Neither Islamic Jihad nor Hamas has taken
responsibility for the deadly bombing of a Jerusalem shopping district on
Sunday. That is not surprising: The bomber was a woman. Both terror groups
have fundamentalist Islamic agendas, and neither believes a woman is
deserving of a martyr's glory.
But Sunday's attack did not mark the
first time that Israel has been victimized by a female terrorist. In 1978,
a woman named Dalal al Mughrabi led a group of terrorists who took over a
civilian bus on the road between Haifa and Tel Aviv. Thirty-seven Israeli
civilians were killed, making it the deadliest terrorist attack in Israeli
history.
Last week, I met with Itamar Marcus, director of
Palestinian Media Watch, a group dedicated to monitoring the Palestinian
Authority's state-controlled media. In a prescient presentation, Marcus
showed me Palestinian television programming that glorified Al Mughrabi.
On a show called "Panorama," a commentator described Al Mughrabi as "a
symbol for the Palestinian nation" who demonstrated "the Palestinian
woman's role as a fighter." The speaker exhorted viewers to "cling to
Dalal as an individual who belongs to the Palestinian consciousness."
Following this, viewers were shown a dramatization in which Israeli Jews
threaten a Palestinian with a pistol in the cemetery in which Al Mughrabi
is buried. As the action unfolds, Al Mughrabi appears above her grave as a
protective spirit.
In the Muslim and non-Muslim worlds alike,
female suicide bombers are a rarity. The only exceptions are cult-like
groups led by charismatic leaders, such as Sri Lanka's guerrilla group the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, which has launched more suicide attacks
than any terror group in the world. How do the Tigers recruit female
terrorists? The strategy is simple: Get them while they're young.
Velupillai Prabhakaran, the Tigers' leader, personally brainwashes
preadolescent boys and girls, many of them war orphans. By the time
they're teenagers, they have become human time bombs. Girls and women
participate in 30% to 40% of the Tigers' suicide attacks, including the
1991 killing of former Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi and an
unsuccessful 1999 attempt on Sri Lankan President Chandrika Kumaratunga
that cost her an eye.
Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat has copied
the Tigers' strategy of using the mass media. Marcus showed me recordings
of programs from Palestinian state-controlled television. In one of the
most disgusting vignettes, a boy is shown clutching a toy car. He gazes at
the camera, drops the toy and picks up a rock to throw at Israelis. Then
the same shot is shown, this time with a girl holding a doll. She, too,
rejects her toy in favor of a rock. In another vignette, a boy is being
interviewed by a reporter. The interviewer asks the boy if he wants to
become a martyr. He says yes. She asks if he is afraid to die. He pauses
and stares at her, not knowing what to say. She shakes her head from side
to side slightly, signaling the expected response. "No," he then says,
defiantly.
Mohammed Durra, the 12-year-old killed as he was held by
his father during an October 2000 firefight between Israeli soldiers and
Palestinian gunmen, has been turned into a recruiting tool for child
martyrs. In one Palestinian television clip, the boy is shown in what is
depicted as a "children's paradise."
The television station of the
radical Lebanese Islamic movement Hezbollah identified Sunday's bomber as
a female student from An Najah University in the West Bank city of Nablus.
If the report of her age is correct, then she probably was exposed to this
brand of vile propaganda since she was an adolescent. It is no accident
that she turned to violence once she outgrew her dolls.






