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Remember the Arab who gave his life for Jews

Murdered policeman Amir Khoury put himself in the firing line without hesitation in Bnei Brak

April 8, 2022 10:56
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TOPSHOT - Israeli police officers carry the coffin of Israeli Arab policeman Amir Khoury, 32, one of the five people killed in a shooting attack in the religious town of Bnei Brak, during his funeral in Nazareth on March 31, 2022. (Photo by Jalaa MAREY / AFP) (Photo by JALAA MAREY/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

On 29 March, two Arab men went to Bnei Brak. One was armed with an M-16 and meant to kill. The other was Amir Khoury, a 32-year-old Israeli-Arab Christian and police officer. When he and his partner got the call they sped to the scene, where the gunman had just claimed his fourth victim. Khoury and his fellow officer engaged and killed the terrorist but not before he shot Khoury, who later died from his wounds. “My children will grow up and remember your name because you were my flak jacket, dear brother,” Khoury’s partner said in a tribute to his fallen colleague. 

The terrorist was a 27-year-old Palestinian from northern Samaria. Let us not dignify his name — yimakh shemo. He chose the stereotype, the dull and self-defeating cliche of murderous Palestinian rejectionism. In short, he chose death. In his own way, Amir Khoury chose death, too; becoming a police officer meant living with it as a daily risk. His killer valued no one’s life, not even his own, but Khoury made the protection of all lives his calling: Arab, Jewish, Christian, Muslim. It is a vocation to which he gave the ultimate loyalty. Haaretz has called him “a national hero”. 

Khoury embodied the liberal Zionist ideal of equal and integrated Arab-Israeli citizen, but he deserves to be remembered as more than a symbol. He was the 11th Israeli killed by terrorism in just seven days but his significance was not statistical. To honour him, follow the example of his partner. Teach your children about Amir Khoury. Teach them that one wicked evening in Bnei Brak, when Jews were being slaughtered, an Arab came to their rescue. An Arab who put himself in the firing line to take down the terrorist. An Arab who gave his own life to save countless others. 

Teach them that this was remarkable but not extraordinary. Teach them about Yazan Falah, the Druze Border Police officer gunned down two days before Khoury in the Hadera terror attack. Teach them about Youssef Ottman. He was an Israeli Arab who, after a stint in the Border Police, worked as a security guard for Har Adar. When a Palestinian gunman opened fired on the settlement in 2017, Ottman tackled the killer and was shot dead.

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Israel