Photo by RNS/Reuters Israeli riot police fire tear gas over the Western Wall. incident remain obscure.) Since the massacre, the Jabris want nothing more to do with anything Israeli. They will not testify before the state in- quiry commission. They will not accept the compensation that the government has offered the victims' families. So deep is their bitterness and suspicion that they're even convinced the army will lift the curfew only to make the situation worse. "We risk our lives each time we sneak out to surrounding farms to get milk for the baby," said Mohammed al-Jabri, re- ferring to Salman al-Jabri's 8- month-old daughter. "But we know, and they know, that when the curfew is lifted, some- thing will happen, and they'll only clamp it down again." What will happen? "Something terrible. And whatever it is, the army will blame us. That's the rule: we're always at fault, and the settlers are always right. I tell you: Life will never go back to normal in Hebron. They'll have to take the settlers out." Those feelings are echoed throughout Hebron. A short dri- ve away, 21-year-old Mo- hammed Salam Jaz al-Jabri, from another branch of the fam- ily, is recovering from bullet wounds in his legs: one from a standard, the other from a dum- dum bullet. "Two kinds of weapons were shot in the mosque," he said. "I know that not only because of the bullets removed from my legs, but because shooting was going on while Goldstein was changing his magazine, and shooting was coming from two directions." But he will not tell that to either the Israeli or the Palestinian inquiry commis- sions. "If people still won't be safe here, if we have no freedom, what's the point?" he asked. And although he is going to Amman for further medical treatment, his family will not claim any money from Israel to pay for it. "You can't compensate us for what happened except by en- suring that it won't happen again," he reasoned. "And the way to do that is by ridding He- bron of the settlers." "You must understand, it's not just that a settler was re- sponsible for the massacre that day," explained Nabil al-Jabri, a son of the mayor who surren- dered Hebron to the Israeli army in 1967 and a one-time member of the Palestinian del- egation to the Washington peace talks. "Their presence here, and the army's policy of protecting them, are the cause of continuous confrontations and the loss of life." Like the resident's of Hebron, the city's leaders see no point in bringing their grievances to the Israeli government. "They know what's going on," Nabil al-Jabri said. "After weeks upon weeks of continuous curfew — with all the factories, shops, and schools closed — they know they're de- stroying the city's infrastruc- ture. The fact is that we've lost 50 people, and we're the one's being punished for it." Nabil al-Jabri, who was in the Cave of the Patriarchs just hours after the massacre and again three days later, is also pessimistic about the results of any inquiry, Israeli or Pales- tinian. "I don't think we'll ever know the truth," he said. "The place was cleaned up with unseem- ly haste. They even filled in the bullet holes in the floor, so that you can't tell which directions the bullets came from. And no one I've spoken to can say that he personally saw Goldstein be- ing killed. How do we know that he wasn't murdered by one of his own accomplices?" Still, establishing the truth for posterity is less important now, for Nabil al-Jabri and his colleagues, than coping with the agony of the 90,000 residents of Hebron. "Our people want to express their grief," he added wearily, "but the Israelis have created a closed bubble in which all the elements just keep on crashing against each other, and nothing moves away." Even we have a brief prob- lem doing that as we are stopped at a checkpoint on our way out of town. "We are tourists," our driver cheerfully told the soldier, who peers skep- tically into the car but soon re- veals his willingness to go along with the claim. "Have you enjoyed the coun- try up until now?" he asked, and we flash idiotic grins in reply. "This is not a very pretty part of Israel you've seen here." ❑ PROFESSIONAL TENNIS CHALLENGE / V' 4■ $ • .......... • CHRYSLER • PLYMOUTH WHERE THE PEoptE MD THE PLACE...IVIAKE ALL THE DIFFERENCE. 24315 Haggerty • South of Grand River (810) 476-7900 Monday-Friday: 9-9, Open Saturday ANY NEW CHRYSLER, INFINITI AND FULL MEMBERSHIP The Sports pub April 30, 1994 $10,000 Novi Auto Mall Professional the Sports Club of West Bloomfield, Over 110 LHS and New Yorkers In-Stock for immediate delivery. Take advantage of the all time low finance programs or short term lease programs.