| 
 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
 
	  
           |  | Biology of Peace
 
 By Mazin Qumsiyeh
 
 Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, February 27, 2011   My chapter in Book on "Why Peace", edited by Mark Guttman (available http://www.why-peace.com/) [This 
	  book is an exploration of aggression, and of the evolutionary (and 
	  revolutionary) process to peace. Through the insights of men and women, 
	  from a wide range of backgrounds, cultures, and perspectives, Why 
	  Peace presents stories of wars, invasions, and political repressions—down 
	  to the most basic levels of authoritarianism…]
 Biology of Peace by 
	  Mazin Qumsiyeh
 Text also posted here http://www.qumsiyeh.org/biologyofpeace/and here where you can leave comments http://popular-resistance.blogspot.com/2012/02/biology-of-peace.html
 
 Professor Mazin Qumsiyeh teaches biology and does research at 
	  Bethlehem and Birzeit Universities in occupied Palestine. He previously 
	  served on the faculties of the University of Tennessee, Duke and Yale 
	  Universities. He is now president of the Palestinian Center for 
	  Rapprochement Between People and serves on the board of Al-Rowwad Children 
	  Theater in Aida Refugee Camp. His main interest is media activism and 
	  public education. He has published over 200 letters to the editor and 200 
	  op-ed pieces and been interviewed on TV and radio extensively (local, 
	  national and international). Mazin has published several books, including 
	  Sharing the Land of Canaan: Human Rights and the Israeli/Palestinian 
	  Struggle and Popular Resistance in Palestine: A History of Hope and 
	  Empowerment.
 
 I grew up under Israeli occupation, a brutal military 
	  occupation accompanied by “colonization” (land theft). My family suffered, 
	  though not as much as other Palestinian families. It is hard to describe 
	  how much the occupation invades every aspect of one's life here: from 
	  eating and drinking to education and from healthcare to travel, from 
	  economy to freedom of religion. The antithesis of all of this repression, 
	  violence, occupation, colonization and war is, of course, peace. I was 
	  thus captivated by peace as a concept, a dream, a hope. Sometimes I was 
	  thinking of peace in terms of a state of external calm and lack of 
	  disturbance. In other times, I thought peace was related to freedom from 
	  repression. Now, I think of peace as being an inner peace, that only comes 
	  from acting on what we believe and freeing our minds of the bondage 
	  acquired from external sources.
 
 In the Buddhist traditions, we are 
	  asked to seek, to have “joyful participation in the sorrows of this 
	  world.” I was reminded of this when I was held on July 27, 2011, along 
	  with some Israeli and Palestinian activists, in the Israeli military 
	  compound at Atarot. This was after being attacked by Israeli soldiers for 
	  participation in a peaceful demonstration in the village of Al-Walaja. 
	  This beautiful village in the West Bank is slowly being depopulated of its 
	  last remaining citizens. Simple and beautiful slogans are hard to apply 
	  here, as a wall will encircle the remaining houses of the village, cutting 
	  the inhabitants off from their livelihood and forcing them to leave.
 
 How can we even begin to comprehend the sorrow that has engulfed the land 
	  of Canaan in the past few decades? The sorrows of the native inhabitants 
	  are so horrendous that it sometimes seems unreal. Of 11 million 
	  Palestinians in the world, 7 million are refugees or displaced people. The 
	  5.5 million natives who remain inside the country (many displaced) are 
	  restricted now to shrinking concentration areas, amounting to only 8.3 
	  percent of the historic land of Palestine.
 
 According to the latest 
	  survey of the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, some 26.2 percent 
	  of families live in poverty and 14.1 percent live in deep poverty, for a 
	  total of 40.3 percent living in poverty or deep poverty in the West Bank 
	  and Gaza. The situation in Gaza is worse than in the West Bank with 1.5 
	  million people, most of them refugees squeezed in an arid part of 
	  Palestine, besieged, blockaded and denied even basic living necessities. 
	  This, the worst post-WWII horror inflicted on a people, indeed portends so 
	  much suffering. So how can we have personal peace, let alone joyful 
	  participation, when we suffer so much?
 
 On a personal level, I have 
	  lost many colleagues and friends. Just in the last year alone, I have lost 
	  friends who practiced nonviolence and strove to peace: Juliano Mer Khamis, 
	  Vittorio Arrigi, Bassem and his sister Jawaher Abu Rahma. I lost many 
	  other friends and relatives to illnesses that seem to be increasing in our 
	  population. Cancer and heart disease have claimed the lives of many of 
	  those: my two brothers-in-law and four dear friends and fellow activists. 
	  All such losses certainly make deep scars that reach to the soul. Even 
	  routine difficulties in life stir us and disturb us, leaving us a little 
	  further from peace. So how can we aspire to peace while our own souls are 
	  still far from peace? I believe our internal turmoil is mainly due to a 
	  lack of understanding of human nature and the trajectories of history.
 
 To understand humans and what drives us, we have to understand our 
	  biology, especially our early development. I taught developmental biology 
	  and researched how things could go wrong in early development. We all 
	  start as a zygote, a single cell which is the result of the union of the 
	  sperm nucleus with the egg nucleus inside the cytoplasm of the egg. That 
	  primal cytoplasm is a soup containing codes for proteins that allow the 
	  early embryo to get its initial organizational structure, even before the 
	  code in the nucleus of the zygote starts to shape the future of the 
	  individual. In a sense then, we all depend far more on “stuff” we get from 
	  our mothers than stuff we get from our fathers. In developmental biology 
	  we know that axis formation (having three dimensions: anterior-posterior, 
	  dorsal-ventral, left and right) comes from the cytoplasm of the egg from 
	  our mothers. In essence, without that initial material we get from our 
	  mother, we would simply be a round blob.
 
 But the miracle of 
	  developmental biology is that the joining of 23 chromosomes from the sperm 
	  with 23 chromosomes from the egg make one nucleus. There are already 
	  endless genetic possibilities for those maternal and paternal chromosomes. 
	  This is because the process of producing sperm and eggs, called meiosis, 
	  not only reduces the chromosomes by half (from 46 to 23), but creates 
	  myriad opportunities for having very different sets of genetic variation, 
	  through recombination and chromosome segregation. That is why no two sperm 
	  and no two eggs are the same. That is why no two siblings are the same 
	  (except of course identical twins, which come from the same zygote).
 
 The first cell divides to become 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64 cells. That early 
	  embryo implants itself on the uterine wall and the interdigitation of 
	  embryonic and maternal tissue forms a placenta. This remarkable structure 
	  is where nutrients are supplied to the embryo, and oxygen and CO2 are 
	  exchanged. Many embryos are lost along the way because they have genetic 
	  codes that affect these developmental processes. Some 15-20 percent of 
	  recognized pregnancies end-up spontaneously aborted (a natural selection 
	  process). Harmful mutations are the price that our species pays for 
	  possibilities of useful mutations. Mutations are the natural substances 
	  upon which natural selection operates. Useful mutations survive and travel 
	  to the next generation. That simple idea (developed and spread by Charles 
	  Darwin) revolutionized our understanding of biology and in turn has 
	  advanced a wide range of fields, from environmental research to medical 
	  studies.
 
 The embryo developing in the uterus is, of course, 
	  subject to its environment. Both harmful and beneficial stimuli shape its 
	  very existence and future. That is why pregnant mothers are told to stay 
	  away from harmful materials (alcohol, tobacco and other drugs) and 
	  maintain a good diet. (Many Palestinian mothers delivered babies with 
	  blindness in the few years following the Nakba of 1948, because of vitamin 
	  E deficiencies in the refugee camps.) Some scientific studies also suggest 
	  a child’s brain development may be susceptible to nutritional food and 
	  toxin-free air and the absence of other harmful things. There are data 
	  that show that even music and the mother’s good mood influences the mental 
	  capacity and development of the child she is carrying. Needless to say, 
	  women in war zones do not produce the healthiest babies. This is why the 
	  impact of a military occupation is not just on the adults and children 
	  around but on future generations.
 
 After birth, education from 
	  society may create tribalistic racist notions (e.g., Nazi Germany… or 
	  Israel today). Challenging these notions of superiority and striving for 
	  common good is possible, but it requires shedding some of the educational 
	  baggage that nationalistic and militaristic societies use to saturate 
	  young minds. At one level, this is more difficult today than in the past: 
	  Modern warfare is much bloodier than ancient warfare, but it is conducted 
	  from a distance.
 
 Soldiers no longer come home to wash off the 
	  blood of their enemies from their clothes and swords. They come home with 
	  images of the tools that they have used to destroy enemies from a 
	  distance. The faces of their enemies are not familiar to them, only 
	  outlines in gun sights or on computer screens. The facial distortions and 
	  agonized screams of those killed do not reach the killers. Some of these 
	  killers like to pretend they do not imagine these things. They want to 
	  cling to the elements of their humanity. They may go back home, and even 
	  help an old lady cross the street or pass a candy to a child. But deep in 
	  their psyches, these killers know that they have destroyed a human being 
	  just like them, with flesh and blood, with feelings, with people who loved 
	  him or her.
 
 On the other hand, the development of the internet and 
	  of methods of social communication allow a closeness of the human family 
	  in new and incredibly positive ways that promote social transformation 
	  towards peace and human rights. From the organizing against the World 
	  Trade Organization and International Monetary Fund in Seattle, to Tunisia 
	  and Egypt, people are finding their voice. Here in Palestine, we have had 
	  a vibrant activist community for decades. Increasingly, Israeli and 
	  international activists join hands with native Palestinians in our 
	  struggle for peace with justice.
 
 After 20 years of fruitless 
	  negotiations between colonizer and colonized, occupier and occupied, even 
	  Palestinian elites have come around to see the power of the people. 
	  Engaging in international diplomacy while doing popular resistance is seen 
	  as critical in increasing the pressure to arrive at a just resolution. If 
	  the Israeli government remains intransigent and continues to build 
	  colonial settlements on Palestinian lands, the only remaining option will 
	  become adopted by more and more people: a push for a single democratic 
	  state throughout historic Palestine. That outcome may already have been 
	  guaranteed by the relentless expansionist Zionist project. By making a 
	  two-state option impossible and forcing us into close contacts, we 
	  (Palestinians and Israelis) are developing joint strategies to work for 
	  peace, even as walls are erected on our land.
 
 What is remarkable 
	  is that humans of different backgrounds are coming to regard peace as 
	  personal, and to regard politicians as “behind the times.”  All humans 
	  have behaviors that trace back to our ancestral primates. From sex to 
	  feeding to self-protection to ambition to control of space, we as a 
	  species are driven by these deep-rooted innate behaviors. To what extent 
	  we can control our behavior in a positive fashion determines our humanity. 
	  Governments endeavor to maintain the status quo of control over 
	  individuals and the manipulation of conflicts for their benefits. Yet, the 
	  achievements by individuals working together towards freedom, peace, and 
	  self-government are a testimony to the power that resides in us.
 
 We learned from the civil rights movement in the US, from ending apartheid 
	  in South Africa, from the freedoms achieved in Eastern Europe, and from 
	  the Arab Spring. I believe the main reason this world functions (and the 
	  main reason we remain optimistic) is that good people are everywhere, 
	  endeavoring toward inner peace and extending it by deeds to achieve peace 
	  in our societies. This happens despite the push-back from governments who 
	  are happy with the status quo. Without this “people power,” we would have 
	  endless wars and endless repression and injustice. With it and with human 
	  cultural evolution speeding up, we indeed look forward to a day when no 
	  human life is lost in useless wars and conflicts, and all individuals are 
	  free from state aggression. It is up to us to work to accelerate the trend 
	  in history.
   
 
 |  |  |