Another day, another terrorist suicide bombing in Israel. Atop
more than 100 Palestinian suicide attacks in three years, it's
almost not even news.
Yet last Wednesday's bombing in Gaza was different. The suicide
killer was the first to be a mother and the first female bomber
from the terrorist group Hamas. (The six previous female suicide
attackers were members of Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigade, a group
sponsored by Yasser Arafat's Fatah faction of the PLO.) In the
first suicide attack since Christmas, 21-year-old Reem Raiyishi
orphaned a 3-year-old son and a 1-year-old daughter.
In a traditional pre-suicide videotape testimonial, Raiyishi,
holding an AK-47 assault rifle almost as big as she was and wearing
the green Hamas sash, said she long wanted "the honor" of being a
suicide bomber and was "proud to be the first female [Hamas]
martyr": "I have two children and love them very much. But my love
to see God was stronger than my love for my children, and I'm sure
that God will take care of them if I become a martyr," the woman
from a middle-class Palestinian background said.
The attack signals a change in tactics for Hamas, which in the past
hasn't used women as suicide bombers. Indeed, the group's founder
and leader, Ahmed Yassin, doesn't approve of women traveling
outside the home unchaperoned by men.
Yet after the bombing, he trumpeted, "Jihad is the obligation of
all Muslims, both men and women .¤.¤. resistance will
escalate against the Zionist enemy until they leave our
land."
So much for the recent ceasefire.
Yassin went on to say that using a "female fighter" was a "new
development in resistance against the enemy." Some terror groups
have been reluctant to use women because their brand of Islam holds
females to be unworthy of martyrdom. But women raise less suspicion
with security personnel and often can get closer to their
targets.
Who will Yassin recruit next as a human bomb: senior citizens and
children?
What would possess a young mother in the prime of her life to strap
on a belt laden with 10 pounds of plastic explosives, nails and
ball bearings and to willfully widow her husband and orphan her
children? (Her husband reportedly never knew of the plot.) It
appears she was seized by Palestinian nationalism and religious
fervor.
That doesn't necessarily mean she was crazy. Contrary to popular
belief, suicide bombers aren't insane - in a clinical sense, at
least. Most are carefully selected and trained and know full well
what they are doing and what the consequences will be to themselves
and their victims. Although suicide for reasons of personal
distress is forbidden in Islam, like in most religions, to give
one's life in the name of Allah is considered a divine act.
(Justifying the killing of innocents is tougher, but of course
terrorists convince themselves that their victims aren't
innocents.)
Islamic culture has a long suicide-attack tradition, dating to the
Assassins of the 11th to 13th centuries in modern-day Syria and
Iran, who attacked Christian Crusaders and other prominent local
officials in large public places, assuring the attackers' immediate
capture, execution and martyrdom.
For Islamic terrorists, martyrdom may bring personal notoriety, new
recruits to the cause, achieve revenge or give significant meaning
to one's life. It can also be prompted by a desire for religious
purification and entrance into heaven.
For many Muslims, heaven is a place of milk and wine rivers and
honey lakes, where the martyr will see Allah's face, be joined by
70 chosen relatives, and enjoy the services of 72 virgins. Female
martyrs are promised to dwell forever alongside the husband or
fiance they have left behind. And the weight of earthly rules
(including Islamic law) and responsibilities will no longer hang
upon them like millstones in the afterlife.
In fact, suicide bombers have been known to smile widely and
joyfully just before blowing themselves to kingdom come.
For those Palestinians who have indoctrinated their children in the
glories of martyrdom, peer pressure provides an incentive to choose
this fate as well. Today, instead of weapons of last resort,
suicide bombings have become the weapon of choice in the modern
terrorist's arsenal in the Middle East - and beyond.
This clear escalation of the conflict by Hamas is troubling for
Israel and the prospects of Middle East peace. Attempting to
resolve political disputes through terrorism is bad enough, but
using the mother of young children - in a suicide run that will
change nothing - is wrong and shameful.
COMMENTARY Middle East
Suicide Psyche
Jan 21, 2004 3 min read
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