Palestinian kids created as “fertilizer,”
to saturate the land with blood
Fatah: “Our children… were created to be fertilizer
for the land of Palestine, and for our pure land
to be saturated with their blood”PA children sing: “My pure land, I shall saturate you
with my blood… redeem you with my life”
by Itamar Marcus and Nan Jacques Zilberdik
Dying for the sake of “Palestine” as an ideal, even for Palestinian children and youth, remains part of Palestinian discourse.This week, official Palestinian Authority TV reported from a Fatah celebration in a refugee camp in Lebanon and chose to focus on the following slide shown at the celebration. Fatah’s message was that children are created so that their blood will be “fertilizer” to saturate the land:
“Our children are our glory and honor,
they were created to be fertilizer for the land of Palestine,
and for our pure land to be saturated with their blood.”
Earlier this month, a PA-Fatah celebration in Ramallah featured a performance with the same message. In front of senior PA leaders, including Prime Minister Salam Fayyad, young children and youth performed a song that included the following words:
“My pure land, I shall saturate you with my blood…
redeem you with my life.”
Palestinian Media Watch has reported extensively on the PA’s teaching of children to die as Martyrs for “Palestine.” During the PA’s terror campaign (the “Intifada,” 2000-2005), the PA encouraged children to aspire for Martyrdom death as a central part of its message to children. Today, the message that children should die for “Palestine” is less prominent, but still found in PA schoolbooks and is expressed in cultural settings through song and dance.
During the terror campaign, PA TV videos presented martyrdom death for children as “sweet.” One PA TV music video broadcast hundreds of times from 2001 to 2004, showed a young boy falling dead on the ground to the words: “How sweet is Shahada (Martyrdom), when I am embraced by you, my land!”
As a result, children presented death for kids as “sweet” in TV interviews. In 2002, at the height of the terror campaign, an 11-year-old Palestinian girl said on PA TV: “Of course Shahada is sweet. We don’t want this world, we want the Afterlife.”