Las Vegas Review-Journal

Hate-fueled stabbing of Muslim child in Chicago is disgusting

- Yvette Walker Yvette Walker is a columnist for The Charlotte (N.C.) Observer.

On Oct. 7, the Islamic armed group Hamas in Palestine attacked Israel in a horrific terror assault that killed thousands. This past Saturday, a Chicago-area landlord attacked a 6-year-old boy and his mother, killing the boy. Why? Police and relatives say it was because they are Muslim with family ties to Palestine.

Retributio­n? No. Murder, plain and simple.

The headline glared at me from the news app on my iphone and the location startled me. Plainfield Township, Ill., is 42 miles from my hometown of Chicago, under an hour away from the neighborho­od I grew up in.

It’s not a large area, with a population of just over 80,000, and the crime occurred in an unincorpor­ated area that is certainly smaller. The 2020 crime rate in nearby Plainfield (estimated population 46,243) was 5.2 times lower than the national average, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

But statistica­l trends often don’t make sense with violent crimes, especially when hate is involved.

Not much is known about the attacker, Joseph Czuba, 71, other than he hated his victims because of their ethnicity and religion, and his anger was directly tied to the war in the Middle East, police said. He was charged with first-degree murder, attempted first-degree murder, two counts of hate crimes and aggravated battery with a deadly weapon, The Associated Press reported.

There is no excuse for killing a kid and injuring his mother, no matter where you stand on the war at this moment. And think about the intensity of the attack. Several media outlets have reported that the boy, Wadea Al-fayoume, was stabbed more than two dozen times. His mother was also stabbed multiple times and was hospitaliz­ed.

The boy’s uncle, Yousef Hannon, spoke of humanity at a news conference Sunday reported by the AP. “We are not animals, we are humans. We want people to see us as humans, to feel us as humans, to deal with us as humans, because this is what we are.”

Hours before the attack in Illinois, Palestinia­ns across the country were preaching the same message at rallies for Palestine. Many of the people participat­ing in the rallies would give only their first names to reporters, for fear of retributio­n.

I personally have been told that there are many people eager to have their voices heard but terrified of the reprisal for doing so. I guess I don’t blame them, with Republican­s like Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri on X (formerly known as Twitter) calling for the Department of Justice to investigat­e pro-palestinia­n student groups.

Last week’s gatherings representi­ng Jewish and Palestinia­n communitie­s were almost entirely peaceful. I pray it stays that way. But I’m sad and disgusted about the attack that happened near the city where I grew up.

Yes, Hamas started this war. No doubt. It killed adults and children and terrorized the nation of Israel. And the group must return without delay the Israelis it kidnapped.

Both groups of people believe the land they live on is sacred. Many questions linger, but perhaps this one is most important: Can a war over the sanctity of one’s homeland ever validate the killing of children, and future generation­s?

Let’s ask it a different way. Can this war validate the killing of innocent people thousands of miles away, in our neighborho­ods, who have nothing to do with the violence? The answer has to be no.

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