Peace through Oddities?
Bassam Aramin, Jan. 20, 2007.
Imagine my surprise, then, to learn from freelance journalist Hélène Keller-Lind over the weekend (en Anglais for we non-Francophiles) that this poor girl's father has been shamelessly using her death as an anti-Israeli prop, during a "neutral" peace conference hosted by the Shimon Peres Centre for Peace.
The first sign of trouble was the fact that the event was scheduled on the 40-year anniversary of the Six Day War. For such a date to escape the notice of the "peace movement" by accident seems unlikely, so one is left to wonder whether the event organizers were trying purposefully to single out Israel for scorn by picking such a controversial date. The Al Quds Association for Democracy and Dialogue, in fact, confirmed that as far as they were concerned, the date was selected for that very reason!
Which brings us back to Bassam Aramin, the father in question, who just happens to be associated with the Al-Quds group.
According to Hélène, when she personally spoke with Mr. Aramin, he claimed that the Israeli Defence Forces shot his daughter for no reason, and claimed that there was no demonstration going on around her at the time. In fact, he goes so far as to claim that she was killed by a soldier while she was on the way home from school, and that the soldier told him that "they were told to kill Palestinian civilians deliberately".
Mourners carrying her body, the same day of her death. Notice how the posterized prints are already prepared for the occasion?
What's also cute is to see that he told her he, "had been in an Israeli jail for 7 years for having thrown stones and raised a Palestinian flag." What makes that cute? The touching caption, which were passed along with Kevin Frayer's pictures of this girl's wake, indicated that Mr. Aramin was, "an ex-Fatah gunman."
The man definitely seems to have developed a penchant for stretching the truth... The question is, to whom is he lying? Were the initial press reports correct? We've discovered, via CAMERA, that an autopsy indicated that rocks could also have been to blame for her death, but that her death was not caused by a normal bullet. Was he a peace activist before her death?
And again, I can't stress enough that no "demonstration" goes unseen in the West Bank. I've seen thousands of photographs of these types of events, which tend to happen every Friday, immediately following afternoon prayer services at the local mosques. Without fail. And for each protest that happens, there are dozens of photographers who witness each and every one.
Pop quiz: Which group(s) in the middle east is/are identified primarily with throwing stones at protests?
The Al-Qods Association's plans were foiled when some of the event's participants protested that the shirts were "inappropriate" for a peace gathering, as they were excessively inflammatory. Thankfully, Al Quds relented.
If you want to see some of the photographs which aroused my original suspicion, be sure to check out the Snapped Shot archives.
Cross-posted at Newsbusters.

