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 Back to Basics in Palestine:  Redefining Our Relationship to a People's Struggle
	 By Ramzy Baroud 
 Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, March 12, 2012
 
 The Winter 2012 edition of Palestine News features a photograph of an 
	old man. His white beard and traditional jalabiya give him the appearance of 
	any Palestinian grandfather. His name is not given; he could be a Muslim or 
	a Christian. We know that he comes from the West Bank village of Qusra, and 
	that he is holding the broken branches of his olive trees.
 
 According 
	to the accompanying report, the destruction of Palestinian olive trees by 
	Jewish settlers -under the watchful eye of the Israeli occupation army - 
	cost farmers over $500,000 in 2011. It isn’t only income that the settlers 
	are targeting. They know the land is also a source of empowerment to 
	millions of Palestinians. Their ultimate aim is to break the bond that has 
	united the native inhabitants of Palestine since time immemorial.
 
 But will they succeed?
 
 Suheil Akram al-Masri, a 26-year-old 
	political prisoner from Gaza, was hospitalized on March 2, just hours after 
	his release. Al-Masri had reportedly fallen unconscious after 13 days of 
	being on a hunger strike, in solidarity with female prisoner Hana Shalabi, 
	who went on a hunger strike on February 12.
 
 Hana’s story is 
	troublingly typical. She has spent 25 months under what Israel calls 
	‘administrative detention,” a bizarre legal system that allows Israel to 
	hold Palestinian political activists indefinitely without charge or trial. 
	She was released in October 2011 as part of the prisoner exchange deal, only 
	to be kidnapped again by soldiers a few months later.
 
 Like Khader 
	Adnan, who had recently ended the longest hunger strike ever staged by a 
	Palestinian prisoner, Hana decided that enough was enough. Hundreds of 
	Palestinians, including Hana’s aging father, joined in her quest for freedom 
	and dignity.
 
 Charlotte Kates, an activist with The National Lawyers 
	Guild, wrote, “Imprisonment is a fact of life for Palestinians…There are no 
	Palestinian families that have not been touched by the scourge of mass 
	imprisonment as a mechanism of suppression.”
 
 In the Israeli 
	military there is an order that grants it "the authority to arrest and 
	prosecute Palestinians from the West Bank for so-called 'security' 
	offenses." There are 2,500 such military orders, including one issued in 
	August 1967, which deems any acts of influencing public opinion as 
	“political incitement’”. Also prohibited is any activity that demonstrates 
	sympathy for organizations deemed “illegal” by the military.
 
 Palestinians are thus governed by laws without internationally recognizable 
	legal frame of reference. There is no need to examine the Fourth Geneva 
	Convention on prisoners, the rights of occupied nations or the forceful 
	seizure of property. Israel is governed by its own absurd and inhumane 
	logic.
 
 It is this very logic that allows Israel to justify the 
	detention of Gaza patients seeking medical treatment outside their besieged 
	area – which lacks critical medical equipment and life-saving medicine. The 
	Palestinian Center for Human Rights (PCHR) issued a statement on January 23, 
	protesting an exceptionally disturbing practice that has been used by the 
	Israeli military for many years: interrogating Palestinians seeking surgery 
	in West Bank or Israeli hospitals.
 
 Bassam Rehan, 25, from Jabaliya 
	refugee camp, was a victim of this policy. He was detained as he tried to 
	pass through the Erez crossing. PCHR was concerned that, like many before 
	him, Rehan would be subject to torture, according to Maan News. "Targeting 
	patients, exploiting their need for medical treatment at hospitals in Israel 
	or the West Bank and blackmailing them constitute serious illegal actions," 
	PCHR’s statement read.
 
 Such stories don’t begin or end here. But 
	the continuation of this terrible and convoluted episode raises questions 
	about the lack of will to bring the injustice to an end. It highlights our 
	collective moral responsibility, even culpability, in allowing Israel to 
	treat people – the natives of this ancient ‘holy land’ - in such a degrading 
	way.
 
 There is no point in counting on Barack Obama, Stephen Harper 
	or David Cameron to exact justice for Palestinians. How could they, when 
	their governments continue to facilitate and arm the occupation of 
	Palestine, finance the illegal settlements, ensure the continuation of the 
	siege on Gaza and block any attempt - even symbolic - to indict the 
	unlawful, violent and Apartheid-like practices of the Israeli government?
 
 To whom can ordinary Palestinians turn for justice? To whom can 
	they appeal for their rights? And from whom should they expect solidarity?
 
 One thing remains certain. Palestinians will continue to resist 
	with or without an international awakening to their plight. The old man will 
	try to replant a new olive grove. Suheil, Hana and Adnan will continue their 
	quest for freedom. A whole new generation will carry on the torch from the 
	previous one.
 
 In the meanwhile, we, the silent multitudes, cannot 
	afford to remain silent. Our silence only empowers Israel’s crimes and 
	allows for the untold suffering of millions of people. It is time to 
	redefine our relationship to the Palestinian struggle. We are not helpless 
	outsiders; we are enablers of this moral travesty, and we can choose not to 
	remain so.
 
 Ordinary Palestinians need true solidarity, not sermons 
	about violence and non-violence. They have utilized the latter for nearly a 
	hundred years. They need us to morally divest from Israel, as opposed to 
	standing halfway between the oppressed and the oppressor. They need us to 
	overcome our tendencies towards intellectual elitism or any sense of moral 
	ascendancy. They don’t need of us to play the role of the lecturer. They 
	need us to truly listen, to comprehend and to act.
 
 This is not a 
	conflict concerning religion or politics. It is about rights, about people 
	with history firmly rooted in their land. They need us to remember their 
	names, their stories and their longing for justice and lasting peace. Suheil, 
	Hana, Adnan and Bassam and millions of others need our voices of support.
 
 Before we speak of ‘solutions’ to the ‘Palestinian-Israeli conflict,’ I 
	believe that we must first resolve our own dilemma by divesting from an 
	occupation that runs counter to any conception of true humanism.
 
 Desmond Tutu once said, “If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you 
	have chosen the side of the oppressor.”
 
 Where do we stand in 
	relation to this conflict? Are we on the side of the armed Brooklyn settler, 
	and the US-armed Israeli soldier? Or are we on the side of the bearded old 
	man holding tightly to his broken olive branches, conveying a profound mix 
	of despair and hope?
 
 The choice is yours. And the consequences of 
	your choice could redefine history.
 
 - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) 
	is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: 
	Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London).
 
 
 
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