Previously I had discussed Molly Moore's one sided portrayal of Israeli checkpoints. One point of controversy was that originally the member of Machsom Watch who witnessed the incident said that the Israeli guards had not intended to humiliate the Arab musician. That was until the Arab musician claimed otherwise:
The 28-year-old resident of the Farah refugee camp in the northern West Bank studies music at Al Najath University. "I did not offer them to play," he told Haaretz on Tuesday. "They asked me to open the case and show them the instrument, which was fine by me. But then they asked me to play; I did not offer to play. That does not sound logical. They asked me to play something sad, to match their mood."I felt humiliated," Tayam said Tuesday. "I always identified with the Jews who suffered in Europe [at the time of the Nazis] and after that they come and do the same thing to us."
When asked if perhaps the soldiers wanted him to play to ensure that the violin was not booby-trapped or contained explosives, Tayam said, "it doesn't make sense that they thought there were explosives in the violin. If they thought that, they would have made me move some distance from them [before playing], fearing I might blow up. I do not understand why they forced me to play. Most of the soldiers at the checkpoint know me, as I work there twice a week. The problems arise when new soldiers come."
Also responding in a letter to Haaretz was a former principal violinist for the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra. He writes: "Over a decade ago, I found myself in a very similar situation. During a concert tour in Great Britain, we arrived at Belfast airport and at border control I was asked to open my violin case and immediately afterwards even to play for them? It is appropriate to point out that musical instrument cases have been used at times to hide weapons." (He cites a movie and television show as examples.) In letters to the Jerusalem Post, other musicians described similar requests to play their instruments at overseas airport inspections.Nevertheless, the notion that the request of this Palestinian to play was humiliating and unjustified could not be laid to rest. Even the IDF bought it in revising its statement to deny that the request had been made at all. The Palestinian had volunteered to play, was its claim now.
The story of the soldier and the violinist has been blown way out of proportion to its significance. I too would like it removed from the media burner. But not before another musical instrument gets its deserved mention.I'm referring to a guitar. One that also grabbed a few headlines on 9th August, 2001.
On that morning, Izzadin Al-Masri, the newly-religious son of a well-to-do Palestinian restaurateur, passed through a machsom -- a checkpoint -- on the edge of West Jerusalem. Accompanied by a Palestinian women dressed as an Israeli to allay suspicions, he strode into the center of the city. A guitar case was slung over his shoulder. At 1:45 pm, he reached the intersection of King George and Jaffa streets. The restaurant was packed with mothers and children. This was lunch time, and the country's schools were closed for summer vacation. Al-Masri entered easily -- there was no security guard. Seconds later, he activated the explosives in his guitar and murdered fifteen Israelis in cold blood. My daughter Malki, 15, was one of them.
I notice that the "Arab Musician" is identified as a "student of Music at Al-Najah University, in news repoprts, to give him yet more credibility and further discredit the IDF soldiers. However, the media has suppressed the links that Palestinian Universities often have to Hamas and other terror groups as places of incitement and recruitment. INDEED this is clearly illustrated by Bassam Hundakji, who led the recent Carmel Market suicide bomber, 16-year-old Amar Al-Faar of the Askar refugee camp, from the territories into Israel. Hundakji's passage into Israel was eased by a journalist's identification card he had obtained through the framework of his studies at Nablus' Al-Najah University. Al Najah University is not an institution that removes a veil of suspicion from a student, in fact it adds a layer of warrented suspicion.
Also urgent is the news ignored by the media of how Amar Al-Faar, the 16 year old Palestinian Carmel Market suicide bomber, used information that terror groups gleaned by sending youths with fake bombs through checkpoints to test soldiers for their alertness. When the youths report that they managed to get through safely, the terror groups then assume the route is clear to send suicide bombers into Israel. How debased then are Leftist groups and the media, to seek to assist Palestinain terror groups to more easily send youthful suicide bombers to commit suicide and homicide by strategically weakening IDF defense through condemnatory false propaganda and distracting interference.