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		The 1982 Israeli Invasion of Lebanon Cannot be 
		Forgotten, as it Massacred 18,000 Lebanese and Palestinian Civilians  
				By James J. 
				Zogby 
		Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, 
		April 13, 2019  
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				Palestinian and Lebanese civilians massacred in Sabra and 
				Shatella, in Beirut, Lebanon, by Israeli invading forces, 1982  | 
			 
		 
		  
		Bringing Back Memories of the Nightmarish Israeli Invasion of 
		Lebanon    The New York Times headline on April 4th 
		was simple enough, "After 37-Year Search, Israel Recovers Body of a 
		Fallen Soldier," but the memories it dredged up were both painful and 
		complicated. 
  Here's the simple news story that appeared this 
		past Thursday: Four days before Israelis will go the polls to vote, the 
		remains of Sergeant Zachary Baumel, who had gone missing in 1982 during 
		Israel's invasion of Lebanon, were returned to his family for burial. 
		The remains reportedly were found by Russian and Syrian troops and then 
		sent by Russia to Israel. The entire event is being celebrated in Israel 
		and being seen as a pre-election gift for Prime Minister Benjamin 
		Netanyahu, who is currently being hounded by pending criminal charges 
		ranging from corruption to bribery. 
  That might be the simple 
		story, but for anyone with attachment to Lebanon and memories of the 
		devastating war of the summer of 1982, this episode only served as a 
		painful reminder of deep wounds that will never heal. It was called a 
		war, but in reality what happened could better be termed the "barbaric 
		rape of a country." The Israelis with their superior air power and 
		artillery ran roughshod over the south of Lebanon and after bombarding 
		and destroying the magnificent western side of Beirut – devastating its 
		infrastructure and even destroying its hospitals. Israeli troops then 
		entered and occupied the city, plundering, looting, and terrorizing the 
		trapped civilian population as they moved through Beirut's ruins. While 
		some Americans recall the massacres in the Palestinian refugee camps of 
		Sabra and Shatilla (committed by Israeli-allied Lebanese militia as 
		Israelis stood guard at the camps' perimeters), in fact the entire war 
		was a massacre. In just three months, over 
		18,000 were killed (mostly 
		Lebanese and Palestinian civilians) and over 30,000 were 
		wounded.  
  I remember this period all too well because I helped 
		start and then ran "Save Lebanon," a project to bring severely wounded 
		Lebanese and Palestinian children to the US for medical treatment that 
		was unavailable to them in bombed-out West Beirut. In all 65 maimed 
		children came to us. One little girl, Fayzeh Amin, lived with my family 
		for six months while doctors worked to save her cluster-bomb shattered 
		leg. I have a picture of Fayzeh and two other girls, Fatmeh and Amal, on 
		the wall of my office. It is a constant reminder of the pain of that 
		war. I also have a few hollowed-out Israeli cluster bomb casings I found 
		near a Palestinian camp in the south of Lebanon. They too serve as 
		reminders of the inhumanity of that period. 
  Less than a decade 
		and a half later, I joined then Vice-President Gore at a dinner at the 
		Israeli Knesset. I was one of the co-leaders of a project Gore had 
		launched in the post-Oslo period to help grow the Palestinian economy. I 
		admit to being more than a little uncomfortable at that dinner since I 
		was the only Arab American in a room filled with the members of the 
		Knesset, Gore, and the rest of his team. It became even more 
		uncomfortable when a boisterous former Israeli General, now Knesset 
		member, sat next to me and greeted me with "Ah, you are Lebanese. I've 
		visited your country. I love its beauty." Trying not to make a scene, I 
		merely said to him, "I know when you were there. You weren't a 'visitor' 
		and I know what you did while you were there. It was too painful and I 
		don't care to hear about it from you." As the evening went on, Gore, 
		maybe sensing that I was uneasy, came over to rescue me and brought me 
		to sit next to Leah Rabin, the wife of the late, assassinated Prime 
		Minister. He told her that I had just visited my family in Lebanon and 
		encouraged me to share my story with her.    
  I also recall from 
		that night that it was the lead up to the 1996 Israeli elections and the 
		Clinton Administration wanted nothing to do with Netanyahu, who was 
		challenging then Prime Minister Shimon Peres (who had succeeded Rabin 
		following the assassination); Gore appeared to make a determined effort 
		not speak to or even acknowledge Netanyahu. Mrs. Rabin noted this, at 
		one point, and told me, her voice filled with bitterness and sadness, 
		that she held Netanyahu responsible for the incitement that led to her 
		husband's murder. Enough said. 
  These were some of the memories 
		that came rushing to the fore as I read The New York Times article. The 
		problem is that these memories can't just be buried and laid to rest. 
		The maimed of Lebanon's war will be crippled for life. The families of 
		the those who were massacred from the air or by militia at point blank 
		range will continue to mourn their incalculable losses. Meanwhile, there 
		are Israelis who will still gloat over having "visited" Lebanon. And 
		Netanyahu, who was elected in 1996 on a platform promising to end the 
		peace process, not only met his goal during his first term, but came 
		back for three more terms. He now stands poised to win a fifth term and, 
		as perverse as it may be, is being helped by the return of the remains 
		of a soldier who died in the horrible invasion of the summer of 1982.   
		 There are those who may say that I should just forget this 
		hurt-filled past and move on. Forgetting, however, isn't an option. 
		Justice is the only cure that will close those old wounds. And given 
		what is unfolding in today's Israel, justice seems further away than 
		ever.  
		*** 
		
		 
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