Israel’s Descent Into
Unmasked, Right Wing Extremism:
A new generation rises to fight occupation, settler-colonialism,
apartheid
This Palestinian resistance is a spontaneous reaction to the most
racist, far-right government in Israel's history
By Omar BarghoutiOctober 26, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Salon"
- As I write these words, a new unflinching generation of
Palestinians is rising up against Israel’s decades-old regime of
occupation, settler-colonialism and apartheid.
I usually succeed in shutting out the bloody
images and the haunting stories of our children being brutalized by
Israel’s occupying army so that I can focus on contributing my fair
share to the emancipation of my people, without being emotionally
overwhelmed, drained, and disempowered. But at a certain point you
cannot help but reach a level of heavy heartedness. So I am not in a
mood to write diplomatically today.
This phase of popular Palestinian resistance has
broken out spontaneously, in reaction to exceptionally repressive
policies of the most racist, settler-dominated and far-right
government in Israel’s history.
Since Benjamin Netanyahu’s return to power in
2009, Israel’s descent into unmasked, right wing extremism has
accelerated alarmingly. The number of Jewish settlers living
illegally on occupied Palestinian land has grown by more than
120,000, something Netanyahu was recently caught on tape boasting
about. Meanwhile, a steady stream of discriminatory, anti-democratic
laws targeting Palestinian citizens of Israel, and to a lesser
extent Jewish-Israeli critics of Israel’s apartheid regime, have
been passed by the Israeli parliament. These include the so-called
“boycott law,” and the “Nakba law.”
Following a recent visit to occupied Palestine, South
African Parliamentary Speaker Baleka Mbete wrote, “Apartheid in
South Africa was a picnic compared to what we have seen in the
occupied territories.” Not just in the occupied territories,
actually.
The ongoing Israeli “state
terrorism” against Palestinians all over historic Palestine, the
violent attacks and desecration campaigns by fanatic Jewish
fundamentalists against Palestinian civilians, including burning a
toddler and his parents alive, and the systematic desecration of our
Christian and Muslim places of prayer, particularly the Al-Aqsa
(Noble Sanctuary) mosque compound, were the direct trigger for the
current Palestinian uprising, dubbed “The Jerusalem Intifada” by
several political parties and youth groups.
For more than a decade, the fanatical messianic
“Temple Mount movement” has been growing inside Israel, with the
ultimate goal of destroying the Muslim shrines on the Noble
Sanctuary and replacing them with a temple, something they declare
openly.
Once on the fringes of Israeli society, today this
dangerous fundamentalist movement has moved into the mainstream,
counting senior government officials among its adherents. The
Israeli government in fact provides direct financial and political
support to extremist settler groups, like the Temple Institute and
others, that are colonizing Palestinian homes and neighborhoods in
Jerusalem and actively working towards building a temple in place of
the Al-Aqsa mosque, putting paid to hollow, disingenuous claims by
Netanyahu that Palestinians have no reason to fear an Israeli desire
to change the status quo on the site.
The seemingly random but persistent Israeli
violent attacks against Palestinians are in fact part of an official
Israeli strategy whose goal is to intensify the ethnic cleansing and
“Judaization”
of occupied East Jerusalem, especially its Old City and, and to
eventually take over the Noble Sanctuary. This was done with the
historic Ibrahimi mosque in Hebron following the 1994 massacre of 29
Palestinian worshippers by an Israeli-American terrorist. Following
the massacre, Israel’s occupation authorities partitioned the mosque
and gave half of it to Hebron’s notoriously far-right and violent
settler population for exclusive Jewish use, effectively rewarding
them for the murderous acts of the killer who came from their midst
and egging them on to pursue their criminal attacks on Palestinians
with impunity.
As early as 2012, the UN Special Rapporteur on the
right to adequate housing accused Israel of pursuing a “strategy
of Judaization“:
“From the Galilee and the Negev to
east Jerusalem and the West Bank, the Israeli authorities
promote a territorial development model that excludes,
discriminates against and displaces minorities, particularly
affecting Palestinian communities, side by side with the
accelerated development of predominantly Jewish settlements.”
Even the U.S. State Department acknowledged in
its 2009
International Religious Freedom Report: that “many of the
national and municipal policies in Jerusalem were designed to limit
or diminish the non-Jewish population of Jerusalem.” The prominent
South African jurist John
Dugard compared those policies to those applied by apartheid
South Africa.
This strategy could not succeed without the
rubber-stamp Israeli judiciary, which a UN fact-finding report of
the Israeli attack on Gaza in 2009 condemned as having “structural
flaws,” and without the prevailing culture of violent racism and
dehumanization of Palestinians that has taken over Israeli society.
The current shaking off of Israel’s chains, almost
entirely led by groups of very young Palestinian men and women, with
a refreshingly prominent participation of the latter, is not just a
struggle to decolonize the Palestinian land, but just as crucially,
if not more so, to decolonize Palestinian minds.
For two decades the Oslo process has attempted to
negate most of the UN-stipulated Palestinian rights and to arrest
Palestinian aspirations. The Palestinian Authority (PA) created by
Oslo was designed to be a sub-contractor for the Israeli
occupation, relieving the occupation of mostly municipal duties,
suppressing resistance to it and all the while providing the
precious fig leaf to allow Israel’s relentless colonization of
Palestinian lands and gradual ethnic cleansing of Palestinians to
proceed under the guise of a “peace process.” This fraud has allowed
Israel to open diplomatic relations and trade channels with tens of
countries, including China, India, Brazil and other large economies,
taking its economy to the level that it is at today.
Most damagingly, Oslo and its architects have
tried to reduce the definition of the people of Palestine to only
those who reside in the territories occupied by Israel in 1967,
omitting the 50% of the Palestinian people who live in exile, denied
their right to return home, and the 12% who are the indigenous
Palestinian citizens of the state of Israel, living as second and
third class citizens in their homeland.
The great obstacle facing the new uprising is that
the PA is not only missing in action, but is often working behind
the scenes to thwart and undermine widespread popular protests. Its
scandalous coordination and gratuitous sharing of intelligence with
the Israeli military continues, despite being universally condemned
by Palestinians from across the political spectrum. This
coordination, which Israel considers indispensable, has considerably
undermined Palestinian resistance to the occupation.
Fortunately, the increasingly despotic PA lacks
any significant credibility among Palestinians, young and old,
residing in Palestine or in exile, and is therefore compelled to
tread a thin line, allowing some space for protest and dissent which
can be exploited by those of us seeking to transcend the political
impasse following the effective collapse of Oslo.
Still, and even if this popular uprising does not
evolve into a full-fledged intifada, it has already revealed to
Israel, the U.S. and other world powers that are complicit in
maintaining Israel’s regime of oppression, that Palestinians will
never accept slavery as fate. New generations will continue to rise
up and assert their will to be free, against all odds. After being
written off by Israel and its allies as self-centered, apolitical or
apathetic, Palestinian youth are proving to be just as loving of
freedom and justice, and just as indignant about oppression, as
anyone.
But how to de-escalate this “Israeli-Palestinian
conflict,” many journalists have asked?
The famous “Israeli-Palestinian conflict” is in
fact not a conflict at all, by an accurate definition of the term.
The question of Palestine is one of resistance against a colonial,
apartheid regime. The root cause of all this original violence by
Israel and the reactive violence by Palestinians is Israel’s system
of injustice and the complicity of world powers and corporations in
maintaining it. Those, like me, who truly wish to see an end to all violence
should strive to eradicate its root causes, thus cutting off the
roots of this poisonous tree.
Israeli apartheid will not end voluntarily, almost
all Palestinians and many people of conscience the world over
recognize. Concerted, widespread, sustained nonviolent pressure that
is anchored in international law and universal principles of human
rights is needed, particularly in the form of boycott, divestment
and sanctions, or BDS. A military embargo, for instance, similar to
the one imposed on apartheid South Africa, and an intensification of
the academic and cultural boycott as well as divestment from
complicit companies like Hewlett-Packard and G4S can be far more
effective than a thousand empty calls for “restraint” in preventing
Israel from shattering the status quo in occupied Jerusalem, and its
thinly-veiled attempts to paint the explosive situation created by
its apartheid regime as a “religious war.” After such a
“de-escalation,” perhaps we can pursue the goal of freedom, justice
and equality.
Omar Barghouti is a
Palestinian human rights activist and independent researcher. He has
advocated for the secular democratic state solution for more than
three decades. This article reflects his personal analysis and
does not represent the views of the BDS movement.
Copyright © 2015 Salon Media Group, Inc.