
Nine-month-old baby and four-year-old boy, his brother, were brutally taken hostages by savages 16 months ago, along with their mom who tried to protect them with her body.
Sixteen months on, we are expecting their bodies to be returned to Israel. To imagine what his father, who was also kept hostage for 15 and a half months, is going through is impossible.
There is no need to elaborate on the crime against humanity that occurred not in the time of a war, but as a part of premeditated massive terrorist attack. It screams out by itself.
What is needed to elaborate though is circumstances, the international climate, the atmosphere in which we are living these days. The atmosphere of a moral perverse when a terrorist is supported. When murders of babies, young children and mothers are supplied with all kinds of humanitarian aid non-stop, for months and months on. When perpetrators of awful crimes against humanity are cheered up all over the globe, from London to Sydney. When supposed-to-be moral authorities , such as the boss of the largest religious denomination, are openly and tirelessly supporting murderers. When small lazy vanity-dolls, believing firmly that they are some leaders, are playing their dirty, very dirty games non-stop, repeatedly siding with terrorists.
There is no ‘two-sides’ motto for baby murders. Period.
The moral depravity of the world today – and this is the countries which are largely accepted as civilised ones – is screaming and unparalleled.
Why didn’t the Allies supply Dr Mengele and all that bunch of murderers with non-stop humanitarian aid? Why did not whatever court of whatever justice issue an arrest order for Sir Churchill at the time? Because it would be related to the mockery of common sense and mockery of the victims. Not today though.
The relativity of good, bad and acceptable crossed all and any border in the society in which we are living today, and which has encouraged such hideous crimes as the murder of the Bibas family and many other crimes against humanity committed by the masked humanoids. And largely, widely supported by the crowds all over the world, all this tolerated by so many governments .
What has happened is that crimes against humanity are committed freely, and paid for by the tons of humanitarian aid, with scores of murderers released from the Israeli prisons in the time of widely and largely tolerated barbarity. Tolerated not by the bunch of wild marginals, but on the state- and international levels of the civilised world. This is unprecedented. And to say that it is screaming is to say nothing.
The climate of this criminal tolerance is made by people. By their decisions, their positions, their actions. Or non-actions.
The tragedy of the Bibas family, those innocent charming red-heads, will be remembered by many people, both in Israel and world-wide. It is impossible otherwise. Because whatever the cancer of moral relativity projects, human reactions still be the same, so far. The tragedy of the murdered baby, his 5-years old brother, their mom, and that poor father, the whole Bibas family, set a watershed to the limits of patience with terrorists, murderers, and those low-lives who support them with all that joy on the streets.
But there is more in this screaming crime of aloof human cowardice of all those in whose power it was to call things by their own names and not to shame the name of humanity by their despicable ineptness, the leaders of the free world. Free from what? Today, thinking about three murdered Bibases, a baby, a child, and mother, one can think that our world today is free from decency and will of the decision-makers. As simple as that.
It is simply impossible to hear those repeated mumbings of ‘never again’ by those who are mumbling it because of only reason, being in some office. Just stop it, for once. I am terrified to think of what Elie Wiesel and people like him would think and feel – feel – today. There are no Churchills around, not in Europe or Australia, for that matter. There is an enlarging moral and human void which is widening in front of our shocked and unbelieving eyes. I do hope that the current victory of darkness on the earth would be the Pyrrhic and short-leaved one.
© Inna Rogatchi
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Inna Rogatchi est une écrivaine, érudite, artiste, conservatrice artistique et cinéaste de renommée internationale, l’auteure d’un film très prisé sur Simon Wiesenthal: « The Lessons of Survival ». Elle est également experte en diplomatie publique et a été conseillère à long terme pour les affaires internationales des membres du Parlement européen. Son art peut être vu à Silver Strings : Inna Rogatchi Art site – www.innarogatchiart.com
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