+ Reply to Thread
Page 1 of 4 1 2 3 ... LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 40

Mercedes-Benz: Israeli Butchers blow face off American

  1. #1
    Awake
    Guest

    Israeli Butchers blow face off American

    Illusion of Invincibility Shattered -- Painfully

    Brian Avery thought his U.S. passport would protect him when he journeyed
    to the Mideast to be a 'human shield.'

    By Allen G. Breed, Associated Press Writer



    CHAPEL HILL, N.C. - When Brian Avery called home in early January to say
    he was heading for Israel, his parents realized that they could not stop
    him. But they had to try.

    "This issue has been there for so long," his father, Bob Avery, tried to
    reason with his son, 24. "How do you think you can change it?"

    "If everyone took the position that there's nothing I can do, then
    nothing's ever going to change," Brian replied.

    Brian knew that peace activists had been wounded in the
    Israeli-Palestinian conflict - and that a humanitarian worker had been
    killed the year before. But that had supposedly been an accident, a fluke.

    Voicing another fear, Bob Avery brought up the imprisoned "American
    Taliban," John Walker Lindh, who was nearly killed fighting U.S. troops in
    Afghanistan.

    "I'm not going to be a fighter," Brian assured him. "I'm going to report
    on the events and write articles."

    The words "human shield" didn't come up until later.


    --------------------------------------------------------------------------



    Julie Avery had always called her son Brian "my free spirit."

    The ponytailed rock drummer had studied music in college, but dropped out
    after a year to work on an organic farm. He worked with the homeless and
    poor in Chicago.

    Brian viewed the world in terms of the big guy versus the little guy, the
    corporate behemoth against the family farmer, Goliath and David.

    While studying herbal medicine in Albuquerque last winter, Brian had
    become involved with the local Arab-Jewish Peace Alliance. Eventually, he
    decided to volunteer with a group called the International Solidarity
    Movement.

    Founded in 2001, ISM operates in the West Bank and Gaza Strip - lands that
    Israel seized in 1967 and 1973 after attacks by Arab neighbors who denied
    the 56-year-old Jewish state's right to exist.

    Some Israelis see these lands as a necessary buffer against continuing
    sniper attacks and suicide bombings; Jewish settlers claim them as a
    biblical birthright.

    For Palestinians, the Israeli presence there is a heavy-handed occupation
    of their homeland. They bridle at Israeli Army checkpoints and other
    restrictions.

    The United Nations has called for Israeli withdrawal. There have been
    pullbacks, but renewed violence has begotten reoccupation.

    The latest Palestinian up- rising began three years ago. Since then, 2,400
    Palestinians and 830 Israelis have died in the fighting.

    ISM's founders saw themselves as an international peacekeeping and
    monitoring presence that the United Nations could not or would not
    provide. To the Israeli government, ISM's activists are meddlers whose
    actions range from negligence to outright abetting of terrorism.


    --------------------------------------------------------------------------



    Brian Avery hadn't been in the West Bank city of Nablus a week when his
    parents got a lengthy e-mail.

    His group's main "actions," as he put it in the Jan. 31 note, consisted of
    "being monitors and witnesses at military checkpoints" and "lodging in the
    homes of the families of individuals who chose suicide bombing as their
    method of resisting the occupation."

    Brian's parents had pictured him handing out food and medicine. Instead,
    he was negotiating with armed border guards and occupying "martyr houses."

    Brian told them that he believed that his American citizenship put him in
    a special position.

    On the one hand, it made him feel partially responsible for what was
    happening in the territories because of U.S. aid to Israel. At the same
    time, though, he saw his American passport as a unique asset - a "badge of
    invincibility" that he would share with the Palestinians.

    Six weeks later, the Averys learned just how little protection a U.S.
    passport provided.

    On March 16, another ISM member, Rachel Corrie, 23, a college student from
    Olympia, Wash., was crushed to death while trying to stop an Israeli
    bulldozer demolishing a row of Palestinian homes in the Gaza Strip town of
    Rafah.

    Israeli officials said that she was in a blind spot and that the driver
    couldn't see her, despite her bright red vest.

    "Please get out of Palestine while you can!!!!" Julie Avery begged her son
    in an e-mail afterward.

    But Brian had trained with Rachel, and her death made him even more
    determined.

    Still, he tried to reassure his parents: He had a couple more weeks left
    on his visa, after which he would see them. Besides, he was headed north
    to Jenin, even farther from the volatile Gaza Strip.

    "Don't worry, Mom," he said in a rare telephone call. "They don't shoot
    Americans."


    --------------------------------------------------------------------------



    Bob Avery was sitting in his basement office on April 5, watching the rain
    that had washed out his softball game, when the phone rang.

    "I'm afraid I've got some very, very bad news for you," came a voice in
    heavily accented English.

    It was Tobias Karlsson, head of ISM's Jenin office.

    Just minutes before, he and Brian had heard gunfire in the streets below.
    The city was under curfew, but the two went out to meet four other
    activists and investigate.

    That's when they noticed two Israeli vehicles rumbling up behind them.

    Slowly, they backed up under a street lamp and put their arms out at their
    sides to let the vehicles pass, Karlsson said. Only Brian was wearing a
    reflective vest, identifying him as a peace activist.

    Suddenly, they were being pelted by bits of shattered pavement.

    The Israelis would often fire two or three warning shots at a wall,
    Karlsson said, but this time, 10, 15, 20 rounds were fired.

    When the shooting stopped, he turned to find Brian lying on his stomach in
    the street, blood seeping between the fingers wrapped around his face.


    --------------------------------------------------------------------------



    Three days later, Bob Avery arrived at Haifa's Rambam Medical Center. From
    the doorway of the intensive car unit, he caught sight of his son.

    Brian's face was twice its normal size, its hue a surreal yellowish-purple
    from massive bruising.

    X-rays showed that the bullet had entered just below the right tear duct.
    There was a large hole where Brian's nasal bone should have been. The
    bullet exited the left cheek. Half of the teeth were missing on the top
    left side and another on the bottom. His lower left jaw had been sheered
    in half.

    "He'll never go back together," Avery said to himself.

    April 10 was Brian's 25th birthday. The hospital staff sang to him. The
    next day, a surgeon laid out a plan to harvest bone from the sides of
    Brian's skull to rebuild the nasal area.

    Bob Avery tried to cheer his son. "They said they needed a model for what
    you've got to look like. I gave them a picture of Elvis."

    This would be just the beginning of the effort to reconstruct Brian's
    shattered face.


    --------------------------------------------------------------------------



    The Israel Defense Force released its findings on Brian's shooting in late
    May.

    The armored personnel carrier crew reported firing on three occasions that
    day, but no casualties were identified.

    But the army noted that vehicles enforcing the curfew were directed to
    keep their hatches closed for protection, creating "enhanced chances of
    misidentification and misunderstandings."

    The report's conclusion: "Mr. Avery's injury is an unfortunate incident."

    Bob Avery, a 30-year U.S. Navy veteran, was outraged. Through his own
    investigation, he made what he considered a key discovery:

    ISM had said Brian's injury occurred at 6:30 p.m., a time when the army
    showed the APC several blocks away.

    Actually, it was an hour later. Israel had just begun observing the
    equivalent of daylight-saving time, but clocks in the Palestinian sector
    were still set an hour earlier.

    That put the Israeli vehicles in the shooting area around the right time,
    Avery concluded. But the IDF would not budge.

    It paid for Brian's treatment in Haifa. But when he left the hospital, he
    was on his own.


    --------------------------------------------------------------------------



    By the time that Brian returned to the United States on June 14, 2 1/2
    months on a liquid diet had shrunken the former defensive lineman to 115
    pounds.

    When he talks, the sound echoes inside his skull. He cannot breathe
    through his nose and he has no sense of smell.

    He faces at least five more rounds of surgery in the coming year. More
    bone will be taken from his skull to rebuild the left jaw so that
    artificial teeth can be implanted.

    He has no insurance.

    Brian thinks often of Rachel Corrie. He thinks of Tom Hurndall, an ISM
    activist from Great Britain who was shot the same month by IDF forces
    during a Gaza protest and is brain dead in England.

    Brian knows that he's the lucky one.

    He regrets that his medical needs have thrown his parents' retirement
    plans into financial chaos. He regrets that he may never again smell a
    rose or smile as before.

    But he insists that he does not regret his decision to go.

    And he wants to return to the region someday. Only next time, he'll go as
    a true observer.

    He has no more illusions of invincibility.


    __________________________________
    Do you Yahoo!?
    The New Yahoo! Shopping - with improved product search
    http://shopping.yahoo.com







  2. #2
    FB
    Guest

    Re: Israeli Butchers blow face off American

    <sniped>

    I'm sure it's a very sad story (only read the subject line), but relevant to
    the posted NG's?


    FB




  3. #3
    BS
    Guest

    Re: Israeli Butchers blow face off American

    I really think you should find a different group for this post. You should
    try a news group related to the subject, and I can't find anything about
    Volvos or technical problems in this post.

    When I visit this news group, I normally do it because I'm intrested in
    Volvo cars, or because I'm having trouble with my own Volvo. Personally I
    rate your post as spam, even if the subject can be interesting, only
    because it's not related to this news groups subjects.

    BS


  4. #4
    Vinnie
    Guest

    Re: Israeli Butchers blow face off American

    This isn't really true, because we americans are invincible. Maybe he
    was english, his parents just over from that "armpit of the world".


    On 28 Oct 2003 12:29:40 +0100, Comment.Header
    (Awake) wrote:
     


  5. #5
    Vinnie
    Guest

    Re: Israeli Butchers blow face off American

    You think he cares if it's the wrong group? He could care less, as
    long as his hate-message gets out.

    On Tue, 28 Oct 2003 13:37:24 +0100, BS <online.no> wrote:
     


  6. #6
    BS
    Guest

    Re: Israeli Butchers blow face off American

    Refer to my earlier post in this thread.

    As long as you encourage him by argue with him, he will continue to post
    spam, so just don't argue with him about the subject. But off course,
    neither of us should bother to write anything at all to him, or in this
    thread.

    So therefore, everybody reading this sentence. Do not answer posts not
    related to the news group your currently in. Ignore them, no matter how
    much you disagree with that it says.

    BS


    På Tue, 28 Oct 2003 13:27:06 GMT, skrev Vinnie <net>:
     

  7. #7
    psycho@here.there
    Guest

    Re: Israeli Butchers blow face off American

    On 28 Oct 2003 12:29:40 +0100, Comment.Header
    (Awake) wrote:
     

    Big deal... He stuck his nose in where it didn't belong in the first
    place. I (and most of the rest of the world) do not care what happens
    in the middle east. These people have been fighting forever and shall
    continue to do so until they are all gone. As for the pacifist peace
    activists, they know the chances that they are taking and continue to
    take them. I say if you're going to take up a fight, get a gun, choose
    a side and fight. Where's your gun, PUSSY?

  8. #8
    C.R.
    Guest

    Re: Israeli Butchers blow face off American

    Comment.Header (Awake) wrote in message news:<org>...

    Not in *this* group, asshole. And, the next time, you're getting
    reported to Yahoo for crossposting this shit in totally unrelated
    groups.
    --
    C.R. Krieger

  9. #9
    BE
    Guest

    Re: Israeli Butchers blow face off American


    how true, I could not say it better 



  10. #10
    atwifa
    Guest

    Re: Israeli Butchers blow face off American

    they've been fighting since the state of israel was created, shortly after
    WWII. that doesn't really count as forever.


    "BE" <me@m.com> wrote in message
    news:6qwnb.4460$srv.hcvlny.cv.net... 




 
+ Reply to Thread
Page 1 of 4 1 2 3 ... LastLast

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts

Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.6.0

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48