There Will Be No Peace
Until Israel’s Occupation Of Palestine Ends
We have tried to be patient, but the
international community has failed us. Freedom for Palestinian
people is long overdue.
By Marwan Barghouti
October 12, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "The
Guardian"
-
The current escalation in
violence did not start with the
killing of two Israeli settlers, it started a long while ago and
has been going on for years. Every day Palestinians are killed,
wounded, arrested. Every day colonialism advances, the
siege on our people in Gaza continues, oppression persists. As
many today want us to be overwhelmed by the potential consequences
of a new spiral of violence, I will plead, as I did in 2002, to deal
with its root causes: the denial of Palestinian freedom.
Some have suggested the reason why a peace deal could
not be reached was President Yasser Arafat’s unwillingness or
President Mahmoud Abbas’s inability, but both of them were ready
and able to sign a peace agreement. The real problem is that Israel
has chosen occupation over peace, and used negotiations as a
smokescreen to advance its colonial project. Every government across
the globe knows this simple fact and yet so many of them pretend
that returning to the failed recipes of the past could achieve
freedom and peace. Insanity is doing the same thing over and over
again and expecting different results.
There can be no negotiations without a clear
Israeli commitment to fully withdraw from the Palestinian territory
it occupied in 1967, including East Jerusalem; a complete end to all
colonial policies; a recognition of the inalienable rights of the
Palestinian people including their right to self-determination and
return; and the release of all Palestinian prisoners. We cannot
coexist with the occupation, and we will not surrender to it.
We were called upon to be patient, and we were,
giving chance after chance to reach a peace agreement. Maybe it is
useful to remind the world that our dispossession, forced exile and
transfer, and oppression have now lasted for nearly 70 years. We are
the only item to have stood on the UN’s agenda since its inception.
We were told that by resorting to peaceful means and to diplomatic
channels we would garner the support of the international community
to end the occupation. And yet, as in 1999 at the close of the
interim period, that community failed yet again to undertake any
meaningful steps, neither setting up an international framework to
implement international law and UN resolutions, nor enacting
measures to ensure accountability, including boycott, divestment and
sanctions, which played a crucial role in ridding the world of the
apartheid regime.
So, in the absence of international action to end
Israeli occupation and impunity or even provide protection, what are
we asked to do? Stand by and wait for the next
Palestinian family to be burned, for the next
Palestinian child to be killed or arrested, for the
next settlement to be built? The entire world knows that
Jerusalem is the flame that can inspire peace and ignite war. Why
then does the world stand still while the Israeli attacks against
the Palestinian people in the city and in Muslim and Christian holy
sites, notably Al-Haram al-Sharif, continue unabated? Israel’s
actions and crimes not only destroy the two-state solution on 1967
borders and violate international law, they threaten to transform a
solvable political conflict into a never-ending religious war that
will undermine stability in a region already experiencing
unprecedented turmoil.
No people on the globe would accept to coexist
with oppression. By nature, humans yearn for freedom, struggle for
freedom, sacrifice for freedom, and the freedom of the Palestinian
people is long overdue. During the first intifada, the Israeli
government launched a “break their bones to break their will”
policy, but for generation after generation the Palestinian people
have proven their will is unbreakable and needs not to be tested.
This new Palestinian generation has not awaited
reconciliation talks to embody a national unity that political
parties have failed to achieve, but has risen above political
divides and geographic fragmentation. It has not awaited
instructions to uphold its right, and its duty, to resist this
occupation. It is doing so unarmed, while being confronted by one of
the biggest military powers in the world. And yet, we remain
convinced that freedom and dignity shall triumph, and we shall
overcome. The
flag that we raised with pride at the UN will one day fly over
the walls of the old city of Jerusalem to signal our independence.
I joined the struggle for Palestinian independence
40 years ago, and was first imprisoned at the age of 15. This did
not prevent me from pleading for peace in accordance with
international law and UN resolutions. But
Israel, the occupying power, has methodically destroyed this
perspective year after year. I have spent 20 years of my life in
Israeli jails, including the past 13 years, and these years have
made me even more certain of this unalterable truth: the last day of
occupation will be the first day of peace. Those who seek the latter
need to act, and act now, to precipitate the former.
Marwan Barghouti is an
imprisoned Palestinian leader, and member of the Fatah central
committee and the Palestine National Council.