TERRORISM: THEIRS AND OURS

by Eqbal Ahmad Sunday, Sep. 23, 2001 at 3:25 PM

Terrorists change. The terrorist of yesterday is the hero of today, and the hero of yesterday becomes the terrorist of today. In the 1930s &40s, the Jewish underground in Palestine was described as TERRORIST." Then came the Holocaust. By 1944-45, they were becoming "freedom fighters." In 1985, President Ronald Reagan received a group of bearded men, Afghan Mujahiddin. He pointed towards them, and said, "These are the moral equivalent of America's founding fathers". Such examples serve as jumping-off point for an analysis that calls for honesty, integrity and the rule of law, rather than continuing the follies of the past.

TERRORISM: THEIRS AND OURS

By Eqbal Ahmad

(A Presentation at the University of Colorado, Boulder, October 12, 1998)



In the 1930s and 1940s, the Jewish underground in Palestine was described as "TERRORIST." Then new things happened.

By 1942, the Holocaust was occurring, and a certain liberal sympathy with the Jewish people had built up in the Western world. At that point, the terrorists of Palestine, who were Zionists, suddenly started to be described, by 1944-45, as "freedom fighters." At least two Israeli Prime Ministers, including Menachem Begin, have actually, you can find in the books and posters with their pictures, saying "Terrorists, Reward This Much." The highest reward I have noted so far was 100,000 British pounds on the head of Menachem Begin, the terrorist.

Then from 1969 to 1990 the PLO, the Palestine Liberation Organization, occupied the center stage as the terrorist organization. Yasir Arafat has been described repeatedly by the great sage of American journalism, William Safire of the New York Times, as the "Chief of Terrorism." That's Yasir Arafat.

Now, on September 29, 1998, I was rather amused to notice a picture of Yasir Arafat to the right of President Bill Clinton. To his left is Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netan

Original: TERRORISM: THEIRS AND OURS