American Teen Tried to Unite Jews, Arabs, massacred by Palestinians
Uri | 07.03.2003 21:57
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20030306/ap_on_re_mi_ea/israel_young_victims_8
American Teen Tried to Unite Jews, Arabs
Thu Mar 6, 2:11 PM ET
By JASON KEYSER, Associated Press Writer
HAIFA, Israel - As an American teenager living in Israel, Abigail Litle wanted to help bring Jews and Arabs together, joining a school group that aimed to bridge a divide worsened by more than two years of Palestinian-Israeli violence.
Her dream was shattered Wednesday when a Palestinian suicide bomber blew himself up aboard a crowded city bus, killing Abigail — a daughter of a Christian church worker — and 14 Israelis.
"For Abigail, it was always that someone be valued as a person, not as an object defined by nationality," said her father, Philip Litle, originally from Harrisonville, Mo., sharing his agony over having to identify his daughter's battered body. "She's gone to a better place now."
Abigail, 14, was one of three students from the Reali school in the northern city of Haifa who were killed in the blast. The others were Daniel Harush, 16, and Yuval Mendelevitch, 13.
Born in Lebanon, N.H., Abigail was an infant when her parents brought her to Israel in 1989. The family settled in Haifa, where her father was studying at the Technion, Israel's premier technological institute. Later, her father took a job with a Baptist church.
In a land ripped apart by ethnic and religious conflict, Abigail and Yuval took part in a school program that worked to promote understanding between Arab and Jewish students. The program, "Children Teaching Children," had its first meeting Feb. 26.
Abigail's teacher Nurit Harel described her as a strong-willed teenager who once refused to let a raging fever prevent her from going to school for a sports competition.
"Pupils phoned her and she told them that although she was ill she would be there," Harel said. "She did the best she could, and the points she earned won the class first place."
On Thursday, some of Abigail's friends and her sister Hannah, 13, gathered in the bedroom the two girls shared. On Abigail's side of the room was a poster of English soccer star Michael Owen. "She thought he was cute," Hannah said.
Abigail is to be buried in Haifa on Sunday.
Moments before the blast, Yuval Mendelevitch had called his father on his cell phone, as he did every day, to tell him what he'd done in class that day and when he'd be home.
"He said, 'I love you, Dad.' Then the line went dead," Yuval's father, Yossi, said. "It turns out that those were his last words."
Daniel Harush, 16, finished class early on Wednesday because most of his fellow students were on a field trip to Poland, his sister Ronit said.
He was planning a career as an air force pilot and had signed up to take a parachuting course this summer, she said. He was buried Thursday.
Nine of the bombing victims were under 18 and at least two passengers killed were Arabs. Haifa, a city known for Jewish-Arab coexistence, was hit by several suicide bombings before, including a bus bombing that killed 15 in December 2001.
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon (news - web sites) pointed to the deaths of the youngsters and linked it to terror attacks in the United States.
"The terror that attacked the twin towers (Sept. 11) is the same terror that murders school children," he said at a Jerusalem ceremony recognizing police and volunteers who have foiled terror attacks.
In the hallway of the Reali school, a large and colorful paper lion hangs on the wall, made by Yuval for the upcoming Jewish holiday of Purim. Also at the school was an impromptu memorial that students set up with flickering candles and photos and articles cut from morning newspapers.
Principal Ron Kitrey said his 3,200 students were close, despite the school's size. "There is a feeling of one big family, and of great pain," he said.
Wednesday's bus bombing brought to six the number of Reali students killed in Palestinian attacks since the September 2000 outbreak of Palestinian-Israeli violence.
Police said the bomber had a letter declaring his intention to carry out a suicide bombing and praising the Sept. 11 terror attacks. His family said he was a 20-year-old member of the Hamas militant group.
No organization has taken responsibility for the Haifa bombing yet.
Yossi Mendelevitch described the news of his son's death as "an ink blot, spreading across the consciousness."
Called to the national forensic institute in Tel Aviv, he was warned to bring Yuval's dental X-rays so that he would not have to view what the bomb had left of his boy.
"I want to remember Yuval whole," he said. "In one piece."
American Teen Tried to Unite Jews, Arabs
Thu Mar 6, 2:11 PM ET
By JASON KEYSER, Associated Press Writer
HAIFA, Israel - As an American teenager living in Israel, Abigail Litle wanted to help bring Jews and Arabs together, joining a school group that aimed to bridge a divide worsened by more than two years of Palestinian-Israeli violence.
Her dream was shattered Wednesday when a Palestinian suicide bomber blew himself up aboard a crowded city bus, killing Abigail — a daughter of a Christian church worker — and 14 Israelis.
"For Abigail, it was always that someone be valued as a person, not as an object defined by nationality," said her father, Philip Litle, originally from Harrisonville, Mo., sharing his agony over having to identify his daughter's battered body. "She's gone to a better place now."
Abigail, 14, was one of three students from the Reali school in the northern city of Haifa who were killed in the blast. The others were Daniel Harush, 16, and Yuval Mendelevitch, 13.
Born in Lebanon, N.H., Abigail was an infant when her parents brought her to Israel in 1989. The family settled in Haifa, where her father was studying at the Technion, Israel's premier technological institute. Later, her father took a job with a Baptist church.
In a land ripped apart by ethnic and religious conflict, Abigail and Yuval took part in a school program that worked to promote understanding between Arab and Jewish students. The program, "Children Teaching Children," had its first meeting Feb. 26.
Abigail's teacher Nurit Harel described her as a strong-willed teenager who once refused to let a raging fever prevent her from going to school for a sports competition.
"Pupils phoned her and she told them that although she was ill she would be there," Harel said. "She did the best she could, and the points she earned won the class first place."
On Thursday, some of Abigail's friends and her sister Hannah, 13, gathered in the bedroom the two girls shared. On Abigail's side of the room was a poster of English soccer star Michael Owen. "She thought he was cute," Hannah said.
Abigail is to be buried in Haifa on Sunday.
Moments before the blast, Yuval Mendelevitch had called his father on his cell phone, as he did every day, to tell him what he'd done in class that day and when he'd be home.
"He said, 'I love you, Dad.' Then the line went dead," Yuval's father, Yossi, said. "It turns out that those were his last words."
Daniel Harush, 16, finished class early on Wednesday because most of his fellow students were on a field trip to Poland, his sister Ronit said.
He was planning a career as an air force pilot and had signed up to take a parachuting course this summer, she said. He was buried Thursday.
Nine of the bombing victims were under 18 and at least two passengers killed were Arabs. Haifa, a city known for Jewish-Arab coexistence, was hit by several suicide bombings before, including a bus bombing that killed 15 in December 2001.
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon (news - web sites) pointed to the deaths of the youngsters and linked it to terror attacks in the United States.
"The terror that attacked the twin towers (Sept. 11) is the same terror that murders school children," he said at a Jerusalem ceremony recognizing police and volunteers who have foiled terror attacks.
In the hallway of the Reali school, a large and colorful paper lion hangs on the wall, made by Yuval for the upcoming Jewish holiday of Purim. Also at the school was an impromptu memorial that students set up with flickering candles and photos and articles cut from morning newspapers.
Principal Ron Kitrey said his 3,200 students were close, despite the school's size. "There is a feeling of one big family, and of great pain," he said.
Wednesday's bus bombing brought to six the number of Reali students killed in Palestinian attacks since the September 2000 outbreak of Palestinian-Israeli violence.
Police said the bomber had a letter declaring his intention to carry out a suicide bombing and praising the Sept. 11 terror attacks. His family said he was a 20-year-old member of the Hamas militant group.
No organization has taken responsibility for the Haifa bombing yet.
Yossi Mendelevitch described the news of his son's death as "an ink blot, spreading across the consciousness."
Called to the national forensic institute in Tel Aviv, he was warned to bring Yuval's dental X-rays so that he would not have to view what the bomb had left of his boy.
"I want to remember Yuval whole," he said. "In one piece."
Uri
Comments
Hide the following 4 comments
Even more sad...
08.03.2003 00:32
Sad that we can hardly find a Palestinian massacred who has a life and that kind of life that he can look forward to compared to the victimisers.
We can hardly get a story of a Palestinian whose life is worth reporting in terms of how well things was going for him, what he wants to do, what he would be one day, etc etc etc in positive terms.
And that goes generally for the whole Palestinian population.
Just what have we learned from the Jewish holocaust apart from that it can be used to justify nazi attitude to the Palestinians, and even the not-so-white Jews in Israel?
And I am not being anti-semitic, don't you go on a "victim" rant! Palestinians are semitic and the closest cousins of the Jews.
Remember Deir Yassim
I'd welcome your comments on this Uri
08.03.2003 03:37
Read this and reconsider
http://www.yellowtimes.org/article.php?sid=1078
fred
Homepage: http://www.yellowtimes.org/article.php?sid=1078
Pogrom
08.03.2003 08:29
doesn't really count. There must one or two good apples in the a barrel of of scum, this posting is very likely to be part of the Mossad / zionazi propaganda campaign that has unlimited resources and centuries of experience to fall back
on. Israel is not only carrying out a Pogrom but they are in the process of driving th Palestinians out of their own country. First they build ILLEGAL settlements and then they
make the area around them a no go area..
But despite a conspiracy of silence through the largely jewish controlled corporate media. The truth is slowly getting out, although I can't see Israel ever disarming .:
Breaking point
For the children of Palestine and Abigail.
08.03.2003 23:39
Abigail appears to have respected and commicated with her neighbours, Arabs and Jews. The people who sit in the whitehouse, the people who publich Zionist propaganda on this website, the idiot in 10 downing street, all the people who fuel and supply the war machine should LEARN from this. Stop selling arms to Israel, stop funding Israel with more money than the west sends in aid to Africa. stop using this small piece of land for the interests of the west. stop spreading horror across the world.
just fucking stop.
heather