William,
son of Lady Diana: Hearing is not Like seeing
Dr.
Bouthaina Shaaban
There
has been a story in the press recently about how Prince William, son of Prince
Charles and the late Diana, Princess of Wales, spent a night on the streets when
temperature was minus four in order to draw the world’s attention to the
suffering of the homeless in the UK. The
Prince’s companions spoke about how he slept, like the homeless, on cardboard,
and how they were shocked by the suffering of the homeless in the cold.
When movement slowed down in the city, drug dealers start moving around
among the homeless who live in constant fear of being attacked.
William’s friends were frightened when a rubbish collection vehicle
almost ran over the Prince who was wrapped in a blanket.
What
struck me about this story, besides the warm human feelings of Prince William
towards the homeless, is that one should actually live a certain case of human
suffering in order to know exactly what it means and how it feels.
All the words in the world cannot convey the suffering people live,
unless one goes through the experience itself, particularly when it has to do
with hunger, homelessness, humiliation, torture, war or racist subjugation by a
hateful occupation.
That
is how I explain the inability of the “civilized” Western world to
understand the suffering of the Palestinian people as a result of occupation,
oppression, killing home demolition and deprivation of freedom.
Can
one stop and think for a moment of what it means to become a “refugee” in a
country not your own, or “displaced and homeless” in your own; what it means
to be blockaded like the people of Gaza, to live surrounded by concrete and
steel walls?
When
I read a headline in The Wall Street Journal (Dec. 12, 2009) which reads
The Forgotten Palestinian Refugees,” I felt that there are people in the West
– which has inflicted all this suffering on the Palestinians a hundred years
ago – who have started to remember their suffering.
I read the article only to find it a fabricated story about a young
Palestinian in the
Jesus
Christ was the first Palestinian who suffered oppression, suppression and pain;
and the homes of his followers are still being demolished in
These
days, the world’s celebration of the birth of the prophet of peace, coincides
with the first anniversary of the barbaric Israeli war on
What
does the world say of these Israeli cold blooded crimes committed on Christmas
day against innocent unarmed young people? After
observing the inhuman conditions the Palestinians live under, former Dutch Prime
Minister, Andreas van Agt, decided to
speak out about their suffering. In
an experience similar to that of Prince William, van Agt says: "The scales fell from my eyes on a visit to the
On the first anniversary of the brutal war
on Gaza, Israel is still meting out collective punishment against one and a half
million Palestinians in Gaza, still kills and arrests at will; nevertheless, all
that concerns people like Schwammenthal is covering up
the acts of Israeli war criminals and justifying their crimes through a
fabricated story of an asylum seeker.
Chris
Patten wrote an article titled “We are failing
Other
protestations have been voiced by Richard Falk, the UN special coordinator in
the occupied Palestinian territories, who repeatedly stressed that honorable
people, the governments of the world and the United Nations should award
sufficient attention to the inhuman conditions under which Palestinians in
How
long can this disgrace go on? It is
the holocaust of the 21st century; and all those who stay silent are
accomplices in this crime. The
international silence is a conspiracy against humanity; and Western leaders
should follow in the footsteps of Prince William and try to spend a night in the
open in Gaza like the homeless of operation Cast Lead in the hope that it would
awaken their sleeping silent consciences which ignore a horrible and disgraceful
reality that flies in the face of human values, religious values and
international conventions.