Musa Abu Hashhash could not hold back his tears. We have worked with this devoted field worker from B'Tselem, the Israeli Information Center for Human Rights in the Occupied Territories, for years. Never before had we seen him cry. But this week he broke down and wept after a visit to the widow of Fayez Faraj, his aged, broken-hearted mother, and his 10 distraught orphans, aged 2 to 18.
Fayez Faraj was the last person who might have been expected to attack Israel Defense Forces soldiers. He had a permit to enter and sleep over in Israel, which few Palestinians are given - and then only after a thorough security check. He had worked for 15 years for Kriza, a footwear company in Tel Aviv, crafting soles for the women's shoes. Aged 41, he spoke Hebrew fluently, hung out in Tel Aviv, had Israeli friends, was well-off economically and lived in a relatively spacious stone home.
No one in Hebron believes that Faraj attacked the soldiers. One of his Tel Aviv employers, who asked to remain anonymous, also refuses to believe it. A., the Israeli, spoke to Faraj by phone three hours before he was killed, an ordinary business conversation.
"I don't believe he went to stab a soldier," A. told Haaretz this week. "I have worked with him for 15 years. I know he was a good guy. Someone who loved life. He wasn't embittered. I can't understand how he got into a situation where soldiers killed him. It's a kind of fate, a screwed-up fate. It's true that he was slightly depressed lately, because he was in a financial crisis, but the whole story is puzzling, very puzzling."
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1153972.html