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2 Girls, Divided By War, Joined In Carnage
New York Times | April 5, 2002 | Joel Greenberg

Posted on 04/05/2002 5:52:42 AM PST by Stand Watch Listen

When an 18-year-old Palestinian girl is induced to blow herself up and in the process kills a 17-year-old Israeli girl, the future itself is dying, the future of the Palestinian people and the future of the Israeli people." - President Bush

JERUSALEM, April 4 — The suicide bomber and her victim look strikingly similar.

Two high school seniors in jeans with flowing black hair, the teenage girls walked next to each other up to the entrance of a Jerusalem supermarket last Friday.

Ayat al-Akhras, 18, from the Dheisheh refugee camp near Bethlehem, was carrying a bomb. Rachel Levy, 17, from a neighborhood nearby, was carrying her mother's shopping list for a Sabbath eve dinner.

The vastly different trajectories of their lives intersected for one deadly moment, mirroring the intimate conflict of their two peoples. At the door of the supermarket, Ms. Akhras detonated the explosives, killing Ms. Levy and a security guard, along with herself.

The teenagers' deaths were invoked today by President Bush as he described the horrors of the escalating conflict here. "When an 18-year-old Palestinian girl is induced to blow herself up and in the process kills a 17-year-old Israeli girl, the future itself is dying, the future of the Palestinian people and the future of the Israeli people," Mr. Bush said.

The twin images of the girls resonated here, piercing a public consciousness increasingly numbed by more than 18 months of grinding violence.

The daughter of a refugee family originally from the Gaza Strip, Ms. Akhras grew up in Dheisheh, a grim warren of alleys and tightly packed dwellings that house 12,000 people on the southern edge of Bethlehem.

She was the 7th of 11 children, living in a bare third-story apartment down one of the camp's narrow streets.

Despite the violence and turmoil of the past 18 months, Ms. Akhras stuck to a steady routine, her relatives said. Every morning at 7 o'clock, she would leave home for the half-hour walk to school at the neighboring village of Artas. She would return home in the afternoon and devote herself to homework and housework: cooking, ironing, doing the laundry.

A top student with superior grades, she was preparing for graduation exams in a few months and planned to study journalism at a West Bank university, said her father, Muhammad Akhras, a construction foreman. "She studied all the time," said a brother, Fathi Akhras.

On Sept. 1, 2000, she became engaged to Shadi Abu Laban, a tile layer from Dheisheh. They were to be married in August.

Ms. Levy was also preparing for graduation exams. Her specialty in school was photography, and she recently completed a final photo project whose theme was water: pictures of a waterfall, a street puddle, a pond.

But her real passion was exercise. Ms. Levy worked out daily at a local club or in the living room, using a Jane Fonda exercise video from 1985 that had originally been brought by her mother.

"Fitness was her obsession," said the mother, Avigail Levy. "Her appearance was very important to her. She tended to get stressed out, and the exercise was a release."

The second of three children, Ms. Levy was born in Israel but spent the first nine years of her life in California, where her parents lived mostly in Los Angeles before returning home. She was so Americanized that she continued to speak English to her parents even after the family moved back. Her parents later divorced and her older brother moved out, leaving her at home with her mother and a younger brother.

As the violence between Israelis and Palestinians built steadily over the past year and a half, Ms. Akhras betrayed no sign of anger or militancy. She heard the worsening news on television and radio, she saw the scars left by Israeli shellings and military incursions, but there were never any indications that she was slipping into despair or plotting an act of revenge, her relatives said.

"She was quite normal," said her father.

Ms. Levy, for her part, refused to let the increasing Palestinian suicide bombings change her life. She insisted on going downtown with friends, despite her mother's pleas.

"She wasn't afraid," her mother said. "It didn't touch her at all." Ms. Levy was more protective of her mother, though, and would often change the channel on the television at home soon after news of another suicide bombing came on the air.

Last Friday, Ms. Levy told her mother that she wanted fish for Friday night dinner instead of the usual chicken. Her mother sent her out with a shopping list to a grocery shop downstairs, but some of the items, including the rice crackers Ms. Levy favored over high-calorie matzos on Passover, were only available at the supermarket nearby. Neither mother nor daughter dreamed that the place would prove a deathtrap.

At Dheisheh, Ms. Akhras left home as usual for school. Classes were in session that Friday, usually a day off, to make up for time lost during an Israeli incursion a few weeks earlier. After school, friends said, Ms. Akhras said something about running an errand in Jerusalem.

As Ms. Levy walked up to the supermarket in the neighborhood of Kiryat Yovel a little before 2 p.m., Ms. Akhras also approached. They walked to the door, where Ms. Akhras was stopped for a check by a security guard. Then, an explosion.

Ms. Akhras left behind a farewell videotape. Her head wrapped in a checked Arab headscarf, she announced that she was "a living martyr," ready to die for Palestine.

Ms. Levy did not get a chance to say goodbye, but her mother discovered musings in one of her notebooks. "She wrote about love," she said, "and about death. About what comes after death."



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Israel; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 04/05/2002 5:52:42 AM PST by Stand Watch Listen
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To: Stand Watch Listen
These girls were never joined. One was a normal, healthy happy girl. The other was a twisted, insane psychotic killer. It's obscene to even mention these girls in the same article except to say that one was the innocent victim of the other...which this article never gets around to saying.
2 posted on 04/05/2002 6:02:54 AM PST by pgkdan
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To: Stand Watch Listen
My guess is "Ms. Akhras" received a first-class education/brainwashing in the Palestinian schools, courtesy of Arafat.
3 posted on 04/05/2002 6:04:35 AM PST by Snake65
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To: pgkdan
These girls were never joined. One was a normal, healthy happy girl. The other was a twisted, insane psychotic killer. It's obscene to even mention these girls in the same article except to say that one was the innocent victim of the other...which this article never gets around to saying.

As appealing as it is to draw these stark moral comparisons, the fact of the matter is that the Palestinian teen was as much a victim of Arafat as the Israeli teen.

W used precisely the right verb when he noted that the Palestinian girl was "induced" to commit her heinous act.

4 posted on 04/05/2002 6:09:13 AM PST by Hotspur
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To: Stand Watch Listen
I said it on another thread, and I'll say it here: While all of us are responsible for our own actions, I believe there is a special place in hell for the unholy animals who twist the minds of children, turning them into suicidal killers.

These vermin don't love kids--they use them, just like the perverted pedophiles and slave-traders. They are enemies of morality and human decency.

5 posted on 04/05/2002 6:15:28 AM PST by Recovering_Democrat
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To: Stand Watch Listen
She (Ms. Akhras) was the 7th of 11 children, living in a bare third-story apartment down one of the camp's narrow streets.

The second of three children, Ms. Levy was born in Israel . . .

A great summation of why the Jews cannot allow the "right of return" that the Palestinians demand.

6 posted on 04/05/2002 6:58:27 AM PST by mushroom
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Comment #7 Removed by Moderator

To: pgkdan
These girls were never joined. One was a normal, healthy happy girl. The other was a twisted, insane psychotic killer. It's obscene to even mention these girls in the same article except to say that one was the innocent victim of the other...which this article never gets around to saying.

This article is so typical of the New York Times. And what is the reader supposed to draw from the fact that the murderess "was the 7th of 11 children, living in a bare third-story apartment down one of the camp's narrow streets"? Want to get these liberals' attention? Start calling these suicide attacks "hate crimes."

8 posted on 04/05/2002 7:31:37 AM PST by Atticus
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To: Stand Watch Listen
The dispassionate evenhandedness of this article is nothing that should surprise me, I guess, knowing what I do about the liberal media. But it's pretty upsetting, even so. This is a murderer and a victim, for heaven's sake!
9 posted on 04/05/2002 7:38:28 AM PST by Irene Adler
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To: Atticus
"Want to get these liberals' attention? Start calling these suicide attacks "hate crimes."

But the "oppressed" can never commit hate crimes, by definition. BTW, has anyone noticed the constant repetition of the term "humiliation" used by Palestinians and their supporters when describing their treatment by Israelis? I would imagine that qualifies as a "hate crime" to liberals more than blowing some innocent person up. To the left, it all depends on whose side you're on, and what the PC party line is this month; nothing else matters, really.

10 posted on 04/05/2002 7:44:27 AM PST by Irene Adler
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To: Atticus
HonestReporting.com calls these attackers 'homicidal bombers'.
11 posted on 04/05/2002 8:53:24 AM PST by Kermit
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To: pgkdan
While reading this article, I was struck by the similarity of the suicide bombers to the Columbine killers. Those two boys were also unhappy with their position in society, were angry, felt repressed and "humiliated". I wonder why the liberal reaction to their crimes is so different.
12 posted on 04/05/2002 9:15:11 AM PST by Eva
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To: Irene Adler
BTW, has anyone noticed the constant repetition of the term "humiliation" used by Palestinians and their supporters when describing their treatment by Israelis?

With the Arabs you have a prime example of a "shame culture," like that of the Japanese and some other Far Easterners. What matters most is how you appear to others, whether you are properly honored, and so on.

The Jews are almost the direct opposite, and were virtually the inventors of the "guilt culture," where what matters most is how you feel about yourself.

13 posted on 04/05/2002 5:41:58 PM PST by Stultis
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