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The Other View |
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Issue No. 6 Autumn 2001
By Ann Shaw In his article 'A Child is Killed'
(The Other View Issue 5), Anthony Mc Intyre describes the killing of twelve year
old Mohamed Elargi by Israeli forces as 'profoundly disturbing'. As a mother who
raised two children during the course of the recent violent conflict in Northern
Ireland, and who has dreaded the possibility that either could be killed as the
result of an indiscriminate shooting or bombing, I would certainly agree with
those remarks. That any child should die, whether
accidentally or wilfully, as a consequence of political conflict is deplorable.
This applies as much to Israeli children killed by Palestinian fighters as it
does to Palestinian children killed by Israeli forces. All such deaths should be
regarded as 'profoundly disturbing'. No child, Israeli or Palestinian, deserves
to be killed and when we take up the pen to condemn one such killing we ought to
be consistent and condemn all such killings. "The killing of a Palestinian
child is no more horrendous and no more murderous than the killing of an Israeli
child". The horrendous killing of six
Israeli children by a Palestinian suicide bomber in a Pizza Café in August
reminds us of the absolute horror of total war. But what was even more
disturbing were the newsreel pictures of adults dancing in the street in
celebration of the slaughter. Celebrating the death of children! – that is 'profoundly
disturbing' indeed. Children in Northern Ireland have
been no more immune from attack than children in Palestine or in Israel.
Statistics provided by the Cost of the Troubles Study show that 257 children
under the age of eighteen were killed between 1969 and 1998 I stood numbed with shock one
Saturday afternoon in December 1971 as the lifeless bodies of two babies were
dug out of the rubble of furniture showroom on the Shankill Road. One child was
two years old, the other a mere seven months. That was my first close encounter
with the death of a child who had been killed during the course of the Northern
Ireland conflict. That 'profoundly disturbing' experience has stayed with me
ever since. It could have been my child or my neighbours child and the thought
that has haunted me down through the years was the knowledge that at any time
either of my children could suffer a similar fate. When the 'Rule of Law' and
the values of normal civic morality are dispensed with, any child is liable to
the same horrible fate. In Northern Ireland we have a very
bad habit of defining victim-hood in the narrowest of terms. We tend to draw a
circle around 'our' people and deny victim-hood to all who fall outside that
circle. This simply serves to justify injury to some, suggesting that there are
'deserving' and 'undeserving' victims – those who 'are good value for it' and
others who are not. Genuine concern for healing in the community will lead us to
acknowledge that all who have suffered loss as a result of violence have a right
to have that suffering validated. This means that the definition of 'victim-hood'
must be all-inclusive. The children of Israel as much as the children of
Palestine, Unionist children no less that Nationalist children, victims of
anti-state violence no less than the victims of state violence. A view of victim-hood that is skewed
towards 'our' people, or towards those people elsewhere with whose political
aspirations we identify, produces a 'profoundly disturbing' approach to
victim-hood. A much more even-handed view is required if we are ever to assist
communities in conflict to heal the hurts of the past. By all means let us write
and talk about the effects of violent conflict on our children, but let us do so
in as open and as unbiased a way as is possible.
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