By Mazin Qumsiyeh
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, May 9, 2011
Join us 15 May 2011 on
the streets as we launch a global intifada (uprising), using popular
resistance methods. It will not be the end but the beginning of the end
of the Israeli occupation of Palestine, as hundreds of demonstrations
and marches are held around the world (including marches to checkpoints)
and from nearby countries to the borders of occupied Palestine.
***
The beginning of the end of the Israeli
occupation of PalestineI teased a friend the other day: Do
you feel safer in the new world order? We discussed the fact that there
is a “new world order” whereby two states (regimes) in the world feel
immune from International law, disregard existing mechanisms including
the UN and Interpol, and send agents or machines regularly to other
sovereign countries to engage in extrajudicial assassination of those
they deem enemies. On most occasions, nearby civilians are killed or the
victim turns out to be someone else. There is the argument that
these people assassinated are bad guys and should be killed. My
friend and I certainly do not have sympathy for Bin Laden and people
like him. But violating laws is not the way to go (two wrongs do
not make a right).
My friend points out that some two
million Iraqis, half of them children, perished by the unjust US/UK led
blockade, sanctions, and war. Millions suffered and over 60,000 were
murdered by the Israeli policies of land theft, ethnic cleansing,
regular massacres of civilians, and other war crimes and crimes against
humanity. These are all acts of state terrorism in whole sale as opposed
to the retail terror acts of Al-Qaeda. Yet imagine if Afghani
commandoes (or Chinese or Irish for that matter) landed in a clandestine
way in the US, Britain, or Israel and “took-out” one of the masterminds
of such mass terrorism. Come to think of it, the stage is
set now for this to happen since the message sent around the world is
that “might makes right”. As humans, we have clear choices to
make: we either support the notion of “dog-eat-dog world” and put our
faith in military might OR we insist that another world is coming and
that we can shape it with our hands using popular and nonviolent
resistance.
My friend laments a history of our species of
oppression, exploitation, destruction, and even mass murder (e.g. the
genocide during slavery, during colonization in the Americas, the use of
nuclear bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki). She asks half jokingly
why should we expect a dramatic change in our life-span? History does
show that, slowly but surely, democracy and peace are spreading around
the world. In Latin America an amazing progress transpired from
the era of colonialism (including genocide and slavery) to the era of
“banana republics” (ruled by ruthless, western-supported dictators) to
the hard won democratic revolutions. A similar transformation is
occurring in the Arab world. This Arab spring came later and is
more painful because such a transformation threatens the implanted
Western wedge that is the racist apartheid state of Israel. My friend
and I debate whether acting is contingent on being 100% sure of winning!
While a more rational reading of history would lead one to be more
optimistic, acting on our beliefs and our ideals is not contingent on
existing power structures or short-term outcomes but only on how we
believe we should live and act. Self-transformation itself is a win!
I ask my friend to imagine activists 10 years before each of these
events and what motivated them to act (even as they did not foresee the
end): the collapse of the Berlin wall, the freedoms in the countries of
Eastern Europe, the end of apartheid in South Africa, the end of
segregation in the South of the US, the woman suffrage, and the end of
the US supported Pinochet, Suharto, and Mubarak regimes. In
each of those instances and hundreds more, many activists died even
before seeing the end of the struggle. In each of these cases,
some thought it was a hopeless struggle against incredible odds.
But even some activists did not understand how close they were to
winning. Some even gave up the struggle a year or two before it
triumphed.
Even when it seems most entrenched the status
quo will not stay the same. The mighty Persian and Roman empires
ended. Who now remembers that in the 19th century, Portugal,
Spain, and England had armies and colonies around the world and seemed
invincible. Even Hitler’s relatively short-lived third Reich
seemed invincible. Human constructs are invariably changeable by new
human constructs ESPECIALLY if they are repressive and antagonize too
many people. The Israeli and US regimes are thus more susceptible
on this front than any other in existence today. Martin Luther
King Jr once said of the US: “I knew that I could never again raise my
voice against the violence of the oppressed in the ghettos without
having first spoken clearly to the greatest purveyor of violence in the
world today -- my own government..” Israeli historian Benny
Morris stated “The Jewish generations of 1948, however, knew the truth
and deliberately misrepresented it. They knew there were plenty of mass
deportations, massacres and rapes . . . . The soldiers and the officials
knew, but they suppressed what they knew and were deliberately
disseminating lies." Ilan Pappe summarized years of his historical
research thus: “Jews came and took, by means of uprooting and expulsion,
a land that was Arab. We wanted to be a colonialist occupier, and yet to
come across as moral at the same time..” These ‘original sins’ (as
another Israeli historian titled his book) will catch up with this
generation.
I tell my friend that the sins of the past come to
haunt people whether at the individual level or the national level.
Similarly, the good deeds do get repaid sooner or later. I remind
her that her good deeds were already rewarded many times over as she
herself acknowledged to me. I am sure the many Israelis and US
citizens who worked very hard for peace with justice will be vindicated.
She states that our biggest troubles are not sustained by those who work
against us but the masses who are apathetic. Apathy indeed is the
scourge of humanity. Each of us should look themselves in the
mirror everyday and honestly think if they have done enough! Here
in Palestine, like in other parts of the world there are also those who
act and those who are apathetic. The latter may watch TV, may feel
pangs of frustration or anger but are not willing to sum up the inner
courage (present in all of us) to finally act on their convictions.
On our deathbed, will we lament a life wasted or smile at a life of
achievement for fellow human beings.
My friend and I are
pleased to be alive in this day and age and continue to be very
optimistic. We are grateful for the tentative initial steps of
reconciliation of the Palestinian house (but must keep pushing) and we
are grateful for the failure of Netanyahu to get Europeans to pressure
the Palestinian people to keep their divisions. We know Netanyahu
will next go to the US but there he will have to pass through
demonstrators to get to the Israeli occupied halls of Congress.
And the US is already 14 trillion in debt, one third of it caused
directly by the Israel-first lobby. But AIPAC is being challenged.(1)
Meanwhile, the struggle here in the last land of apartheid
continues. Saturday, our friends Yusuf and Musa Abu Maria were
attacked and injured by Israeli forces in a peaceful demonstration in
Beit Ummar near Hebron (Yusuf had two breaks in one arm) and we attended
two conferences in Hebron the same day. One was the Palestinian
Forum for Medical Research first biomedical research symposium (2) where
one of my master’s students presented her research results. The
second was attended by 300 activists nearly half Israeli and was titled
“Joint Struggle for an End to the Occupation and Racism”. The
final declaration from this conference is meaningful in showing the
change happening on the ground in joint struggle (as opposed to
normalization)(3).
Join us 15 May 2011 on the streets as we
launch a global intifada (uprising) using popular resistance methods. It
will not be the end but the beginning of the end of the Israeli
occupation of Palestine, as hundreds of demonstrations and marches are
held around the world (including marches to checkpoints) and from nearby
countries to the borders of occupied Palestine.
We will say that 63 years of destructions and war is enough and our
Nakba must end. Some are calling this the third intifada (4) but it is
actually the 14th or 15th and it is likely going to be the last (5). In
follow-up you can join us in Palestine this July (see PalestineJN.org)
to take a bigger step forward.
In the meantime, as our friend
and martyr Vittorio reminded us to always “STAY HUMAN”.
Notes
1) From May 21 to 24, 2011, come to
Washington DC and join CODEPINK with a coalition of over 100
organizations, including Jewish Voice for Peace and the US Palestinian
Community Network, at the historic gathering Move Over AIPAC: Time for a
New Middle East Policy!
http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/424/p/salsa/web/common/public/signup?signup_page_KEY=5832
2)
http://www.pfmr.ps/?p=120
3)
http://www.alternativenews.org/english/index.php/topics/news/3578-concluding-declaration-of-the-conference-a-joint-struggle-for-an-end-to-the-occupation-and-racism-
4)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kEIbUoSSiV4
5) See the book Popular Resistance in
Palestine: A history of Hope and Empowerment"
http://www.qumsiyeh.org/popularresistanceinpalestine/