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Intifada:
A Third Chapter
By Ramzy Baroud
ccun.org, March 31, 2009
Though the dust has settled in Gaza, the rubble from the untold
number of demolished buildings, homes and mosques is far from being cleared
away. Graves continue to receive victims, young and old alike, from Israel's
most recent offensive. And in the midst of this, with the hopes of some
respite and recovery on the horizon, rumors of a third Intifada swell among
politicians, scholars and everyday people alike. While the first
and second Palestinian uprisings were spontaneous and natural responses to
institutionalized injustice, and while they fostered a great sense of
community and brotherhood among Palestinians everywhere, the many years of
uprisings mark some of the most painful years in Palestinian history.
It's not easy to isolate specific dates and events that spark popular
revolutions. Genuine collective rebellion cannot be rationalized through a
coherent line of logic that elapses time and space; it's rather a
culmination of experiences that unite the individual to the collective,
their conscious and subconscious, their relationships with their immediate
surroundings and with that which is not so immediate, all colliding and
exploding into a fury that cannot be suppressed. The eruption of
both the first and the second Intifadas cannot be faultlessly explained by
one individual, for it meant different things to different people. It was a
popular and spontaneous retort to the injustice and the humiliation felt on
a daily basis by Palestinians living in the Occupied Territories. But also,
it was a bold declaration made collectively that Palestinians will struggle
until freedom is finally achieved. There are several factors that
have led many to believe that a resumption of the uprising, or a third
Intifada, is simply the natural response to the current situation on the
ground. Mass arrests, unjust imprisonment of people denied the right to a
trial and extrajudicial executions are some of the many cruelties imposed on
Palestinians that have pressed them to revolt or reignited their ongoing
rebellion. But some of the most contentious issues throughout the
years have been the crimes of house demolitions, settlement construction in
the Occupied Territories and the increasing number of settlers moving into
those ever-growing settlements. In a recent interview with Ma'an
news agency, the Palestinian Authority's governor to Jerusalem warned that
the planned demolition of 100 Palestinian homes and the displacement of
nearly 1,000 people in the occupied Jerusalem area would certainly increase
the growing possibility of a third Intifada. "It is now clear to the
international community, and our position within the Palestinian Authority
is very clear - no negotiations, no peace process with settlements," he
stressed. There is a great fear that the Israeli plan, which some
have described as "slow-motion ethnic cleansing", is now augmenting into a
fast-paced settlement project. These worries have been confirmed by the
Israeli "Peace Now" movement, in a press release, issued on March 2.
"The Ministry of Construction and Housing is planning to construct at least
73,300 housing units in the West Bank," Peace Now reported. It further
stated that the plans outlined in the Israeli Ministry of Housing report
"represent only a small part of the total number of the plans existing in
the settlements". "At least 15,000 housing units have already been
approved and plans for an additional 58,000 housing units are yet to be
approved," said the group, which also concluded that of the units already
approved by the Israeli government, nearly 9,000 have been built. "If all
the plans are realized, the number of settlers in the territories will be
doubled." It follows that the construction of thousands of units
will lead to permanent demographic realities in the West Bank that would
strongly impede any possibility of Palestinian statehood, according to the
standard "vision" of a two-state solution. The new illegal units
are built on stolen land, illegally confiscated from their rightful
Palestinian owners. With such a move, Israel purposely renders the so-called
two-state solution permanently incapacitated, while insisting that a
one-state solution is the equivalent to the "annihilation" of the Jewish
state. Israel is once again molding the very desperate environment that led
to the revolts of 1987 and 2000, at the cost of thousands of lives.
So, what is a nation to do under such circumstances? Can stone throwing,
general strikes and boycotting Israeli products deter such a scheme? More,
what is the responsibility of the free world in this conflict? Will they sit
by, as they did in the recent and tragic attacks on Gaza, and view the
crimes from afar? Will they again expect Palestinians to bear down and
endure such harsh and cruel realities, or will the onset of yet another
popular revolution come as no surprise? As for two generations of
Palestinians who lived through the first and second Intifadas, scribing
rebellious graffiti, hurling stones at occupying soldiers and refusing to
buy the Israeli products that were imposed on them (while impeding the
growth of Palestinian local industry) may not have unshackled a hostage
nation. Indeed, it may not in the future, but a third Intifada, in
the eyes of many, could accomplish one vital task. It could provide the
platform for the Palestinians to reclaim their unity (despite the prevailing
factionalism of today) and declare that they will struggle until the day
when they finally embrace freedom. If this is all that a third Intifada
accomplishes, in the eyes of many Palestinians, then it is certainly a
necessary and worthy endeavor. - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net)
is an author and editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His work has been
published in many newspapers, journals and anthologies around the world. His
latest book is The Second Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of a People's
Struggle (Pluto Press, London).
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