April 1996, pgs. 11, 114
Special Report
Relatives Mystified by Israeli Refusal To Release
Body of Slain Palestinian
by Samir Twair
Traditionally, Israeli authorities turn over the corpses of Palestinian
men killed by Israeli soldiers or police to the families of the
victims after midnight, and instruct the families to complete the
burial without fanfare by daybreak. However, relatives of Palestinian
American Ahmed Abdel Hamida have no idea when they will receive
his body. Members of Hamida's family say Israeli authorities refused
to hand over his body to his California relatives after reading
that they were considering "suing for millions in a wrongful
death suit to be carried out by American attorneys."
Hamida was killed Feb. 26 by armed Israeli bystanders after his
car crashed into a crowd at a Jerusalem bus stop. The Israeli government
claims Hamida was carrying out a Hamas suicide attack. His relatives
steadfastly call it an accident.
Israeli emotions were soaring to astronomical heights of paranoia
following two suicide bomb attacks on buses in Jerusalem and Ashkalon
that killed 27 people and injured 80 on Feb. 25. Only hours later,
on Feb. 26, Hamida's rented car careened into a Jerusalem crowd,
killing one Israeli and injuring 22 others. Israelis who shot and
killed Hamida, an American citizen, on the spot were released after
questioning by Israeli authorities.
Hours after CNN reported to viewers all over the world that the
slain driver of the errant car was an Arab American from Los Angeles,
Israeli police announced that skid marks showed the driver had tried
to stop his Fiat Uno, but had lost control of it on the rain-slicked
road.
By the next day, however, Israeli police had changed their story:
the skid marks were not made by Hamida's car, they asserted. The
Israelis claimed instead that Hamida was a drug addict and a militant
Muslim radical. Jerusalem Police Chief Arik Amit said an Islamic
Jihad leaflet had been found in the car.
The Islamic Center of Southern California has refuted this, saying
the literature found in Hamida's rental car was religious in nature,
but not militant. Also found in the car was a bagful of groceries,leading
those who heard the report to ask why a terrorist would shop for
food before going on a suicide mission.
There were other contradictory reports about the incident. CNN
initially reported Hamida had been shot to death as he was struggling
to get out of the car. On the same day Associated Press Jerusalem
correspondent Said Ghazali filed a story stating that Hamida was
shot dead by three Jewish settlers after he exited the car and tried
to run away. The Los Angeles Times quoted Israeli police spokesman
Eric Bar-Chen who said Hamida emerged from the car, but made no
claim that he tried to flee.
The reports gave rise to new questions. If Hamida was slain vigilante-style
by Jewish settlers, how many bullets did they pump into his body?
And if he was a drug addict, did an autopsy show traces of drug
ingestion? These questions may never be answered, however, if Israeli
authorities persist in refusing to relinquish Hamida's body to his
family.
An American Family
I met with Hamida's mother and his cousins on Feb. 27 in Hacienda
Heights, a town east of Los Angeles. Still in shock from the news
of his sudden, violent death the previous day, family members were
in mourning in the comfortable home in which Ahmed Hamida lived
with his mother, Azmia, 62, his younger brother, Ghalib, and Ghalib's
wife and young son. As soon as they received news of Ahmed's death,
Ghalib, 32, and his sister, Eptisam, departed for Jerusalem.
The Hamida clan numbers more than 150 members in Southern California.
Ahmed, 36, emigrated 20 years ago from the family village of Mazraa
al-Sharqia near Ramallah. He never finished high school, but earned
a reputation as a hard worker. He managed a small California grocery
store for his brother, Ghalib, until physicians recommended bed
rest for a chronic colon problem. That was last July, a cousin explained,
and Ahmed returned to the West Bank to treat his ailment and search
for a bride. His first marriage to a non-Arab had ended in divorce,
but his pride and joy was his 12-year-old daughter, Kathy, who lives
with her mother.
Ahmed's father, Abdulhamid, died in California in 1982. Two of
Ahmed's three sisters live on the West Bank. Ahmed had been visiting
with them since last July. His health had improved in Palestine
and he intended to return to California in April for a cousin's
marriage.
"What is this about Ahmed having a drug problem?" his
mother, Um Ahmed, lamented. "He was a good Muslim. He didn't
drink alcohol and he had stopped smoking. He did not take drugs."
Said another cousin, Bilal Hamida, 26: "I got to know Ahmed
very well over the past two years. Everyone who knew him loved him.
If he was on drugs, don't you think we younger fellows would have
known? He was no terrorist. There were no weapons in the car he
had rented for one week, not one day, and he was carrying all his
identity cards."
Another cousin, Kamel Hamida, added: "He was gentle and good-humored.
He wouldn't harm a fly. He was a good family man."
Granted, Bilal commented, Ahmed had turned somewhat religious,
but he was in no way a fanatic. And what's more, on the few occasions
he joined in political discussions, he expressed approval of Yasser
Arafat's efforts to make peace with the Israelis.
On Feb. 28, two days after the fatal incident, the Los Angeles
Times reported Israeli police were unable to find a mechanical problem
that might have caused Ahmed to lose control of the car.
Bilal disputed this. When I visited the family again he turned
on a video copy of the Israeli re-enactment of the car running into
the bus stop. Repeatedly, we watched the car slow down, but the
driver clearly couldn't make a sharp stop because the brakes appeared
to be faulty. In fact cars rented to Palestinians rarely are in
good repair, a cousin pointed out.
On the West Bank, Ahmed's sister, Nawal, told the Los Angeles Times
her brother had rented the car to take her and her three children
on a family picnic. He had gone grocery shopping for her and was
due to pick them up when the incident took place.
"The Israelis are lying, because they need an excuse for shooting
him," the distraught Nawal charged. Repeatedly, she told Times
reporter Summer Assad that Ahmed was not a religious zealot nor
was he preoccupied with politics.
The California Hamidas were disturbed by Ghazali's Associated Press
report. "Who is this Said Ghazali?" asked an irate cousin.
"He writes that Ahmed bragged to villagers 'watch me on TV
tonight!' Ahmed would never say this."
Hafez Bargouti, editor of Al Hayat, a Palestinian newspaper published
in Ramallah, also supports Ghazali's account. Bargouti said Ahmed
visited him at his office shortly after the two Feb. 25 bomb attacks
and acted strangely, stating God had cured his illness and he planned
to dedicate his life to God.
Does this incriminate him as a Hamas terrorist?
In California, relatives proudly showed me pictures of Ahmed, a
handsome, gentle-looking individual. This was in stark contrast
to the front page photo in the San Gabriel Tribune and in other
newspapers around the world. Taken at the accident scene, it showed
Ahmed's corpse lying face up, unattended, uncovered, on the street.
"How dare they disgrace him this way, leaving him in the street
like a dead dog," complained another cousin.
The Hamidas have requested an investigation by the U.S. State Department
and have filed letters of protest to California Senator Barbara
Boxer and Southern California Congressman Jay Kim.
When we asked the Hamidas how they were notified of Ahmed's death,
they replied that the American Consulate General in Jerusalem phoned
to tell them Ahmed had been killed in an accident. Later, relatives
began to call from the West Bank.
"Israel says Ahmed intentionally rammed the crowd," Bilal
stated. "If you had known this man, you would know it was an
accident. Whoever heard of a terrorist buying groceries before he
set out on a suicide mission?"
Resentment is mounting among Hamida's friends and family. On March
1, several hundred Muslims gathered for Friday prayers and a special
janaza service was conducted for Hamida at the Islamic Center of
Southern California. At a press conference beforehand, the Muslim
Public Affairs Council said its representative, Salam al-Marayati,
was in Washington, DC to meet with State Department authorities.
"We expect due process of law and an explanation for the death
of an American citizen in a foreign country. We are opposed to the
negative stereotyping of a Muslim who is called a terrorist because
he had religious literature in his rental car," stated Dr.
Maher Hathout, director of the Islamic Center of Southern California.
On March 5, I again talked to Ahmed's mother, now heartsick over
the danger her son Ghalib might be facing in Israel, where a lynching
mentality is aimed toward Palestinians since a third and fourth
suicide bombing raised the death toll to over 61 in nine days.
"I want to tell you this story," she said. Whatever happened
was an accident. My son was very peaceful. He went back to Palestine
on three visits and never had any trouble. He did not belong to
Fatah, Hamas or any political group."
Mrs. Hamida said before the third suicide bombing, on March 3,
the Israelis had hinted to Ghalib that he might be able to retrieve
Ahmed's body in Tel Aviv on March 4.
"Now with all this anti-Arab hysteria, I don't want Ghalib
to travel to Tel Aviv," Mrs. Hamida said. "After news
of the fourth bombing, they will never release his body. Let the
Red Cross take care of it. I don't want to lose another son." |