June 1989, Page 17a
Terrorism
Jewish Terrorist Group Murders Arab and Vandalizes Israeli Homes
By Emile S. Siman
When 20-year-old Yousef Al-Shawish was shot and killed at close
range last April 10 near East Jerusalem's Jaffa Gate, a little-known
underground organization claimed responsibility for the cold-blooded
murder. An anonymous caller told an Israeli newspaper that the killing
of the Arab was carried out in retaliation for stoning Jews at their
holiest shrine, the Western Wall, three days before. "Jewish
blood will not be spilled in vain, and for each Jewish eye, we will
take out 20 Arab eyes," the unidentified man told the daily
Yediot Ahronot.
The organization that executed the Palestinian and wounded three
of his companions as they were relaxing following the break of the
day-long Ramadan fast, is sikrikirn, which is a throwback to and
namesake of the Sicarites, who mounted resistance against the Roman
government of ancient Judea, during the period A.D. 6-73. The name
is derived from the Latin "sicarii," or those armed with
curved daggers.
The sikrikirn, as they are known in Hebrew, used short daggers,
concealed in their clothing, to murder their victims, usually at
religious festivals. The Sicarii also terrorized Jews who openly
cooperated with the Romans and their methods were said to be quite
effective.
Today, the sikrikim are by no means alone in a place which abounds
with right-wing extremist, militant Jewish groups. No less than
20 Palestinians have been killed at the hands of Israeli settlers
in the 17-month intifada, and the leader of the Gush Emunim, Rabbi
Moshe Levinger, has been charged with manslaughter following the
shooting of a Hebron shopkeeper. Moreover, two right-wing parties
with five Knesset seats—Moledet and Thomet—have openly
called for "the transfer of Arabs" from the occupied territories.
"Transfer" is a euphemism for forced deportation or expulsion
of Palestinians from the Israeli-occupied territories. As championed
by American-born Rabbi Meir Kahane and his Kach extremists, it would
also expel Christian and Muslim Palestinians living within Israeli
borders and holding Israeli citizenship. It does not preclude the
use of violence if "friendly persuasion" fails.
Significantly, the clandestine sikrikim has also leveled threats
against leftwing Israelis who have either called for redressing
Palestinian grievances in the occupied territories or who have met
with PLO representatives outside Israel. Among their Israeli targets
have been Maparn Knesset member Yair Tsaban, poet Dan Almagor, journalist
Dan Margalit, pollster Mena Tsemach, and the publisher of the Israeli
left-leaning Haaretz, Amos Shuken. Although there have been no attempts
on the lives of these Israelis, their homes or property have been
firebombed or vandalized.
On May 4, the sikrikim passed a death sentence on French Foreign
Minister Roland Duman and uprooted a tree he had planted in Jerusalem
in memory of his father. The sikrikirn were protesting the French
government's reception of Arafat in Paris. The gesture was also
seen as a warning against widely reported French plans to assume
an intermediary role in the peace process involving the PLO and
Israelis.
The actions and threats of the sikrikim are not likely to have
a far-reaching impact on the Palestinian intifada, now in its 17th
month and still going strong. Nor, for that matter, will it succeed
in intimidating most of the Israelis it has targeted, since they
are accustomed to defying extremists within the Israeli government.
But the danger lies in the condoning by Israeli government authorities
of increasing vigilante acts by armed Jewish settlers, and in appeals
by right-wing government leaders to give the Israeli residents a
free hand in "defending" themselves or "retaliating"
against stone-throwers.
Emile S Siman is a Washington DC-based journalist who writes
frequently on Middle East Affairs. |