We Shall Overcome Despite Zionist Tricks
By Mazin Qumsiyeh
ccun.org, October 18, 2009
Netanyahu looked old, tired, and angry as he delivered his “speech”
in front of the Knesset. He had nothing new to say so he
regurgitated the old myths about protecting Israelis from being charged
with war crimes, lectured his audience (who also looked tired and bored)
that the Goldstone report was a lie, that Israel will defend itself,
that the world better “deal with Iran”, and that Palestinians
better recognize Israel as a Jewish state in order to have peace on the
occupier’s terms. A little bit earlier, Mahmoud Abbas gave a
speech in which he stated that Hamas leaders are using the Goldstone
issue to escape from signing reconciliation agreements. He
reiterated his other positions that are now well known. He also
looked tired, angry, and old. Then the leader of Hamas in
Damascus, standing in front of a picture of the Syrian president, gave a
speech that reiterated Hamas’s known positions. He too looked
angry and tired. George Mitchell came and went on another trip with no
results (I lost count of how many times he had met with the “leaders” on
all sides here). He too smiles for cameras but when giving his remarks
appeared frustrated and angry.
The US administration said
it is likely to “ramp-down” the peace efforts (thanks for the Nobel
Peace prize anyway). Israel simply refuses to abide by its signed
agreements especially by the requirements of the road map to freeze its
colonial settler activities and return things to what they were before
2000 (a rather minimum and mild request I might add). Other
parties issued tired statements and declaration for against this or that
position. On the ground, things look rather poor. We now
have a situation in which every Palestinian town or city has gates that
can be locked or opened at the whim of the Israeli army. That
Israeli occupation army kidnapped 12 more Palestinians in the West Bank
in the past 24 hours. Doctors in Gaza report an increased
incidence of birth defects (likely related to use of illegal weapons by
Israel, polluted water, maternal malnutrition or all of these). In
the West Bank, we learn to bathe with a bucket of water (and save it for
other uses and do it less frequently!). Farmers are fending off
increased settler attacks during the traditional olive harvesting
season. Some are denied access to their lands. Homes continue to
be demolished.
Surveying this obscene scene, one is tempted to
feel discouraged. I know some Palestinians even give up. We
were thinking of these things as we visited the Biotechnology Center at
the Polytechnic University. Coincidentally, Western-Backed
Mohammed Dahlan was to give a speech there. His public appearances
have intensified as he is being groomed to replace Abbas as “president”
of the “Palestinian Authority” (the quotes are deserved since we have no
real authority other than the Israeli occupation). But we were not
there to see Dahlan. We met with some faculty and students who are
doing some real science. Practical, decent, hard-working people.
This got me thinking about hope. No I have no hope that politicians will
suddenly wake-up to reality! But hope because of deep belief in
the goodness and decency of common people. Here, we mean the 11
year old amateur photographer in Aida refugee camp who has more wisdom
and certainly more practical energy than many adults I know. The
70-year-old gentle man who smiles as he tells me that he still goes to
his land even though checkpoints and walls are in the way. The old woman
who was offered millions for her home in Jerusalem but refuses to sell
it to colonizers and occupiers. The university professor and dear friend
who lost his wife to an illness and keeps on pouring his heart and soul
to educate a new generation. The blind girl who keeps up with her
classmates. The unemployed man who keeps his dignity and asks for no
help and keeps trying and hoping for work. The farmer who treats
her vegetables as if they are her children. The Imam in the mosque and
the priest in the church who listen to the people’s problems with
uncommon decency and compassion. Millions upon millions of those
who by their mere presence and steadfastness inspire us.
Every morning when we drive to the University (my wife teaches classes
at 8 AM so we drive together), we see school children laughing, holding
hands, running, and in their eyes, we see hope. In their olive
skins, jet-black hair, strong features, we see our Canaantitic ancestors
egging us on. The difficulties of the present take their natural
role as bumps along the road between our past and our future.
Thus even a visit to a cemetery which we do just about every week as
people die, becomes strangely connecting and empowering. The old died
content in their homeland. The martyrs are remembered and praised
for their sacrifice. Past, present, and future become only
meaningful in the love of the land. In the past two weeks, I was
doing some investigative work on a group of old pictures of Palestine
that have just been digitized in the library of congress. Some of
the pictures were of my hometown in the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s. I
was thrilled to find one of my great-great-grandparent’s home. The
image (likely taken in the early 1920s) shows the only image of my
great-grandmother in existence (an old relatives recognized her).
Other pictures show the bountiful harvest of wheat. We have
been farmers, shepherds, and artisans for hundreds of years and despite
all the difficulties, WE still are. I smile as we begin
preparation for the olive harvest (even though this year looks like it
may not be as good as last year). I smile as I stop my car in a
main road in Bethlehem to let a flock of sheep cross the street led by a
guy who looks exactly like those individuals in those ancient images.
Yes, the Zionist movement destroyed 530 villages and built a European
style metropolis of connected colonial settlements everywhere here
filling them with imported people brainwashed to believe that the only
way to ensure power is to destroy others. But they will
never feel at home until they recognize the injustice done to the native
people and ask in humility for the return of those they expelled/forced
out. That is part of the reason 700,000 naturalized Israeli now live
outside the country.
Time is not kind to murderers
and thieves. We are Palestine can never change as a land and its
people are far from being defeated even if we are forced to live in
these ghettos and in these refugee camps for another 10 or 30 years. The
land is potmarked with ugly edifices of the occupation including the
apartheid wall. But the land is red and soft and productive and patient.
Afterall, it is all mixed with ashes of sweat of our ancestors.
History is not static. We have more love and community than the amalgam
of different people living in fancy homes in settlements with unlimited
supplies. I smile when I see young teenagers do the traditional
dabka dance (I am amazed at their energy as their feet seem to touch the
ground rarely). The people continue to dream and hope and yearn
for freedom. Acts of heroism and resistance continue. Despite
difficulties, most Palestinians live comfortable psychologically and
content in their lot in life certainly more so than the aloof usurpers
or those few who have given up among our own people. Many Israelis
and Internationals who come here every day to support us become part of
this wonderful living healthy mosaic. That spirit is the
spirit that moved African Americans to sing together while holding hands
with decent white people “we shall overcome someday”. That is the
spirit of Jaffa, Haifa, AnNasra, Nablus, Jenin, Bil’in, Ni’lin, Al-Quds,
Rafah, Gaza, Khan Younis, and the 1400 other towns and villages that we
live in or those villages that still live in the heart of their owners
who vow: we shall return someday—we shall be free someday—we shall
overcome someday.
ACTION:
Israeli leaders are squirming to not be charged with war crimes and
to contain the growth of the Boycotts, Divestments, and Sanctions (BDS)
movement.
We are upping the pressure.
Join the first marathon of BDS October 16-17 around the world.
1) Organize an event activity during Friday and Saturday 16/17
October 2009 and let us know at:
freemohammad@stopthewall.org
2) Stop the Wall will publish a time table with all planned
activities.
3) We will put you in touch with the activists mobilizing before and
after you. If your activity and access to internet/phone allows, you
will be able to directly take over from the previous activity and hand
over to the next action.
You may organize activities such as
protests, leaflets handouts, street actions, speaking events, video
screenings, book readings, powerpoint presentations, radio/TV programs,
internet actions, a twitter campaign, a fax blitz…Be creative!
For activist material to make your event a success, contact
freemohammad@stopthewall.org
Mazin Qumsiyeh
A Bedouin in
Cyberspace, a villager at home
http://qumsiyeh.org
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