Al-Jazeerah History
Archives
Mission & Name
Conflict Terminology
Editorials
Gaza Holocaust
Gulf War
Isdood
Islam
News
News Photos
Opinion
Editorials
US Foreign Policy (Dr. El-Najjar's Articles)
www.aljazeerah.info
|
|
From Gaza to Obama:
An Open Letter
By Professor Haidar Eid
Ma'an, November 21, 2009
You will probably not read this letter due to your busy schedule and
the huge number of messages you receive from presidents, kings, princes,
sheiks, and prime ministers. Who is a Palestinian academic from Gaza, after
all, to have the guts and write an open letter to the President of the
United States of America?
What has triggered this letter is a picture
of your Excellency sitting with the late Palestinian intellectual Edward
Said. That, of course, happened before 2004, i.e. before you underwent a
process of metamorphosis which I personally think is unprecedented in
history. Seeing you with Edward Said, I must say, surprised me. Said, a true
public intellectual must have said something to you about the suffering of
the Palestinian people. In the picture, you and your wife seem to be
listening attentively, and admiringly, to him. But the point remains; did
you really understand his eloquent, passionate defence of the rights of the
indigenous inhabitants of Palestine? Judging from your recent policy shifts,
I very much doubt it. It is precisely the incongruity between the photograph
and these policy shifts that has prompted this letter.
Mr. President,
The whole world celebrated your election as the first African-American
president of the US. I did not. Neither did the inhabitants of the
concentration camp where I live. Your sympathetic visit to Sderot—an Israeli
town which was the Palestinian village of Hooj until 1948 when its people
were ethnically cleansed-- three years after your first visit to a Kibbutz
in northern Israel in support of its residents, and after your pledge to be
committed to the security of the State of Israel and its "right" to retain
unified Jerusalem as the capital city of the Jewish people—to give but few
examples—were all clear indications of where your heart lies.
Another reason for the writing of this letter is shock at the indifference
and arrogance with which Secretary of State Hilary Clinton dismissed
Palestinian concerns about Israel's illegal Jewish-only settlements in the
West Bank. Only a few weeks ago you made the admirable statement that all
Jewish settlement must halt, and you made it clear that this included
expansion of existing settlements as well as the construction of new
settlements. However, when Netanyahu let it be known that he had no
intention of stopping settlements, you missed an historic opportunity to
draw a line: no more billions and no more weapons for Israel unless and
until this condition is met. Now Secretary of State Clinton has the
Herculean task of pretending that your position on Jewish settlements has
not changed, though it is clear you have chosen not to use the very real
power at your disposal to bring Israeli policy into line.
About six
months after your election, you gave a speech in Cairo, addressed to the
Arab and Islamic worlds; which some people found impressive. I found it
impressive in form, but not in substance because your actions have not
matched your rhetoric. Why did I not buy the new language of the new
American administration? Because while you were giving your speech, we were
burying my neighbour, a terminally ill patient, who needed treatment in a
hospital abroad, since, thanks to the siege imposed by your own
administration and Israel on the Gaza Strip, the facilities that would have
saved his life are not available in Gaza. Like more than 400 terminally ill
people in Gaza, my neighbour lost his life. In spite of the fine Arabic
words of peace, “salaam aleikum,” you made it crystal clear that the point
of reference in any negotiations in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is
Israel's security. By doing that, Mr. President, you are effectively
marginalizing the whole issue of Palestine, and unfortunately setting the
stage for renewed Israeli assaults against a starving Gaza, an entity that
has, thanks to your "unbreakable” ties with Israel, been transformed into
the largest concentration camp on Earth.
Your failure to support the
Goldstone report, your indifference, not to say your contribution, to
Palestinian suffering and the process of “politicide” against the
Palestinian people of Gaza is, to say the least, unfathomable, coming from a
man who listened so earnestly to Edward Said. Your advisors must have told
you about the cutting off of medicine, food and fuel to the concentration
camp where I live. Patients in need of dialysis and other urgent medical
treatment are dying every single day. A majority of our children, many the
same age as your two beautiful daughters, are badly undernourished.
You must have skimmed through the executive summary of the Goldstone report
detailing the horror inflicted on 1.5 million civilians for 22 days, horror
caused by F16s, Apache helicopters, and phosphorus bombs made in American
factories. Hundreds of children were burnt to death by phosphorus bombs;
pregnant women were brutally targeted in what Israeli soldiers boasted off
on their T-Shirts: "1 bullet, 2 kills." And yet, not a single word of
sympathy, Mr. President! Edward Said had this to say upon his first visit to
Gaza: "It’s the most terrifying place I’ve ever been in… it’s a horrifyingly
sad place because of the desperation and misery of the way people live. I
was unprepared for camps that are much worse than anything I saw in South
Africa." This was back in 1993, Mr. President, before conditions
dramatically deteriorated. Gaza has now become, as the leading Israeli human
rights organization B'tselem describes it, “the largest prison on Earth.”
Mr. Obama,
Unlike your predecessor, you seem to be a smart man.
You must have realized that a two-state solution has been rendered
impossible by Israeli colonization of the West Bank, by the war on Gaza, by
the construction of the apartheid wall, by the expansion of so-called
Greater Jerusalem, and by the increase in the number of Jewish settlers in
the West Bank. You must have realized also that there are six million
refugees, most of whom live in miserable conditions waiting for courageous,
visionary leaders committed to true democracy, human rights and
international law to implement UN resolution 194. And yet, you and your
State of Secretary, like every U.S. president since 1967, have decided to
support Israel in creating conditions that made the two-state solution
impossible, impractical and unjust.
Were you a supporter of the
Bantustan system in South Africa under the Apartheid system? Are you opposed
to equal rights and the transformation of Israel/Palestine into a state for
all its citizens? The two-state solution means the Bantustanization of
Palestine, a solution you, to our knowledge, never supported for South
Africa. Are you, Mr. President, opposed to civic democracy, which is the
demand of most Palestinian civil society and grassroots organizations? This
is what your role models, Martin Luther King and Steve Biko, died for. Was
Nelson Mandela wrong to spend 27 years of his life in pursuit of justice by
demanding equality for the indigenous people of South Africa? Do you realize
that what you are supporting in the Middle East is a racist solution par
excellence? A solution based on ethnic nationalism. Your secretary of state
and envoy to the Middle East, unashamedly, stood with beaming smiles next to
Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, who, not only defends openly the
ethnic cleansing of Palestinians, but also calls for a new genocide in Gaza.
Do you realize, Mr. President, that this Hitlerite fascist might become
Israel's next prime minister, thanks to your administration's complacency
and support?
Our only immediate demand is that your administration
insures that Israel fulfills its obligations in terms of international law.
Is that too much to ask?
Mr. President Barak Hussein Obama,
We, the Palestinian people, are fed up!
Sincerely,
Professor
Haidar Eid Gaza, Palestine
Haidar Eid is an independent
political commentator and Professor in the Department of English Literature
at Al-Aqsa University in Gaza.
|
|
|