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Telling only one side of the Middles East story, Op-ed Aref Assaf,
Bergen Record, 4/23/2006 News and stories about the killing of innocent civilians rightfully
deserves front-page coverage ("New cycle of violence," Page A-1, April
17). Yet it seems that The Record has made a morally laden editorial
judgment when you placed the story about the recent bombing that killed
nine people in Tel Aviv.
You have given the world lull a new meaning. In the lexicon of
Palestinian-Israeli conflict, it is now considered a lull period when
only Palestinians are killed by Israelis.
What really happened during the period of "relative calm" between
Monday's attack in Tel Aviv and the previous Palestinian attack on
civilian targets in Israel? In that time, the Israeli military killed
more than 65 Palestinians, 18 of which were under 16. Israel also
destroyed or confiscated more than 5,000 acres belonging to Palestinian
farmers; Israel destroyed 48 Palestinian homes and jailed more than 258
Palestinians.
Apparently, death of Palestinians and destruction of their properties
and denying them a normal life is considered an acceptable price for
normalcy. Volatility, unrest and terrorism capture your display pages
only when Israelis are killed.
Coverage of the conflict has always been one-sided and viewed only thru
the eyes of Israel military censure. Israel's total grip on the borders
and its restriction of reporter movement has created what I would
describe a geographic bias that has rendered the battlefield - the West
Bank and the Gaza Strip - off limits to foreign reporters. It is ironic
that the only full time reporter in the area is Amira Haas from the
Israeli newspaper, Ha'aretz. We would, however, be given a totally
different view of the conflict if you dared to report even half the
stories Haas covers. U.S. media's
bias is reflected in at least two manners: One is the amount of pro-Palestine
editorials and commentaries by Palestinians or pro Palestine writers compared to
the pro-Israel views. The second, the editorial decisions by which
Palestinian deaths and tragedies are reported and or presented compared to
Israeli deaths. On the first front,
a recent study by
Patrick O'Connor concludes that
Palestinians do not have easy access and thus permission to present their own
narratives. generally aren't allowed to speak for themselves or to articulate
their historical narrative. Israelis, however, are permitted to speak, to
explain the Israeli experience and even to explain about Palestinians. As a
result, the Israeli story is known in the US while Palestinians are dehumanized.
I can attest to this dilemma for it is what I frequently face in my dealing with
certain newspapers to which I have submitted editorials.
On the second point, placement of stories
about Palestine compared to Israel indicate a serious lack of fairness and
journalistic neutrality. According to
If Americans New, most major American newspapers tend to relegate stories
about Palestine deaths to the indeed pages, relying mostly on Israeli sources,
while stories about Israeli death are given full attention on the front pages
often accompanied by larger photographs. By deciding whose voices are heard, and
which stories to cover or ignore, the US directly impacts the US public's
understanding of the conflict.
What is most dubious about American coverage is its almost total
unquestioning of the Israel's assessment of events. It is now, for
example, considered acceptable "collateral damage" when innocent
Palestinian civilians are killed by a two-ton bomb directed at an
apartment complex because the Israeli Army suspected a terrorist may be
hiding there. When an Israeli is killed, the electronic media interrupts
its programming to air gavel-to-gavel story of the life that was lost,
the agony of their weeping parents and relatives. When a Palestinian is
killed, you only see "things" such as blown-up cars and buildings, as if
Palestinians metaphysically exist without families and friends to mourn
their loss also.
When Israel confiscates Arab lands and builds an illegal settlement for
Jews only, it is described simply as a "neighborhood." When an expectant
Palestinian mother is denied access to medical service and is forced to
give birth at a checkpoint, the justification is given as a "necessary"
security measure.
Such deliberate and systematic dehumanizing of the Palestinians tragedy
is the result of a mainstream media complicity that does not question
authority or those who have the power and of a military capacity to
affect the lives of millions of Israelis and Palestinians. This most
pervasive and pernicious ineptitude of the media in covering the
Palestinian-Israeli conflict demonstrates not only a startling lack of
professionalism and fairness, but also a morally corrupt plateau that
renders the lives of the Israelis as being inherently more valuable than
those of the Palestinians. The cycle of violence is neither cyclical
nor random. The best metaphor to describe the Israel Palestine conflict is the
causal effect theory. Israel's illegal, immoral and brutal occupation of
Palestinian lands has led to all kind of resistance manifestations. Simple acts
such as people going to work and school every day, a farmer tilling his
farm or a mother nursing her child, take on political dimensions that have
sustained the Palestinian struggle for liberation and independence. True, some
Palestinians have also utilized violent means to demonstrate their anger-
condemnation of which must be made by all. However, this is not their exclusive
actions when it comes to the region. Israel has systemically and systemically
engaged in acts of terrorism against the Palestinian people.
It remain a fact
that Israel's continued military occupation of Palestine lands and the brutal
subjugation of the Palestinian people are the two undeniable motives for
Palestinian resistance both passive and violent. Relegating this reality only
perpetuates the volatile atmosphere and brings Israel no peace or security and
denies the Palestinians their inalienable legitimate rights to independence,
justice and a sovereign state.
The cause of peace, the security of Israel and justice for the
Palestinians are mutually inclusive requirements for a peaceful Middle
East. They will be advanced when we report the horrors of wars and
terrorism by and against both Palestinians and Israelis.
Aref Assaf President of the Paterson based American Arab Forum
Form-ready (negative) responses were published in the same paper a mere
two days later!.
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