By Khalid Amayreh in Occupied-East Jerusalem
29 November, 2008 
Like most people, I condemn  in the strongest terms the latest acts of terror in India which killed many innocent people from several nationalities. Taking the life of the innocent can’t be justified under all circumstances. 
The Quran for example states in Sura No. 5, al-Maeda,  that “ We ordained for the Children of Israel that if any one killed a person - unless it be for murder or for spreading mischief in the land - it would be as if he slew the whole people: and if any one saved a life, it would be as if he saved the life of the whole people.” Other religious scriptures make similar admonitions against the killing of the innocent.
However, the issue of terror in India or elsewhere, is very complicated and contextual  and stopping at condemning the terror and terrorists doesn’t take us anywhere. 
In Israel-Palestine, for example, the issue of  “terror” is rooted in the huge  Crime Against Humanity, otherwise known as Israel, which through mass terror  stole Palestine from its indigenous inhabitants in 1949, destroyed their homes, villages, and farms, murdered thousands and dispersed the rest to the  four winds.
I am not an authority on India. But I know that India has its own “Palestinian question,” namely the Kashmiri plight.
India occupied Kashmir and Jammu more than  sixty years ago against the will of its people and   despite an explicit UN resolution that would have allowed the native Kashmiris to determine their own destiny through a public referendum, that is to choose either to  join India, join Pakistan or be an independent nation-state.
Since then, However,  the Indian army has been systematically repressing Kashmiris in ways similar to what Israel has been doing to the Palestinians. 
As a result, tens of thousands of mostly innocent Kashmiris have been killed and horrendous crimes as well grave  human rights violations  are routinely committed against the largely Muslim inhabitants of the region. 
This unmitigated  repression, coupled with a real sense of  being oppressed, eventually boomeranged, pushing many young  Kashmiris to  join resistance groups such as the “Mujahideen.”
As I said, no cause, however legitimate it may be, justifies   the killing of  innocent people.  But, unfortunately,  it does make terror,  with all its ugly manifestations,  inevitable.
The American-English   poet W.H. Auden  once wrote:
I and the public know,
What all school children learn,
Those to whom evil is done,
Do evil in return.
One should also recall the perfectly true adage that “war is the rich man’ terror against the poor and terror is the poor man’s war against the rich.” This is certainly true in Palestine, Iraq and Afghanistan. It is likely to be  true  as well in Kashmir.
India is too powerful to be defeated by terror. However, India, or any other country, big or small, strong or weak, can be weakened, demoralized  and destabilized by internal factors such as the rampancy of injustice, tyranny and racist discrimination against a  given religious or ethnic community.
I understand that the Indian government is probably in  no mood now to hear words of advice and wisdom. Moreover, the hot heads of the security establishment, along with jingoistic-minded politicians want to spill blood, now, because otherwise the virility and dignity  of the Indian nation would be questioned.
But this is not the wise man’s approach.
India should be  too confident of itself to walk in the path of insolence and impetuousness, since violence will breed even more violence and terror (even if called counter-terror) will lead to greater terror. India is a very large country, with over a billion inhabitants. It can’t post a policeman in every corner. A police state apparatus won’t work.
India must not try to emulate Israel, an evil state run by murderers, thieves and liars.
My advice to India is to be level-headed and  analyze the outrageous events in Bombai  comprehensively and objectively and  not give in to the  temptation of revenge. Revenge might quench the thirst for blood for the time being, but eventually it would only deepen the crisis and cause more bloodshed.
I suggest that India should try to  sincerely review its policies in Kashmir and reconsider some of its manifestly criminal  behaviors against innocent Kashmiris on suspicion of harboring sympathy with the militants.
Indeed, I don’t see any legitimate reason preventing the Indian authorities from sitting down with militants in an effort to foster peace all over the subcontinent. Talking enemies who willing to talk  for the purpose of solving problems is always better than killing. And meeting the legitimate aspirations and needs of embittered citizens or subjects always leads to a win-win situation for everyone.
More to the point, India should understand that military force has its own limits and that there are certain problems that cannot be overcome with guns alone.
Following the 9/11 events, in which elements within the Bush administration were probably involved,  the US invaded, occupied and virtually destroyed two sovereign Muslim countries at the  pretext of fighting terror.
Now,  seven years later, one is prompted to ask if   terror  has  really been defeated despite the death of hundreds of thousands of mostly innocent people in both Iraq and Afghanistan.
 Does terror now  pose a lesser or greater threat to world peace and security?
Well, we all know the answer.
Also, it is clear that Zionist circles in Israel and North America are trying to pull India toward the circle of Islamophobia. Don’t heed Zionism’s evil advice. They want India to hate Islam and Muslims on Israel’s behalf. Turning against Islam will harm India in ways unpredictable.
 Instead, the huge Muslim minority in India should be utilized to fight terror which distorts their faith. It is in their best collective interests to do so. 
But don’t you every fall in the trap of the clash of civilizations. The terrorists who carried out the carnage didn’t do it because “they hated our freedom.” They did it because of well-known grievances that can’t be easily dismissed as unreal. India must be have the moral courage to face these problems, the sooner the better.
In short, India shouldn’t not walk in the path of the fools like the Bush administration has been doing.  A wise man should learn  from the mistakes of others, if he  doesn’t, then he is no better than them.
Finally, it has been reported  that the terrorists in Bombai were particularly targeting American and British nationals. 
That is really lamentable because numerous Britons and Americans strongly condemned the criminal behaviors of their respective governments. 
Innocent people must never be made to pay, especially in their lives,  for the misconduct of their governments.
Otherwise, millions of Muslims should likewise  be held liable for the scandalous acts of their respective governments. 
(end)
