Jewish "Klansmen" tie Palestinian to power pole, beat him savagely
      [ 06/07/2008 - 10:27 PM ]

      Midhat Abu Karsh

      From Khalid Amayreh in el-Sammou, Hebron



      Even in his wildest dreams, Midhat Radwan Abu Karsh never imagined that 
one day he would be tied  up to a power pole and savagely beaten by bigoted 
Jewish settlers who believe that non-Jews are animals in a  human shape.

      Yet, this is exactly what happened to him earlier this week when four 
Jewish terrorists ganged up on the 31-year-old Palestinian teacher  as he was 
hiking in his land,  awaiting Israeli peace activists whom he wanted to brief  
on  the daily acts of vandalism, harassment and land theft at the hands of  
fanatical Jewish settlers, protected by the army and backed by powerful 
political parties.

      Abu Karsh accuses the settlers of being  hell-bent on driving 
Palestinians away in order to take over their land.

      "As I was standing in my land, suddenly four settlers descended from the 
settlement of Asnael, and started cursing and beating me with clubs. As you 
know, I am physically handicapped and couldn't escape because of my leg," Abu 
Karsh told reporters on Sunday at his home in the small town of El-Sammou, 35 
kilometers south west of Hebron.

      "Then they dragged me along the thorny terrain, causing me indescribable 
pain, until we reached the power pole just out of the settlement. There they 
tied me up rather tightly to the pole and began beating me with the clubs all 
over my body, including my head. What kind of people would do this to a 
handicapped person who can't defend himself?

      "When they tightened the robe around my neck, I thought I was going to 
die.

      The attempted lynching and beating continued unabated even after an 
Israeli army jeep, carrying three soldiers, arrived at the scene.

      "Initially,  I   breathed a sigh  of relief when  I saw the soldiers 
coming. I though   they would rescue me instantly and arrest or at least stop 
the settlers. However, to my disappointment, the settlers kept up beating me, 
causing a lot of bleeding in my head and face while the soldiers kept looking 
on."

      Abu Karsh said the soldiers begged the settlers "to stop it,"  but to no 
avail.

      "Would you believe it, soldiers begging the settlers to stop beating a 
handicapped Palestinian? Just imagine how Jews and non-Jews would react if 
criminals, say in France, attacked a Jew who is physically or mentally 
handicapped, say in Paris or Leon?"

      At one point, the settlers warned the soldiers to keep away, or else they 
would attack the soldiers. Israeli soldiers serving in the occupied West Bank 
have strict orders barring them from responding to settler violence in any 
active manner.

      When the soldiers, who had backed off a few meters, started calling their 
superiors to notify  them of what was going on, the settlers  carried out a 
last round of beating, kicking Abu Karsh  in his underbelly and  genitals.

      He said he nearly fainted.

      Forty minutes later, an Israeli police jeep showed up, with one policeman 
 reportedly telling the settlers to bring a bucket of water from the settlement 
and pour it right  on the victim's head, ostensibly in order to wash away the 
blood before the arrival of journalists and photographers.

      "Even at this point, I was still tied to the power pole and the police 
wouldn't untie me. And, of course, they didn't arrest any of the settlers," Abu 
Karsh said.

      Eventually,  an Israeli ambulance transferred Abu Karsh to a Palestinian 
Red Crescent ambulance which took him to the main hospital in Hebron.

      Abu Karsh  accused the settlers of deliberately starting a fire in the 
area and blaming it on him.

      The incident, the second of its kind in less than a month, was witnessed 
by Israeli peace activists from the Ta'ayosh (co-existence) group.

      One of the activists was quoted by the Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz as 
saying that he saw the settlers kick the victim  while he was bound up.

      "When we arrived at the scene there were already lots of the army's 
troops. I saw a settler approach him and kick him, as he was tied to the pole. 
His whole body was bound up, I saw they bandaged a head wound and he was half 
conscious."

      Last month, masked, stick-wielding  Jewish  settler terrorists attacked 
with clubs elderly Palestinian peasants near the West Bank town of Yatta.

      The brutal attack was filmed on video by a Palestinian woman, which 
embarrassed the Israeli government which refuses to take any meaningful action 
against settlers who attack Palestinian villagers.

      The wide dissemination of the video also prompted  Jewish settler leaders 
in the Hebron region to warn settler terrorists to make sure that their 
"anti-Palestinian activities"  are not being filmed or photographed.

      B'Tselem provided about 100 cameras to Palestinians who bear the brunt of 
settler terror and violence. The project, dubbed "Shooting Back" is aimed at 
documenting settler brutality and attacks.

      Palestinian, Israeli and international human rights organizations 
operating in the occupied Palestinian territories have already  documented 
numerous cases of settler attacks, harassment and vandalism against 
Palestinians.

      However, the Israeli army and Shin Beth (Israel's domestic intelligence 
agency), have consistently refused to rein in the settlers, thus effectively 
encouraging them to keep up their terror against the unprotected Palestinians.

      Most of the terrorist settlers attend Talmudic schools, or Yeshivot, run 
by extremist rabbis who inculcate their students with virulent hatred of every 
thing non-Jewish.

      Some rabbis, especially in the Hebron region, openly preach the view that 
modern-day Palestinians are the descendants of the Biblical  Amalek or 
Amaledites, who the Bible says must be wiped off from the face of earth.

      Some rabbis, such as Rabbis for Human Rights,  strongly reject the brutal 
racism and terror of their right-wing colleagues, arguing that such practices  
are immoral and constitute a serious distortion of Judaism.

      However, such views are rejected and treated with utter contempt by the 
vast bulk  of the Orthodox establishment in Israel.





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