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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
In Hizbullah Children's Magazine, Not Fairies but Fighters
2014-12-03
[AnNahar] It's aimed at children, but instead of princes and princesses, fairies and magicians, the heroes of Leb's "Mahdi" magazine are the "fighters who fell resisting the Israeli enemy".

Produced by Hizbullah
...Party of God, a Leb militia inspired, founded, funded and directed by Iran. Hizbullah refers to itself as The Resistance and purports to defend Leb against Israel, with whom it has started and lost one disastrous war to date, though it did claim victory...
for the last 11 years, Mahdi aims to teach a new generation the group's ideology of "resistance" to the Jewish state.

Packed full of stories inspired by the lives of Hizbullah bad boys, its cartoons represent bearded fighters and its puzzles teach children how to avoid Israeli landmines.

Critics accuse it of glorifying violence, but its publishers insist the monthly magazine is not about indoctrination or military propaganda.

"What we want to do is teach children the values of the resistance," the magazine's general manager Abbas Charara told Agence La Belle France Presse.

"We don't encourage carrying of weapons, we're just making sure they know about the exploits of the resistance," he added.

"We tell them: 'Just as these great people resisted and were victorious, so too can you resist and be victorious, and that starts with your education'."

The magazine is part of broad youth outreach -- schools, scout troops and summer camps -- for Hizbullah, the powerful movement that detractors accuse of being a "state within a state" in Leb.

Established in 1982 by Iran's Revolutionary Guards, Hizbullah has been a key nemesis for Israel.

The group carried out numerous attacks against Israeli forces during their 22-year occupation of Leb, which ended in 2000 with a withdrawal that Hizbullah claimed as a victory.

- 'It's something really dangerous' -
In 2006, Hizbullah's abduction of two Israeli soldiers prompted a massive military response by the Jewish state, but it failed to deal a death blow to the group.

The group is the only party in Leb that failed to disarm after the country's 1975-1990 civil war, and it remains a powerful political and military institution, with supporters revering its leader His Eminence Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah
The satrap of the Medes and the Persians in Leb...
Mahdi is named after the ninth-century Imam al-Mahdi, the last of 12 imams venerated by Shiite Moslems who believe he will reappear as a savior at the end of the world.

One recent edition of the magazine featured stories set in the three decades when Israel occupied southern Leb.

One told of a fighter who detonated a bomb against an Israeli patrol in his occupied village, another of a "hero" Amer, who confides in his mother that he will participate in "a martyrdom operation".

Amer blows himself up, killing and wounding 25 Israeli officers and soldiers, and his name is not revealed until 2000, when Nasrallah praises his bravery.

Hizbullah's strong Iranian influence is also reflected in the magazine, with the Islamic republic's founder Ayatollah Khomeini hailed in its pages in a feature on "the best leaders".

Critics have said the magazine exposes children to violence and teaches them that their identity as Shiite Moslems takes precedence over being Lebanese.

"It goes too far in making guns and violence part of the kids' imagination. It's something really dangerous," said Fatima Charafeddine, an author of children's books.

The magazine also emphasizes "religious identity with virtually no mention of their Lebanese identity," she told AFP.

- 'Resistance and fun games' -
Charara said Mahdi is not exclusively focused on religious and political issues, noting its articles on figures like Alexander the Great, Victor Hugo, Albert Einstein and Thomas Edison.

Still, there is little ambiguity to a game encouraging children to color in grenades and automatic weapons, nor to a puzzle in which readers draw a route around mines and bombs left by the Israelis in south Leb.

The magazine's monthly circulation of 30,000 issues includes three editions -- one aimed at four- to seven-year-olds, one at eight- to 12-year-olds, and one for 13- to 17-year-olds.

Eight-year-old Zahraa, who was born while her father was fighting in Hizbullah's ranks against Israel in 2006, told AFP she enjoyed Mahdi's "stories on the resistance and fun games".

"I like the stories about imams, and especially those talking about victory," the veiled girl added, a smile on her thin face.
An eight year old girl, veiled?! That's obscene -- she's still jailbait until she's nine.
Posted by:trailing wife

#2  The U.S. has the Fairies-thingie pretty well covered.
Posted by: Tholung Noodleman4539   2014-12-03 13:19  

#1  How do we know these fighters are not fairies?
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2014-12-03 02:27  

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