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Al-Awada's 8th Convention in Anaheim,
California
A Report By Anayat
Durrani
Al-Ahram Weekly, 6-12 of May, 2010
Report About Al-Awda's 8th Convention
Return, so be it: The Palestinian diaspora continues its struggle to
regain their homes, says Anayat Durrani
http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2010/997/re5.htm
|
Mustafa Al-Barghouthi and Diana Buttu
(top); Norman Finkelstein and Ali Abunimah (bottom). |
The eighth Annual International Al-Awda Convention
kicked off in Anaheim, California, this past weekend to a packed
audience of Palestinians and their growing supporters. Commemorating 62
years of Nakba, the three-day convention also marked 10 years of the
existence and strong commitment of the Al-Awda Palestine Right to Return
Coalition. "The mission of Al-Awda is to promote, educate and
continue till our very last breath, until every single refugee returns
home," said Jess Ghannam, chair of Al-Awda's National Coordinating
Committee. This year's convention panelists covered a wide
range of subjects, from the Gaza invasion, peace negotiations, to the
importance of the boycott- divestment-sanctions movement, as well as the
shortcomings of the Obama administration. "Many of us now have
come to understand the fantasy and the patina of the Obama
administration's illusion of being able to impose or put pressure on the
government of Israel to do anything. People are waking up to the,
perhaps, gross misjudgment on the Obama administration, if not Obama
himself," said Ghannam, who argues that since Obama took office the
situation has regressed and gone backwards, that there are more US
troops in the Arab world now than under the Bush administration.
Author Norman Finkelstein called the December 2008 Israeli invasion
of Gaza "not a war but a massacre". He poked holes in the Israeli claim
that Hamas used human shields, and read testimony from Israeli soldiers
admitting, "Israel used insane amounts of fire power in Gaza."
Finkelstein focussed on the UN Goldstone Report on the Gaza invasion
which he said marked the end of apologetic Jewish liberalism, which
turns a blind eye to Israeli crime. This has led to the emergence of a
new era where human rights now take centre stage in the
Palestinian-Israeli conflict. "The Goldstone Report, in many respects,
marks a turning point in the beginning of the breakup of American Jewish
support for Israel because Jews are liberal and it was liberal
organisations and liberal individuals like Goldstone who were leading
the indictment of what Israel did in Gaza. It is no longer possible to
call yourself liberal and defend Israeli policies and conduct."
The negotiation process was the subject of Palestinian lawyer and former
legal advisor to the Palestinian negotiation team Diana Buttu's
presentation. She said the issue of negotiations goes all the way back
to the 1970s after Israel's military occupation of the West Bank and
Gaza in 1967. She said there was a fundamental shift on the part of the
PLO away from the belief that Palestinian refugees should be returning
to their homes. "Rather than focusing on Al-Awda, the undoing of 1948,
it became an accommodation of current circumstances, an accommodation of
Israel's presence, an accommodation to Zionism, with the viewpoint being
rather than focusing on the right of return, the focus now became on
statehood and with it all the trappings of statehood," said Buttu.
Buttu called this a trap that the PLO and later the Palestinian
Authority fell into that led Palestinians down a path that Palestinians
could get out of only if they "redirect, reshape and reframe our mode of
thinking". She said the negotiations in actuality did not really fail,
and in fact succeeded, from the viewpoint of Israel. "It ended up being
yet another tool that Israel uses in the long term strategy of trying to
confine the Palestinians into as small a space as possible, take as much
of their land as possible, while all the while pretending there are
talks, partners, and negotiations. If only, if only," lamented Buttu.
Buttu said Palestinians have to start challenging the ideology that
Israelis and settlers have more of a right than Palestinians. She said
the symptoms in this conflict are the construction of settlements, the
confiscation of lands, the confining of Palestinians into small spaces.
"The disease is the viewpoint that Israelis have more of a right to live
in historic Palestine than the Palestinians do." Palestinian
author and co-founder of the Electronic Intifada, Ali Abunimah, used his
recent trip to South Africa where he saw an apartheid museum as an
example for Palestinians. "One of the inspiring things in that museum is
you see how much the struggle against apartheid was really not just a
battle against steel and guns and weaponry but it was a battle of ideas.
And it was the idea of freedom of liberation that triumphed over the
idea of separation, of supremacy, of dominance that ultimately defeated
apartheid," said Abunimah. He said he dreamed of the day when a museum
of Zionism will be created where it exists only in a museum dedicated to
the liberation from Zionism. Like other panelists, Abunimah
strongly emphasized the importance of the Boycott- Divestment-Sanctions
(BDS) movement. He said the BDS movement has three conditions, which
include ending Israel's occupation and colonization, dismantling the
apartheid wall; recognizing the fundamental rights of Palestinians
citizens of Israel to full equality; and accepting the right of return
of Palestinian refugees, as stipulated in UN resolution 1948. "These
three demands bring back all Palestinians into the struggle, whereas the
so-called peace process excluded most Palestinians from the struggle,
and excluded them from the past, present and future," said Abunimah.
Bishop Hilarion Capucci spoke live via phone to the convention
banquet. He spoke emotionally about how he longed to return to Jerusalem
since being exiled. He called on Palestinians to remain steadfast in
their commitment to the right of return. Mustafa Al-Barghouthi,
co-founder and general secretary of the Palestinian National Initiative,
expounded that the right of return means the right of the people to
return to the same towns and villages they were dispossessed from, and
not a location to be agreed upon in negotiations. Barghouthi
presented a sombre slideshow and video of Israeli human rights abuses
against Palestinians. He showed a chilling video of a Palestinian
demonstrator holding a flag who was arrested, handcuffed, blindfolded
and forced to sit on the ground for over two hours. A high ranking
Israeli officer then ordered him to stand in front of an Israeli soldier
who was then shown shooting him in cold blood. The Palestinian man is
seen falling to the ground. Barghouthi said the images were sent to
major media outlets; however none aired the footage. "The choice for
Palestinians today is very simple: are we to be free or are we to be
slaves of Israeli occupation and apartheid?" Barghouthi said
Palestinians must follow a strategy, one that includes resistance,
especially popular resistance, and that Palestinians must regain their
unity under a unified Palestinian leadership. He emphasized the need for
Palestinians to "establish presence on the ground", saying that
Palestinians must help people living in Palestine remain there. "We need
a strong international solidarity movement, namely the boycott
divestment sanctions movement." The Al-Awda organization has
worked tirelessly to raise awareness of the human and legal rights of
Palestinian refugees in its 10-year existence through teach-ins, rallies
regional conferences and other activities. The organization most
recently helped settle Palestinian refugees from Al-Waleed camp in Iraq
into the United States. Al-Awda, The Palestine Right to
Return Coalition PO Box 131352 Carlsbad, CA 92013, USA Tel:
760-918-9441 Fax: 760-918-9442 E-mail:
office@al-awda.org WWW:
http://al-awda.org
Al-Awda, The Palestine Right to Return Coalition (PRRC) is dedicated
to advocacy for the restoration in full of Palestinian human, national,
legal, political and historical rights with particular emphasis on the
right of Palestinians to return to their homes and lands of origin from
which they have been dispossessed since 1948. PRRC is a not for profit
tax-exempt educational and charitable 501(c)(3) organization as defined
by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) of the United States of America.
Under IRS guidelines, your donations to PRRC are tax-deductible. To
donate, please go to
http://www.al-awda.org/donate.html and follow the instructions. To
become a member, go to
http://al-awda.org/membership.html
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