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From guillotines to suicide bombs

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  • From guillotines to suicide bombs

    National Post, Canada
    November 13, 2004 Saturday

    >>From guillotines to suicide bombs

    Sir Martin Gilbert, National Post


    Terrorism is as old as time. The killing of civilians, men women and
    children picked at random, has been a feature of human life for as
    long as history has recorded it.

    States began implementing terror in a systematic way during the
    French Revolution. In 1793 and 1794, what was called "The Terror"
    was a daily way of life and death in France. Execution by guillotine
    was used as a means to create a docile population. Forty thousand
    French men and women were executed by Dr. Guillotine's newfangled
    but effective machine.

    But state terror reached its most destructive apogee in the twentieth
    century. It was Vladimir Ilyich Lenin who first used terror as a main
    instrument of state policy. During the Kronstadt uprising in 1918,
    Lenin's right-hand man, Leon Trotsky, was sent to negotiate with the
    rebels. Lenin telegraphed to him that what was needed was not talk but
    terror; that Trotsky should shoot the leading rebels and all would
    quiet down. Trotsky did as ordered: 600 of the rebels were killed,
    and 900 executed soon afterwards.

    The Gestapo symbolized the State terror that dominated Germany
    between 1933 and 1945. It was Nazi state terror that led to the murder
    by gassing and injections of more than 100,000 disabled non-Jewish
    children judged to be unworthy of life. It was Nazi state terror that
    put hundreds of thousands of non-Jewish Germans -- opponents of the
    regime -- into concentration camps from the first days of Nazi rule
    in 1933. Six million Jews were killed. Gypsies and homosexuals were
    also among those singled out for death. These were all victims of an
    act of state terrorism without parallel in history.

    On Nov. 14, 1914, in Ottoman Turkey, the spiritual leader of the
    Sunni Muslims, the Sheik Ul-Islam, called for jihad against all
    "infidels and enemies of the faith." The principal "enemies of the
    faith" were the Armenian Christians, whose ancestors had lived in
    the Turkish region for two millennia .

    On April 24, 1915 -- a black day -- Ottoman Turkey began a reign of
    terror against its Armenian Christian minority throughout Anatolia. A
    million and a half Armenians died, many during deportations and
    death marches.

    In Cambodia, the state terror of Pol Pot's regime resulted, during the
    course of five years, in one and a half million dead and gave us the
    phrase "killing fields." In East Timor, Indonesian state terror lasted
    24 years: from the Indonesian invasion in 1975 to independence in
    1999. Twenty-four years of misery were imposed on an independent-minded
    people, and more than 200,000 East Timorese citizens were killed in
    what would become the 188th state to enter the United Nations.

    During the early 20th century, colonial powers faced terrorist attacks
    from local insurgents who used ambush, mutilation and massacre as part
    of their national struggles, targeting civilians as well as soldiers.

    Britain faced this at the turn of the century on what was then the
    North-West frontier of India. The Italians faced it in Tripolitania --
    part of today's Libya, which until recently, was itself a center of
    modern global terrorism.

    When I entered the British army in 1955, there were terrorist actions
    being carried out against British civilians as well as soldiers in
    Aden, Kenya, Cyprus and Malaya. In Cyprus, the saintly Archbishop
    Makarios instructed the military leader of the insurgency, General
    Grivas, to make his struggle more effective by placing bombs in the
    markets where the wives of soldiers shopped.

    In Kenya, the Mau Mau of the Kikuyu tribe turned on the Christians in
    their tribe who refused to take the Mau Mau oath, murdering 1,800 of
    them -- 97 in a particularly repellent massacre in the village of Lari
    on March 26, 1953. In Sri Lanka, the terrorism of Tamil extremists,
    the Tamil Tigers, brought more than a decade of violence -- including
    massive suicide bombings -- to a beautiful land. Such terrorism harms
    the very cause it seeks to enhance and endangers the reputation of
    those whom it claims to represent.

    Two remarkable leaders of national movements have deflected their
    followers from the path of terrorism. In India, Mahatma Gandhi
    disassociated himself from the Indian terrorists who, in 1919, murdered
    British civilians throughout the Punjab. Gandhi described the lurch of
    some of his supporters to terrorist acts as a "Himalayan blunder," and
    insisted on a new tactic in the struggle for independence, satyagraha:
    non-violent protests through non-co-operation, boycotts and strikes --
    but not acts of terror.

    Fifty years later, in South Africa, Nelson Mandela likewise moved the
    African national struggle away from terrorism and violence toward the
    Gandhian concept of non-violence. In Northern Ireland, the terrorist
    killings of more than half a century, including those on the British
    mainland, met a powerful opponent in the women's peace movement --
    women from both the Catholic and Protestant communities who banded
    together to protest against the unending violence. Their leaders,
    rightly, were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

    Other forms of terrorism to cow a civilian population proliferated
    during the 20th century. On June 1, 1941, during the Jewish festival
    of Shavuot, a mob of Iraqis -- incited by the local Mufti -- turned
    with savagery on the Jews of Baghdad, a venerable community that had
    been at the forefront of the prosperity and modernization of inter-war
    Iraq. As many as 500 Jews were killed -- slaughtered in the streets
    and in their homes.

    This proved to be only a prelude to more than a decade of attacks on
    Jews throughout the wide arc of Arab-Muslim lands, leading to great
    hardship -- and mass flight -- of hundreds of thousands of Jews who
    had lived as an integral part of Muslim communities since the rise
    of Islam.

    With the emergence of the PLO in 1964, terrorist actions were waged
    against Israelis and Jews across the globe under the banner of
    Palestinian liberation: Against a Jewish community centre in Buenos
    Aires; against Israeli Olympic competitors and their coaches in Munich;
    against airliners; against the Israeli ambassador in London.

    A continuous line of thought and action, dating back to the dawn of
    Islam as modern fanatics would have it, underpins these terrorist
    outrages: The Muslim terrorist who was about to be sentenced for the
    Bali terrorist bombing called out in court, "Jews, remember Khaibar."
    He was warning Jews to remember the time, 1,364 years earlier, when
    Mohammed conquered the Jews of the Khaibar Oasis in the Arabian
    peninsula.

    A turning point in 20th-century terrorism came in 1987 when a new
    organization, the Islamic Resistance Movement, was founded. Better
    known by its acronym Hamas, it intensified the terrorist actions
    against Israel, introducing the suicide bomber to the conflict.

    In the Gaza Strip, Hamas created an infrastructure of welfare
    institutions, schools and hospitals, taking over after 1995 many
    of the social functions that ought to have been undertaken by the
    Palestine Authority. But its main focus was terror. So frequent,
    and so brutal were its terrorist acts that Israel adopted a method
    of counter-attack that had earlier been used by Britain against the
    IRA: targeted assassinations of those who perpetrate, plan, or direct
    terrorist actions.

    This policy, draconian and controversial though it may be, has led to a
    drastic reduction in Hamas acts of terror, especially after the killing
    of the two leaders, Sheik Ahmed Yassin and Dr. Abd-el Aziz Rantisi.

    The acts of terror committed against Jews in every decade of the 20th
    century are a part of a large published record, shown most recently
    in Esther Goldberg's pioneering guide for teachers and students,
    Holocaust Memoir Digest. Other groups have not been so fortunate.

    Several times in recent decades, the Christians of southern Sudan were
    the victims of a merciless Muslim onslaught. In 1965, several thousand
    black Sudanese Christians were killed, literally hacked to death,
    by the military arm of the ruling National Islamic Front. In 1988,
    an estimated 70,000 black Sudanese Christians were killed in their
    villages and thousands more forcibly converted to Islam.

    On June 30, 1989, a military regime espousing a fundamentalist Islamic
    orientation came to power in the Sudan. One of the first acts of its
    leader, Hassan al Turabi, was to obtain the services of a wealthy
    Saudi Arabian and his organization in his terror campaign against
    Sudanese black Christians. That Saudi Arabian was Osama bin Laden
    and his organization, al-Qaeda.

    Aspects of the Sudanese State terror inaugurated 15 years ago included
    the execution of Christian Sudanese who refused conversion to Islam,
    and the abduction of Christian boys and their use as slaves. When
    the United Nations failed to act to prevent this state terror, its
    special rapporteur, Dr. Gaspar Biro, resigned in protest. Sudan is
    of course a member of the United Nations whose supreme and sublime
    Universal Declaration of Human Rights it ignores and subverts.

    Unfortunately, this is not the last time that terrorists will flout
    basic human-rights standards by murdering innocents. Terrorism is an
    integral part of the human story. And there seems little chance it
    will end any time soon.

    GRAPHIC: Black & White Photo: STR, AFP, Getty Images; Israeli
    policemen inspect bodies in front of a bus attacked by a suicide
    bomber in Jerusalem on Feb. 22.
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