in the uncompromising faith of the settler movement. Virtually
- all the hard-liners consider the September agreement to be the
- first step toward a de facto dismantling of the 144 Jewish towns
- built in the West Bank and Gaza Strip since the 1967 Six-Day
- War. And nearly all of them are armed to the teeth: an estimated
- 30,000 own rifles and handguns, and several settlements boast
- depots stocked with mines and hand grenades.
- </p>
- <p> At no place in the territories are the two sides locked in a
- struggle as savage as the one in Hebron, a merchant town south
- of Jerusalem where 6,000 settlers have entrenched themselves
- in the midst of 90,000 Palestinians. Although Jewish life came
- to an end there in 1929 when an Arab band massacred 60 Jews,
- the community experienced a controversial rebirth in 1968 when
- Rabbi Moshe Levinger defied government policy to lead 32 Jewish
- families into the city, ostensibly for the purpose of celebrating
- Passover. They never left.
- </p>
- <p> Two weeks ago, Levinger, who once served 10 weeks in jail for
- gunning down a Palestinian shoe-store owner, again put Hebron
- in the news. Israeli television showed pictures of his compatriots
- swaggering through the streets firing their weapons into a crowd
- of stone-throwing Palestinians, while Israeli soldiers declined
- to intervene. Six people were wounded.
- </p>
- <p> On Tuesday night, as the Lapids' cross-country funeral wound
- through Bethlehem en route to Hebron, mourners called for revenge
- and rebellion against the government. When Palestinians began
- throwing rocks, the settlers retaliated by smashing the windows
- of Arab homes along the road. As the cortege neared Hebron's
- Jewish cemetery, Palestinians again pelted the procession with
- rocks, and the mourners responded, this time with machine-gun
- fire.
- </p>
- <p> By Wednesday morning, Hebron had become a tense ghost town,
- the highway nearly empty, the Palestinian shops closed under
- a 24-hour curfew. The only signs of life stirred in the courtyard
- of the Jewish quarter downtown, where Shalom Sharabi, 32, an
- Uzi submachine gun slung over his shoulder, was watching over
- a group of toddlers. Suddenly, word arrived of an assault on
- a Jewish settler in Bethlehem. The victim, Yair Cohen, was about
- to buy a bathroom faucet at a local store when a Palestinian
- gunman pumped two bullets into his stomach. Enraged by the news,
- Sharabi declared, "If Rabin came here today, I believe he'd
- be shot because he's a traitor."
- </p>
- <p> The settlers blame Rabin for doing too little to protect them.
- But their real ire is directed at the peace agreement they believe
- contains nothing but "gifts" for the Palestinians: the impending
- release of 4,000 Palestinian prisoners, an "army" of their own
- (the 15,000-man Palestinian police) and what the settlers denounce
- as a hands-off policy toward Arab violence. "This has created
- a situation where the terrorists feel secure driving up and
- shooting one of us," says Yechiel Leiter, a Pennsylvania-born
- spokesman for the settlers. "They now feel more brazen."
- </p>
- <p> Amid such attitudes, the hardest thing to keep alive may be
- the peace process. Last week the negotiations had become so
- strained that Yasser Arafat flew to Spain to meet with Foreign
- Minister Shimon Peres, and then to Cairo on Sunday for a meeting
- with Rabin. They need to resolve disputes over the size of the
- new Jericho zone, control of the border crossings and the rules
- of engagement for Israeli troops deployed around Jewish settlements
- before Rabin will begin pulling his army units out of the new
- Palestinian zones.
- </p>
- <p> So destabilizing has the cycle of violence become that even
- the conservative Likud Party has publicly criticized Jewish
- vigilantism. "I told the settlers three weeks ago that they
- would lose the public and lose us if they created vigilante
- groups. They had the view that if they took action on their
- own, they would change public opinion," said Likud's party leader,
- Benjamin Netanyahu. "They were wrong."
- </p>
- <p> But the prospect of being wrong does nothing to deter those
- who are more interested in vengeance than cooperation. On Friday,
- the bodies of two Palestinian brothers and their cousin were
- found in a car six miles from Hebron. An anonymous phone call
- announced that the slayings were in revenge for the Lapid murders.
- For people who are unwilling to consider compromise, the equation
- is simple: "If I can't live in Hebron," says settler David Yisraeli,
- "you can't have peace."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-