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Two Palestinian teen bombers were similar ( 2003-08-13 15:15) (Agencies)
Two Palestinian teenage suicide bombers who killed Israelis in separate attacks Tuesday lived remarkably parallel lives, though their families say they didn't know each other.
Both left behind equally grotesque bombing scenes less than an hour apart, killing themselves and one person each in an Israeli town and a West Bank Jewish settlement 11 miles apart.
While neighbors blessed one of the teens as a "martyr," the mother of the second screamed for revenge against the Islamic militants who sent him to his death.
The bombings were the first since July 7. The summer has been relatively calm thanks to a cease-fire declared by the main Palestinian groups.
Since fighting erupted in September 2000, more than 350 Israelis have been killed in almost 100 Palestinian suicide bomb attacks.
One of the bombers' victims was Yehezkel Yekutieli, 42, who was buying food to make breakfast for his children. One of the dozen wounded in that attack was reported to be a pregnant woman.
The victim of the second attack was a year older than his assailant: Erez Hershkovitz, 18, had just finished army basic training.
One bomber, Khamis Gerwan, grew up in a house in an alley in the Askar refugee camp on the edge of the West Bank city of Nablus, and sold shoes on the street. He became a follower of the Al Aqsa Brigades, a violent wing of Yasser Arafat's Fatah movement that claimed responsibility for the bombing.
Gerwan had been missing for a day. Then came the news: he rigged himself with a bomb and set it off in a small grocery store in a Tel Aviv suburb.
The teen's mother wailed and neighbors began to gather to mourn, but also to celebrate him. Gerwan was honored ¡ª like other Palestinians who die in this conflict ¡ª as a "martyr."
In contrast, a few houses away, the other family mourned with anger.
Islam Qteishat, a young recruit of the Islamic Hamas group, detonated his explosives at the entrance to the West Bank Jewish settlement of Ariel, not far from his home. Hamas took responsibility for his bombing.
Qteishat's mother, Yusra, 40, cried out for revenge, but not against Israel, which had killed two Hamas men and another Palestinian in a gunbattle here days earlier. Hamas said that attack was the reason it had carried out the suicide bombing.
Instead, the mother wanted retribution against God and the militants who took in her son and sent him on his grisly mission.
"I'll kill whoever dispatched my son," she screamed, beating her fists against a wall. A decade ago, an older son was shot in the head while throwing stones at Israeli soldiers, leaving him with brain damage.
Qteishat left behind a letter and a photo showing him with a thin beard and holding an assault rifle.
He was a street vendor like Gerwan, selling schoolbooks, pens and notepads. The boys' parents said the two didn't know each other, though the families both live on Askar Road, which links the refugee camp to the city. In the letter he left behind, Qteishat apologized to his parents and his brothers. "Don't be sad and forgive me," he wrote. The boy's father, a grocer, felt empty. Only days before, he'd been talking with his son about the future, in particular about how he could retake high school exams he failed. "I've lost an important part of my being," he said, but added, "The Israelis have left our boys no other choice but to turn into fighters."
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