Category: Current Events

Current Events

The grateful dead

Deadly Israeli Strike Scatters Mourners

GHAZIYEH, Lebanon (AP) – Mourners in a funeral procession for Israeli airstrike victims scattered in panic Tuesday as warplanes again unleashed missiles that hit buildings and killed 13 people, witnesses and officials said.

The first missile struck a building about five minutes after the march by about 1,500 people had passed by, killing one person and wounding five.

The blast was close enough to send mourners screaming, “Allahu akbar!” or “God is great!” Some broke away from the procession, while others continued on.

They were burying some of the 15 people killed in Ghaziyeh on Monday, when Israeli airstrikes flattened three buildings in the Shiite town southeast of the port city of Sidon.

About 30 minutes after Tuesday’s first airstrike, Israeli warplanes staged four more bombing runs, destroying two buildings, said Mayor Mohammed Ghaddar.

Twelve more people were killed and 18 wounded in those strikes, according to tally from three area hospitals…

Current Events

That pesky immigration problem

EXTREME SARCASIM WARNING

It looks like Israel is showing the U.S. the way to rid itself of its immigration problems: Israeli air raids kill 40 civilians in Lebanon

One Israeli air strike hit a farm near Qaa, close to the Syrian border in the Bekaa Valley where workers, mostly Syrian Kurds, were loading plums and peaches on to trucks, local officials said. They said 33 people were killed and 20 wounded.

They blew up the migrant farm workers…

God have mercy on us all.

Christian Witness, Current Events

Doing the right thing

The Buffalo News is reporting on two faith communities in Buffalo that are doing the right thing. They are reclaiming a portion of the city most people have written off as drug and crime infested. They are restoring value to a portion of the city where people who own homes have to abandon them. They cannot sell, as many of the properties have a negative value.

Check out the article: On the East Side, growth is at home: 3 new housing developments may be able to transform some moribund neighborhoods

Three new housing developments are popping up in an unexpected place – Buffalo’s East Side.

One development involves the transformation of one of the city’s oldest public housing complexes into a mix of rental properties and market-rate homes or townhouses.

Another plans the transformation of a 16-block area around the Masjid Zakariya mosque on Sobieski Street.

And the third – being built without any government subsidies – includes the construction of 40 suburban-style homes around St. Stanislaus Catholic Church on Peckham Street.

Religious institutions are centerpieces of two of the housing initiatives as faith-based groups get more active in revitalizing neighborhoods.

The projects also are within a mile or two of each other in a part of the city where such activity – no matter who sponsors it – has not been the norm.

Current Events, Perspective

Union terrorism

Municipal labor unions are at it again in Buffalo, New York.

The unions, the inheritors of cushy contracts and high wages for their members (as well as plush jobs for union officials) are upset because their workers have not been granted wage increases over the past few years.

The unions met the other night and discussed staging a combined citywide strike, crippling the city and endangering the health, welfare, and safety of the city’s residents (including school children), all because they haven’t gotten what they want.

The wage freeze that is in effect in Buffalo is the result of actions by a Municipal Control Board instituted by the State of New York. The Control Board was necessary as Buffalo was so far in the red that it was about to go bankrupt. Buffalo politicians and their union supporters were so lost in the woods that someone had to come in and rescue them.

A dying rust belt city, Buffalo’s population and tax base has steadily decreased since its peak in the 1950’s. Wikipedia has an excellent article about Buffalo. The population chart shown there indicates that a city that once boasted nearly 600,000 residents now tops out at a little more than 280,000 residents.

The problem is that while the city declined, the unions grew. Their wages grew, their slots grew, and the politicians handed over more and more power and money to the unions in exchange for their support. No one had the courage to turn off the faucet.

A friend once told me that Buffalo is the perfection of communism, one-third of the people working for the government, one-third on the public dole, and one third actually working to support the other two-thirds.

The unions, and the politicians who have fed them, are the problem. They need to be reigned in and they need to be brought down. Work together for the city and improve everyone’s life, get rid of the fat, and work a full day for an honest wage. Do you really need a union if you are confident in your ability to work and succeed?

As to the strike proposition, I think there is a term for harming the innocent to get what you want —“ and I think it is called terrorism.

For more on the story, check out the Buffalo News’ series of articles on the story: Unions discussing citywide strike and Strike could hurt workers. An excerpt from the second story appears below:

Meanwhile, a Common Council member who is on leave from his job as a Buffalo public school teacher says unions have blundered by floating the strike trial balloon.

“I understand their frustration,” said North Council Member Joseph Golombek Jr. “But I represent some neighborhoods where the median income is $16,000 a year. If they’re looking for sympathy, they won’t get it in many of my neighborhoods.”

In October 2004, the control board released a study indicating that the average city worker earns 180 percent more than the typical Buffalo resident. Union leaders attacked the study for using distorted numbers and accused the control board of being obsessed with abolishing union contracts.

Current Events

The concept of forgiveness

Is Mel Gibson a sinner?

Uh, yes, because the ‘I’m going to answer a question with a question.’ question is: ‘Is Mel Gibson a human being.’

I have empathy for Mel and I pray for him. Alcoholism is a terrible disease. There are all kinds of drunks: mean, happy, sleepy, and funny. Nevertheless, they are drunks. They need to heal their addiction with honesty and humility.

I think we’ve learned enough as a country and as a people to know all this. Twelve step programs and addictions are talked about incessantly in the press and in the news.

I found it very unfortunate that a person’s disease, and recklessness, became the fodder for hate mongers.

Those with a prejudice against Mr. Gibson, and his work, saw the opportunity. Let’s pile on.

What really took me aback was not the fact that people were offended by his tirade, for the prejudicial statements on his part were indeed offensive, but the attitudes I heard from the Jewish talking heads on the news shows. ‘He is an anti-Semite.’ ‘He is responsible for his father’s statements.’ ‘His apology will never be accepted.’ ‘His apology is not good enough.’

Because of God’s own words expressed to us by His son, Jesus, the Messiah, we as Christians have a very charitable concept of forgiveness. Confess your sins, be forgiven. Mr. Gibson did that almost immediately, and did so publicly. I would imagine that his penance is to seek healing for his disease.

Some have stated that the Jewish concept of forgiveness either doesn’t exist or is far harsher. They would be wrong.

Jewish thought on forgiveness is at its root similar to the Christian concept of forgiveness. It is charitable and generous. After all, God laid down the Law for the Jewish people. He didn’t contradict His Law; rather Jesus fulfilled the Law.

The Ethics of Forgiveness from the Talmud Torah Center for Basic Jewish Education states:

Jewish law (Halacha) requires us to ask forgiveness from anyone whom we may have harmed, whether the harm was physical, financial, emotional, or social. Nevertheless, one is required to be gracious in granting forgiveness. The source for this halacha is the Mishna in Baba Kamma 8:7 which says, “From where do we know that it is cruel to not forgive? For it says, “Abraham prayed to God and God healed Abimelech…” (B’reishis (Genesis) 20:17).

It is forbidden to be cruel and difficult to appease, rather, a person must be quick to forgive and difficult to anger and when the sinner asks for forgiveness he should forgive him willingly and wholeheartedly….”

Mr. Gibson was wrong and his words were cruel. He asked for forgiveness —“ so it should be freely and generously given. Then we should pray for and support him so that he seeks the recovery he so badly needs for his illness. That’s what God’s people would do.

Current Events, Political

All boats away

I remember a few years back, hearing stories about how Cubans in the United States were anxiously awaiting the death of Fidel Castro.

The elite among them were preparing to move right in and resurrect Cuba’s wheeling-dealing days (gambling, prostitution, drugs, and ‘capitalism’) from the 1950’s and prior. They had designs prepared for hotels and casinos. They had backers lined up. They had their boats ready and were anxious to take to the seas and get back first. All that was required was the death of Fidel.

As Fidel Castro undergoes treatment for his medical condition, Miami celebrates. Yet, strangely, nothing in Cuba is changing.

Fidel will be cold in the ground, but there will be no boats, no hotels, no casinos, no 1950’s. It is time to wake-up. It is time for both sides to reject the abject idiots they have put in the fore.

Castro and his dictatorship have done little to lift up the people. The reality of oppression and dictatorship, plus abject poverty, is the antithesis of what the common man would see as the promise of the revolution. It is only about the cult of personality in a very limited way. Mostly it is about the cult of power —“ who has and exercises control.

One of my friends once asked me if I would ever choose to take a vacation in Cuba. I told him I would not. I asked him how he would feel having to kowtow to the tourists if he were a Cuban citizen. He, having come from Poland when it was run by the communists, knew that such tourists simply take advantage of a repressed people. No one wants to support a dictator.

The Cuban nationalists in the United States are crazy too. They want a dream that died in the 1950’s. You can’t go back. You cannot recapture a lost era. They live on Fantasy Island, rather than in the real Cuba.

They are ready to go forward, replacing a communist dictatorship with a dictatorship of the financial interest groups (and by-the-way, they will be pushed aside very quickly, except a few figure heads like Battista was).

Maybe they should ask: Will the people be any less subjugated? Will your penthouse view still look down on poverty? Why are your determinations and dreams so much more important than the determinations and dreams of the millions who live in the real Cuba?

The nationalists are also idiots for lobbying to keep Cubans repressed. They punish their own people by supporting the crazy ‘blockade’ that’s existed since the 1960’s. The only proven record for bringing about political and economic change is engagement.

Nothing will change in Cuba until Cubans see the necessity for change. Nothing will change until Cubans (not South Florida residents) engage in a process of true self determination.

Those who wish to return should return and get to work. Stop the embargo, engage, help lift the people up. Maybe then the people on the street will see that reasonable capitalism will improve their lives. Maybe they will rally behind a leader who will lead them into democracy. Maybe —“ but only if they determine their own future.

For some interesting observations and links, check out Castro’s Cyber Deathwatch: Preparing For Death On The Internet by John David Powell.

Current Events

The fool in the mirror is us

…and a stinging indictment of U.S. policy from Patrick Buchanan in Israel is Playing Us for Fools. An excerpt below, but make sure you take a look at the whole thing:

If Israel is not in violation of the principle of proportionality, by which Christians are to judge the conduct of a just war, what can that term mean? There are 600 civilian dead in Lebanon, 19 in Israel, a ratio of 30-1, though Hezbollah is firing unguided rockets, while Israel is using precision-guided munitions.

Thousands of Lebanese civilians are injured. Perhaps 800,000 are homeless.

Yet, whatever one thinks of the morality of what Israel is doing, the stupidity is paralyzing. Instead of maintaining the moral and political high ground it had — when even Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Jordan were condemning Hezbollah, and privately hoping Israel would inflict a humiliating defeat on Nasrallah — Israel launched an air war on an innocent people. Now, 87 percent of Lebanese back Hezbollah, and the entire Arab and Islamic world, Shia and Sunni alike, is rallying behind Nasrallah.

And how does one defend the behavior of the United States?

When Gillerman was exulting in the disproportionality of Israel’s attack on Lebanon, U.S. Sen. Hillary Clinton was smiling smugly beside him. When the UN Security Council tabled a resolution condemning Hezbollah’s igniting of the war and Katyusha attacks, but also the excesses of Israel’s reprisals, U.S. Ambassador John Bolton vetoed it. When a few congressmen sought to moderate a pro-Israeli resolution by adding words urging “all sides to protect innocent life and infrastructure,” GOP leader John Boehner ordered the words taken down.

Why? Because, says Zbigniew Brzezinski, AIPAC, the Israeli lobby, had prepared the resolution and wanted it passed the way they wrote it. Our Knesset complied. It sailed through the House 410-8.

And yes, it is the munitions made with our technology, by our hands, in our factories, that is killing the children of Lebanon. Thanks Mr. Bush, maybe the up-tick in military sales will offset the slowing economy and the huge trade deficit.

Tip ‘o the biretta to the Young Fogey and Hallowed Ground.

Current Events

The war correspondent

Excerpts from: Robert Fisk Reports From Lebanon on the Israeli Bombing of Qana That Killed 57, Including 37 Children

Background:

Lebanon is marking a national day of mourning, a day after Israeli warplanes bombed the village of Qana killing 57. Israel has announced it will halt air strikes for 48 hours in Southern Lebanon, but its ground troops continue to fight. Robert Fisk was in the nearby city of Tyre, where many of the victims were taken following the attack. He joins us from his home in Beirut. [includes rush transcript]

After the attack, Israel released what appeared to be video footage of Hezbollah rockets being launched from Qana towards towns in northern Israel, and the Israeli military said that Qana had been targeted because Hezbollah had been using the village as a base from which to launch rockets. This is not the first time that Qana has been devastated by Israeli fire. In 1996, more than 106 villagers died after Israel bombed the UN compound where they were seeking refuge. In the aftermath of the strike 10 years ago, reporting by Robert Fisk led to the United Nations condemnation of the attack. Robert Fisk had just returned from Tyre, where the victims from Sunday’s Israeli air strike in Qana were taken following the attack.

Interview:

AMY GOODMAN: Following Israel’s bombing of the town of Qana, that killed nearly 57 people, we turn to veteran war correspondent, Robert Fisk. I reached Robert Fisk early this morning at his home in Beirut. Robert Fisk’s reporting in Lebanon led to the United Nations condemnation of the Israeli attack on Qana ten years ago, in 1996. Early this morning, when we reached Robert Fisk, he had just returned from Tyre, where victims from Sunday’s Israeli air strike in Qana were taken, following the attack.

ROBERT FISK: I went to Tyre, Amy. By the time this has happened — to get from Beirut now to the south takes 46 hours, because of the broken bridges and the bombed roads, and I realized that by the time I got down there, the wounded would have been in the hospitals in Tyre, and the dead would be already brought from Qana to the villages. So when I got there, I went straight to the government hospital in Tyre, where many of the wounded — and there weren’t many, because most of them died — had been taken and where they were counting the number of children.

When I arrived there, there were a number of, maybe 20, 30 children, the corpses of children, lined up outside the government hospital, hair matted, still in their night clothes. The bomb that killed them was dropped at 1:00 in the morning. And they ran out of plastic bags. They were trying to put the children in plastic bags, their corpses, and they would put on it, you know, —Abbas Mehdi, aged seven,— and so and so, aged one, and use a kind of sticking tape on it. But then they ran out of plastic bags, so they had to put the children’s corpses in a kind of cheap carpet that you can buy in the supermarkets, and they roll them up in that and then put their names on again. I was having to go around very carefully and write down, from the Arabic, their names and their ages. It would just say —Abbas Mehdi, aged seven, Qana.—

And, of course, every time I saw the —Qana,— I remember that I was actually in Qana ten years ago when the massacre occurred there then. This is the second massacre in the town whose inhabitants believe that this is the place where Jesus turned water into wine in the Bible, most of whom, 95% of whom, are Christians — I’m sorry, are Muslims. I think all who died were Muslims. The 5% is Christians who have been there for hundreds of years, their families, because they do believe it is the Biblical Qana. There is a claimant to the rival of Qana in Galilee in northern Israel actually.

The Lebanese soldiers were trying take down the names of all who had died, but I found a man with a clipboard who had taken down 40 names, and he said that they weren’t accurate, because some of the children were blown into bits and they couldn’t fit them together accurately and there might be — they couldn’t put the right head on the right body, and therefore they might not be able to have an accurate list of the dead. But he was doing his best in the circumstances of war to maintain the bureaucracy of government.

One by one the children’s bodies were taken away from the courtyard of the government hospital on the shoulders of soldiers and hospital workers and were put in a big refrigerated truck, very dirty, dusty truck, which had been parked just outside the hospital. The grownups, the adult dead, including twelve women, were taken out later. The children were put in the truck first. Pretty grim. As I said, the children’s hair, when you could see the bodies, were matted with dust and mud. And most of them appear to have been bleeding from the nose. I assume that’s because their lungs were crushed by the bomb, and therefore they naturally hemorrhaged as they died.

AMY GOODMAN: Robert Fisk reporting from Beirut. After the attack Sunday, Israel released what appeared to be video footage of Hezbollah rockets being launched from Qana toward towns in northern Israel. I asked Robert Fisk about the footage.

ROBERT FISK: I’ve seen the video footage. It’s impossible to tell from the footage if indeed this is from Qana. You know, you have to realize that last time the massacre occurred at Qana in 1996, when they killed 106 refugees who were sheltering in the then-UN base that was there — it doesn’t exist anymore, but it did then — more than half of them children, again. They said that missiles had been fired from within the UN base. It turns out that they were fired from half a mile away. They then said that they didn’t have a live time pilot-less aircraft over the UN base at the time. And, in fact, on the Independent, I found a UN soldier who did have a videotape, showing clearly at the time of the bombardment — this is in 1996 — a live time photo reconnaissance unmanned aircraft over the base. The Israelis were later forced to admit that they had not told the truth: indeed there was a machine over the base at the time. You know, you can do what you want with photo reconnaissance pictures and with photographs after the event. It’s interesting that we weren’t shown these pictures before the massacre. We were only shown them after the massacre.

But they may be correct. The Hezbollah are firing missiles from villages in southern Lebanon, just as, for example, when the Israelis entered southern Lebanon and go into places like Bent Jabail, they’re using civilian houses as cover for their tanks, so the Hezbollah use houses as cover for their missile launching. But the odd thing is the idea that for the Israeli military that somehow it’s okay to kill all these children; if a missile is launched 30, 90 feet from their house, that’s okay then. We’ve got some film to show the missiles were launched; that’s okay then. I mean, did the aircraft which dropped this bomb, a guided weapon, by the way — they knew what they were hitting. It’s a guided weapon. We know that because the computer codes have been found on the bomb fragments. Did they say, —Oh, well, then, the man who launched the missile is hiding with the children in the basement of the house we’re going to hit—? Is it the case now that if you happen to live in a house next to where someone launches a missile, you are to be sentenced to death? Is that what Israel thinks the war is about?

I’m sitting here, for example, in my house tonight in darkness — there’s no electricity — next to a car park. What if someone launches a missile from the car park? Am I supposed to die for that? Is that a death sentence for me? Is that how Israel wages war? If I have children in the basement, are they to die for that? And then I’m told it’s my fault or it’s Hezbollah’s fault? You know, these are serious moral questions.

It’s quite clear from listening to the IDF statement today that they believe that family deserved to die, because 90 feet away, they claim, a missile was fired. So they sentenced all those people to death. Is that what we’re supposed to believe? I mean, presumably it is. I can’t think of any other reason why they should say, —Well, 30 meters away a missile was fired.— Well, thanks very much. So those little children’s corpses in their plastic packages, all stuck together like giant candies today, this is supposed to be quite normal, this is how war is to be waged by the IDF.

The fact that when they made these comments, they went unchallenged on television, was one of the most extraordinary scenes I’ve seen. I got back from Tyre on a very dangerous overland journey on an open road, which was under air attack, and I got back, and just before the electricity was cut, I saw the BBC reporting what the Israelis had said, but without questioning the morality that if someone fires a missile near your home, therefore it is perfectly okay for you to die.

AMY GOODMAN: We return to our interview with Robert Fisk of the Independent. He has been based in Lebanon for the last 30 years. I spoke to him early this morning, after he had just returned from Tyre. I asked him to respond to Israel’s announcement it would suspend air strikes over southern Lebanon for 48 hours.

ROBERT FISK: You know, it’s very interesting that the Israelis should say now, now after all these days, they’re going to give 48 hours. Why didn’t they give an extra 48 hours at the beginning to get the people out? Why now? Is this a bonus, a plus point, something you — a supermarket extra card that you win because you’ve killed so many people? Is it a monopoly board that you’re going to gamble? Okay, you get 48 hours free of air attack, because you killed so many people yesterday. Is that what this is supposed to mean?

AMY GOODMAN: In an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council, it voted Sunday not for a cessation of hostilities — the U.S. was opposed to that — but to deplore what happened in Qana and an end to the violence. I asked Robert Fisk to respond.

ROBERT FISK: On the ground, when you’re here, when you see the wounded, see the dead, you realize the immorality, the obscenity, the atrocity of statesmen, as they think they are, claiming that, you know, it isn’t yet time for a ceasefire. A hasty ceasefire would not be a good thing, as Condoleezza Rice said. 24 hours before, I saw a picture of her on a beach in Malaysia. And people remember this. People remember this. In the hospital it was a young man who said — turned to me, he said, —Why have you done this to us? Why have you done this to us?— And the woman I was talking to said the same: —Why does the West want to do this to us?—

You know, this has been going on for more than two weeks now. I’m traveling around the south, increasingly outraged at what I see, as a human being. And I’m not a Muslim. I’m not a Muslim. And I keep saying to myself, —If I was a Muslim, how much more outraged might I be?— I turned to an American friend of mine tonight back in Beirut before I came home, and I said, —You know, I’ve been watching this now for more than two weeks, and there’s going to be another 9/11.— There’s going to be another 9/11, and then we’re going to hear all the usual claptrap about how it’s good versus evil, and they hate us because we’re good and democratic, and they hate our values, and all the other material that comes out of the rear end of a bull that your president and my prime minister talk.

What’s going on in southern Lebanon is an outrage. It’s an atrocity. The idea that more than 600 civilians must die because three Israeli soldiers were killed and two were captured on the border by the Hezbollah on July 12, my 60th birthday — I’ve spent 30 years of my life watching this, this filth now, you know — is outrageous. It’s against all morality to suggest that 600 innocent civilians must die for this. There is no other country in the world that could get away with this.

You know, when — I wrote in my paper last week, there were times when the IRA would cross from the Irish Republic into northern Ireland to kill British soldiers. And they did murder and kill British soldiers. But we, the British, didn’t hold the Irish government responsible. We didn’t send the Royal Air Force to bomb Dublin power stations and Galway and Cork. We didn’t send our tanks across the border to shell the hill villages of Cavan or Monaghan or Louth or Donegal. Blair wouldn’t dream of doing that, because he believes he’s a moral man, he’s a civilized man. He wouldn’t treat another nation like that.

Current Events

Water into blood

From the Australian: ‘Safe house’ that held no refuge by Peter Wilson in Qana, Lebanon

MOHAMMED Zaatar did not celebrate yesterday’s news that Israel would limit itself to land and sea attacks for two days because of the outrage over the killing of more than 50 people in a single house in the Lebanese village of Qana on Sunday.

The 48-hour suspension of Israeli air attacks would allow Zaatar and other Red Cross volunteers to look for bodies in south Lebanese towns that had previously been too dangerous to approach, he said last night — and that was not something he was looking forward to.

On Sunday, Zaatar, a 32-year-old industrial mechanic, had been in the first group of rescue workers to arrive in Qana after an Israeli bombing raid had brought a three-storey home down on top of two extended families, including more than 30 children, who were sheltering in its basement.

Zaatar joined the Red Cross 13 years ago, hoping the service would help him to overcome the shyness of his teenage years. He is still quietly spoken.

Talking beside the house as a large excavator was still clawing away at the wreckage, he paused several times to gather his emotions as he explained how he had pushed his fingers into the rubble looking for survivors.

“We had no equipment, so we had to search with our hands in the earth,” he said.

Scrabbling in the dirt was a weird sensation.

“Because you are following your senses and your fingers, whenever you think somebody is under your hands you feel like it is you trapped down there, and something shakes you inside.”

First, he came across an arm. When he pulled away the debris, a seven-year-old boy was curled up dead on his side in a sleeping position. Many of the 34 dead children were in similar positions — they were killed just after 1am.

As he carried the small body to a waiting stretcher, Zaatar heard a neighbour wail that the boy’s name was Yousef.

Next, his probing fingers struck the head of a smaller child. It was a baby of about four months, lying on his back, face upwards. As he gently wiped the dirt from the baby’s face, Zaatar could see his little tongue was clenched between his teeth.

Zaatar winced at the memory and looked away silently.

He was on Red Cross duty in 1996 when there was a similar Israeli atrocity in the small town atop a rocky hilltop in Galilee, 11km from the Israeli border.

That Israeli attack, said to be intended for Hezbollah guerillas, killed 105 people sheltering in a UN compound.

Their mass grave is two minutes’ walk from the scene of Sunday’s disaster.

“In 96 the bodies were all chopped up and burned by artillery. It was horrible, but this has been worse because it’s mainly children, and they were buried alive — terrible,” Zaatar said.

His three-year-old daughter, Mariam, begged him not to go when the call came from the Red Cross, and his wife was angry with him because he was putting himself into danger. The Israelis had already hit two Red Cross ambulances on the road to Qana.

When Zaatar’s 15-strong Red Cross crew arrived, neighbour Mohammed Ismael was already helping to pull bodies from the wreckage of the house.

“The bombing had gone on all night and we didn’t realise until dawn what had happened here,” said the 38-year-old glazier and farm worker.

“The house was still being built and the owner is away in Africa, and the families thought they would be safe there because it was so big.”

The families did not have enough money or petrol to leave the town and the roads were not safe anyway, he said.

The first thing he saw when he ran to the house was the body of seven-year-old Zainab Hashem al-Sheik. He had taken some food to her family a few days before because they were trapped in the town and had little money.

“Her father, Mohan, survived — he is in hospital — but his wife and children were all killed.”

Ismael’s T-shirt carried a portrait of Moussa al-Sadr, a former Shia leader who disappeared on a trip to Libya in 1978. Qana is firm Hezbollah territory. Like other witnesses, Ismael denied the Israeli claim that guerillas had provoked the attack by firing rockets from the village.

Many are now hoping the tragedy will have the same effect as the 1996 massacre in Qana, which is believed to be Cana, the Galilee town where Jesus performed his first miracle by turning water into wine.

In 1996, the international uproar over the killing forced the Israelis to end their campaign.

But for that to happen this time, when the Bush administration and the Israelis are still ruling out an immediate ceasefire, might require a second miracle.

Current Events

Qana

Tragedy in Qana, Lebanon

…and tonight I cried while brushing my daughter’s teeth.

QANA: An Israeli air strike killed more than 60 Lebanese civilians, including at least 37 children, 15 of them physically or mentally handicapped.

Rescue workers dug through the rubble with their hands for hours, lifting out the twisted, dust-caked corpses of children.