MIFTAH
Thursday, 4 July. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

September 16th, 1982, is one of the most painful dates embedded in the Palestinian collective memory. Lebanese Phalangist militia, in collaboration with the Israeli army, stormed the Palestinian refugee camps of Sabra and Shatila in southern Beirut, butchering approximately three thousand unarmed Palestinian refugees, men, women and children.

The decision to move into West Beirut had been taken by then Israeli Prime Minister, Menachem Begin, and Defense Minister, Ariel Sharon, although it constituted a violation of the cease-fire. On the morning of September 15th, the Israeli army moved into west Beirut and completely occupied it, despite protests from the Lebanese and US governments. They did not enter Sabra and Shatila refugee camps, but surrounded and sealed them off with troops and tanks. The next day, the Israeli cabinet approved a decision to allow the Lebanese militia into the camps to carry out one of the worst massacres of the Twentieth Century. The killing continued uninterrupted for two days, after which bulldozers were used to dig mass graves for the bodies that filled the alleys. A number of homes were also bulldozed to cover up the bodies of the victims.

Two months later, on December 16th, 1982, the United Nations General Assembly condemned the massacres as an act of genocide. The Kahan Commission of Inquiry, formed by the Israeli government in response to public outrage and grief, found that Israel was "indirectly responsible for not anticipating the possibility of Phalangist violence". Israel instituted the panel's recommendations, including the dismissal of Defense Minister Ariel Sharon and General Rafael Eitan, the Army Chief of Staff. Ironically, the first is now Prime Minister of Israel, and the latter managed to reach the rank of Deputy Prime Minister from June 1996-July 1999.

As we commemorate the 20th anniversary of this horrific event, we do not have to look far for other reminders of the inhumane atrocities committed by Israel against the Palestinian people, or of the urgency of achieving a comprehensive 'end to the conflict.' More than 1740 Palestinians have been killed over the past two years by the Israeli occupation forces. While perhaps there has been no massacre, strictly defined, in the West Bank and Gaza, the culmination of those killed throughout the occupied territories easily justifies the use of the word massacre. The collective punishment imposed on Palestinians by the same man responsible for the atrocities of Sabra and Shatila, is a testament to his deep hatred of Palestinians and his wish to control, subjugate and subordinate them according to his will.

The massacres at Sabra and Shatila, gruesome as they were, are just two in a long list of ruthless massacres perpetrated by Israel against the Palestinian people, including Tantura, Deir Yassin, Qana, Hebron to name but a few. This 'untold holocaust' orchestrated by a merciless Israeli government has cost tens of thousands of Palestinian lives and victimized countless others.

The undeniable obligation of the State of Israel to come to terms with its own history and acknowledge the suffering it has inflicted upon the Palestinian people must never be forgotten. So we take this time to commemorate the murder of scores of Palestinians, we take this time to remember. Peace, and peaceful co-existence, cannot be achieved in any other way - 'historical reconciliation' cannot be achieved without a 'historical confession.'

 
 
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