Eight Urgent ‘Musts’
Needed for Palestinians to Defeat Apartheid
It’s time for Palestinians to surmount
ideological, factional and political
divides, for no matter how deep divisions
are - Palestine is, should and will always
be one
By Ramzy Baroud
March 29, 2015 "ICH"
- "MEE"
- Waiting on Israeli society to change from
within is a colossal waste of time, during
which the suffering of an entire nation -
torn between an occupied home and a harsh
diaspora - will not cease. But what are
Palestinians and the supporters of a just
peace in Palestine and Israel to do? Plenty.
Those who counted on some
sort of a miracle to emerge from the outcome
of the recent Israeli elections have only
themselves to blame. Neither logic nor
numbers were on their side, nor the long
history laden with disappointing experiences
of “leftist” Israelis unleashing wars and
cementing occupation. Despite a few
differences between Israel’s right and the
so-called left on internal matters, their
positions are almost identical regarding all
major issues related to Palestine. These
include the Right of Return and the status
of occupied Jerusalem to the illegal
settlements.
Equally important, most
sectors of Israel’s political classes that
are dominated by Zionist Jews are also in
concord regarding the status of Israel’s
Palestinian Arab population (1948
Palestinians). Don’t let the racist
fearmongering of Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu - terrifying Israeli Jews
of Arabs voting in “droves” - blind you to
the fact that the Zionist Labor bloc is
equally racist, although, in a less vulgar
fashion.
But Palestinians are not
without options. Sure, the odds against them
are great, but such is the fate of the
oppressed as they are left between two
options: either a perpetual fight for
justice or unending humiliation and
servitude.
1. Abbas, Oslo
must go
First, the most difficult
obstacle to overcome is the stronghold of
Mahmoud Abbas and his corrupt circle on
Palestine’s political discourse at home.
This is not an outcome of Abbas’s particular
savvy or the genius of his class. The
post-Oslo circle only exists to maintain the
status quo: US interests and involvement as
a mediator in the conflict, Israel’s
security - thus the constant crackdown on
Palestinian opposition and resistance - and
ensuring that the Palestinian Authority (PA)
has a reason to exist for the sake of
ensuring the many privileges that come with
the job.
This whole apparatus must
be overcome and eventually removed entirely
from the Palestinian body politic if
Palestinians are to have any chance at
formulating an alternative strategy.
2. Factionalism
must be defeated, crushed
But for that to take
place, the very ailments that have afflicted
Palestinian society for years, leading to
the creation of the ineffectual PA in the
first place, would have to be confronted
heads on. One such condition is
factionalism, which has to be overpowered by
a collective that defines itself first and
foremost as Palestinian.
Factionalism, in its
current form, has destroyed much of the
social fabric of Palestine. It has divided
the already divided people into fragments
making them easy to be controlled,
manipulated, suppressed - and when necessary
- besieged. 67 years are just too long a
period for a nation that lives mostly in
exile, trapped or confined behind walls, to
sustain its political identity and remain
unified around the same “constants” without
proper leadership.
Yet somehow many
Palestinians persisted, insisting on one
Palestine, one people, one identity, one
goal. For these energies to be streamlined
into a meaningful push against Israeli
colonial designs, factionalism would have to
be put to rest. Additionally, the
Palestinian flag must occupy every public
place currently occupied by red, yellow,
green or any other factional colour or
symbol.
3. But the
transition must be smooth
Such seismic change cannot
come easily. It must be gradual and part of
a national initiative. It must be a
conversation that brings friends and rivals
not to divide material perks, useless
“ministries” and worthless “government”
posts, but rather to mend the broken
unanimity that once existed. In fact, once
upon a time, Palestinians were not united or
disjointed around the frivolous “peace
process,” but instead around “national
constants,” where the Right of Return took
central stage.
The transition from
disunity and chaos into something visionary
and not confined by short-term political
interests, must be smooth, calculated and
led by respected Palestinian figures, not
those with hands soiled by blood and
corruption.
4. Right of
return must be brought back to centre of
discourse
One major issue that must
dominate the new political discourse is the
Right of Return for Palestinian refugees,
guaranteed by international law. The issue
is not only essential in its centrality in
the lives of millions of Palestinians
suffering in Syria, Lebanon and elsewhere,
but is also essential to any sensible
understanding of the conflict and its
resolution.
The struggle in Palestine
doesn’t date back to the war of 1967, but
the Zionist takeover of Palestine between
1947-48 that resulted in nearly a million
refugees, the expropriation of their land,
homes, rights and the attempt at erasing any
evidence of their existence.
By marginalising the Right
of Return, one diminishes the very roots of
the conflict, and any serious attempt at
reconciling the painful past with the
equally agonising present.
5. Palestine 48
must be fully incorporated into national
agenda
Not all Palestinians
became refugees. Some remained in Palestine
as it was being transferred to some other
entity before their own eyes.
The Palestinians of 1948
have always, and will remain a major
component of the Palestine question and the
Palestinian struggle for freedom and human
rights. The fragmentation between the
communities were imposed by calculated
political realities, enforced by Israel or
circumstances. That said, the issues have
never been truly separated: the plight of
Palestinians in Israel, those under military
occupation in the occupied territories, and
refugees in the diaspora all go back to the
same historical point of reference - the
Nakba of 48. These common struggles continue
to be sustained by Israel, its racist laws,
its military occupation and its refusal to
adhere to international law.
Without the Palestinians
of 48, the Palestinian national identity
will remain politically fragmented and
scarred. The persistence and collective
strength of that population is an important
asset, and their struggles are part and
parcel of the struggle and resistance of
Palestinians in the occupied territories and
those in the diaspora.
6. Resistance
must be respected
However, fuel is needed to
urge that new collective awareness forward,
and nothing can possibly achieve such an end
but the insistence on resistance, in both
the real and cerebral sense.
The term “resistance” once
dominated references made by Palestinian
leaders in yesteryears, but was purposely
marginalised following the signing of Oslo
in 1993. That was driven by two subtle
understandings that resistance was
ineffective, and that to achieve a degree of
validity and stateliness in the eyes of
their US benefactors, the new rulers of
Palestine needed to abandon seemingly
unsophisticated references to a bygone era.
Yet without resistance
there is only submission and defeat, which
is precisely what took place. Only popular
resistance in the West Bank and Jerusalem,
the steadfastness of 48 Palestinians,
crowned by the legendary resistance of
Palestinians in Gaza under a harsh siege and
repeated wars, continue to frustrate Israel.
Yet, the harsher Israel tries to destroy
Palestinian resistance, the more emboldened
Palestinians become, for resistance is a
culture, not a political choice.
Without resistance,
Palestinians may as well raise white flags
and sign on whatever dotted line is dictated
by Israel. And then, they would simply be
agreeing to perpetual subjugation.
7. BDS must
continue to grow, bridge gaps
Resistance is part and
parcel of the ongoing global campaign, to
boycott, divest from and sanction Israel.
The outcome of the Israeli elections, and
the rise of a more self-assertive
Palestinian political collective by 48
Palestinians, would mean that BDS must
enlarge its mission, not just rhetorically
by practically as well.
The BDS movement had
already emphasised equality for 48
Palestinians as a main objective that is as
vital as all other objectives. The Joint
List Arab party which won 13 seats in the
Knesset solidified the relationship between
Palestinian Arab communities within Israel
as the BDS movement has to a large extent
solidified the rapport between Palestinian
communities across political and
geographical divides. But more is needed.
The new self-assertive Palestinian community
in Israel deserves greater engagement. By
doing so, BDS would defeat Israel’s constant
attempt at diminishing the collective
aspiration of the Palestinian people.
8. One State must
become the rally cry for equality and
freedom
There is no need or time
for despair. In fact, the opposite is true.
The more empowered and racist Israel
becomes, and the deeper it digs into the
roots of its Apartheid and racist
institutions and walls, the more obvious the
answer becomes: a state for two peoples with
equal rights. Both Palestinians and Jews
exist in that very space, but they are
governed by two sets of laws that make
peaceful co-existence impossible. In order
to speed up the achievement of that moment
and lessen suffering, Palestinians have some
urgent work to do.
It is time for Palestinian
communities everywhere to surmount
ideological, factional and political
divides, reach out to one another, unite
their ranks, and harness their energies, for
no matter how deep the divide, Palestine is,
should and will always be one.
- Ramzy
Baroud – www.ramzybaroud.net -
is an internationally-syndicated columnist,
a media consultant, an author of several
books and the founder of
PalestineChronicle.com. He is currently
completing his PhD studies at the University
of Exeter. His latest book is My Father Was
a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story
(Pluto Press, London).