The Ringworm Children: How the Israeli Government Irradiated
100,000 Israeli Kids
On August 14, at 9 PM, Israel's
Channel Ten television screened a documentary film which exposes the ugliest
secret of Israel's Labor party founders: the deliberate mass radiation poisoning
of nearly all Sephardi youths of a generation.
"The Ringworm Children" (translated in Hebrew
as "100,000 Rays"), directed by David Belhassen and Asher Hemias,
recently won the prize for "best documentary" at the Haifa International
film festival, and in the past year has made the rounds of Jewish and Israeli
film festivals around the world. But it had yet to come to Israeli television
screens. The subject is the mass irradiation of hundreds of thousands of
young Israeli immigrants from Middle Eastern countries -- Sephardim, as
they are called today. The story goes like this:
In 1951, the director general of the Israeli Health
Ministry, Dr. Chaim Sheba, flew to America and returned with seven x-ray
machines, supplied to him by the American army.
They were to be used in a mass atomic experiment with
an entire generation of Sephardi youths to be used as guinea pigs. Every
Sephardi child was to be given 35,000 times the maximum dose of x-rays through
his head. For doing so, the American government paid the Israeli government
300 million Israeli liras a year. The entire Health budget was 60 million
liras. The money paid by the Americans is equivalent to billions of dollars
today.
To fool the parents of the victims, the children were
taken away on "school trips" and their parents were later told
the x-rays were a treatment for the scourge of scalpal ringworm. 6,000 of
the children died shortly after their doses were given, while many of the
rest developed cancers that killed thousands over time and are still killing
them now. While living, the victims suffered from disorders such as epilepsy,
amnesia, Alzheimer's disease, chronic headaches and psychosis.
That is the subject of the documentary in cold terms.
It is another matter to see the victims on the screen.
To watch the Moroccan lady describe what getting 35,000
times the dose of allowable x-rays in her head feels like. "I screamed
make the headache go away. Make the headache go away. Make the headache
go away. But it never went away."
To watch the bearded man walk hunched down the street.
"I'm in my fifties and everyone thinks I'm in my seventies. I have
to stoop when I walk so I won't fall over. They took my youth away with
those x-rays."
To watch the old lady who administered the doses to
thousands of children: "They brought them in lines. First their heads
were shaved and smeared in burning gel. Then a ball was put between their
legs and the children were ordered not to drop it, so they wouldn't move.
The children weren't protected over the rest of their bodies. There were
no lead vests for them. I was told I was doing good by helping to remove
ringworm. If I knew what dangers the children were facing, I would never
have cooperated. Never!"
Because the whole body was exposed to the rays, the
genetic makeup of the children was often altered, affecting the next generation.
We watch the woman with the distorted face explain, "All three of my
children have the same cancers my family suffered. Are you going to tell
me that's a coincidence?"
The majority of the victims were Moroccan because they
were the most numerous of the Sephardi immigrants. The generation that was
poisoned became the country's perpetual poor and criminal class. It didn't
make sense. The Moroccans who fled to France became prosperous and highly
educated. The common explanation was that France got the rich, thus smart
ones. The real explanation is that every French Moroccan child didn't have
his brain cells fried with gamma rays.
The film made it perfectly plain that this operation
was no accident. The dangers of x-rays had been known for over forty years.
We read the official guidelines for x-ray treatment in 1952. The maximum
dose to be given a child in Israel was .5 rad. There was no mistake made.
The children were deliberately poisoned.
David Deri makes the point that only Sephardi children
received the x-rays: "I was in class and the men came to take us on
a tour. They asked our names. The Ashkenazi children were told to return
to their seats. The dark children were put on the bus."
The film presents a historian who first gives a potted
history of the eugenics movement. In a later sound bite, he declares that
the ringworm operation was a eugenics program aimed at weeding out the perceived
weak strains of society. The Moroccan lady is back on the screen. "It
was a Holocaust, a Sephardi Holocaust. And what I want to know is why no
one stood up to stop it."
David Deri, on film and then as a panel member, relates
the frustration he encountered when trying to find his childhood medical
records. "All I wanted to know was what they did to me. I wanted to
know who authorized it. I wanted to trace the chain of command. But the
Health Ministry told me my records were missing." Boaz Lev, the Health
Ministry's spokesman chimes in: "Almost all the records were burned
in a fire."
We are told that a US law in the late '40s put a stop
to the human radiation experiments conducted on prisoners, the mentally
feeble and the like. The American atomic program needed a new source of
human lab rats and the Israeli government supplied it. Here was the government
cabinet at the time of the ringworm atrocities:
Prime Minister - David Ben Gurion; Finance Minister
- Eliezer Kaplan; Settlement Minister - Levi Eshkol; Foreign Minister -
Moshe Sharrett; Health Minister - Yosef Burg;
Labor Minister - Golda Meir; Police Minister - Amos Ben Gurion.
Labor Minister - Golda Meir; Police Minister - Amos Ben Gurion.
The highest ranking non-cabinet post belonged to the
Director General of the Defence Ministry, Shimon Peres.
That a program involving the equivalent of billions
of dollars of American government funds should be unknown to the Prime Minister
of cash-strapped Israel is ridiculous. Ben Gurion had to have been in on
the horrors and undoubtedly chose his son to be Police Minister in case
anyone interfered with them.
Finance Minister Eliezer Kaplan was rewarded for eternity
with a hospital named after him near Rehovot. But he's not alone in this
honor. Chaim Sheba, who ran Ringworm Incorporated, had a whole medical complex
named after him. Needless to say, if there is an ounce of decency in the
local medical profession, those hospital names will have to change.
After the film ended, there was a panel discussion
which included a Moroccan singer, David Edri, head of the Compensation Committee
for Ringworm X-Ray Victims, and Boaz Lev, a spokesman for the Ministry Of
Health.
TV host Dan Margalit tried to put a better face on
what he'd witnessed. He explained meekly that "the state was poor.
It was a matter of day to day survival." Then he stopped. He knew there
was no excusing the atrocities which the Sephardi children endured.
But it was the Moroccan singer who summed up the experience
best. "It's going to hurt, but the truth has to be told. If not, the
wounds will never heal."
There is one person alive who knows the truth: Shimon
Peres. The only way to get to the truth and start the healing is to investigate
him for his role in the mass poisoning of over 100,000 Sephardi children
and youth.
But here is why that won't happen. The film was
aired at the same time as the highest-rated TV show of the year, the finale
of Israel's talent-hunt show: "A Star Is Born." The next day,
the newly-born star's photo took up half the front pages. There was not
a word about "The Ringworm Children" in any paper, nor on the
Internet. Until now
No comments:
Post a Comment