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 The Palestinian Nakba:  The Resolve of Memory  By Ramzy Baroud Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, May 15, 2012
 Many Palestinians remember and reference al-Nakba, also known as 
	  the Catastrophe, on May 15 every year. The event marks the expulsion of 
	  nearly a million Palestinians, while their villages were destroyed. The 
	  destruction of Palestine in 1947-48 ushered in the birth of Israel. Older 
	  generations relay the harsh and oppressive memory of their collective 
	  experience to younger Palestinians, many of whom live their own Nakbas 
	  today.
 
 In covering al-Nakba, sympathetic Arab and other media 
	  play sad music and show black and white footage of displaced, frightened 
	  refugees. They rightly emphasize the concept of Sumud, steadfastness, as 
	  they show Palestinian of all ages holding unto the rusty keys of their 
	  homes and insisting on their right of return. Other, less sympathetic 
	  media discuss al-Nakba, if at all, as a side note – a nuisance in the 
	  Israeli narrative of a nation's supposedly miraculous birth and its 
	  progression to an idyllic oasis of democracy. What such reductionist 
	  representations often fail to show is that while al-Nakba started, it 
	  never truly finished.
 
 Those who underwent the pain, harm and loss 
	  of al-Nakba are yet to receive the justice that was promised to them by 
	  the international community. UN Resolution 194 states that “the refugees 
	  wishing to return to their homes and live at peace with their neighbors 
	  should be permitted to do so at the earliest practicable date” (Article 
	  11). Those who wrought this injustice are also yet to achieve their 
	  ultimate objectives in Palestine. After all, Israel doesn’t have defined 
	  boundaries by accident.
 
 David Ben Gurion, first Prime Minister of 
	  Israel, once prophesized that “the old (refugees) will die and the young 
	  will forget.” He spoke with the harshness of a conqueror. Ben Gurion 
	  carried out his war plans to the furthest extent possible. Every region in 
	  Palestine that was meant to be taken was captured, its people were 
	  expelled or massacred in their homes and villages. Ben Guiron ‘cleansed’ 
	  the land, but he failed to cleanse Israel’s past. Memory persists.
 
 Ben Gurion referenced my own family’s village – Beit Daras – which 
	  witnessed three battles and a massacre. In an entry in his diaries on May 
	  12, 1948, he wrote: “Beit Daras was mortared. Fifty Arabs (were killed). 
	  The (villages of) Bashit and Sawafir were occupied. There is mass exodus 
	  from nearby areas (neighbors in Majdal). We sustained 5 dead and 15 
	  wounded. ” (War Diaries, 1947-1949).
 
 More than fifty people were 
	  killed in Beit Daras that day. An old Gaza woman, Um Mohammed – who I 
	  discussed in my last book, My Father was a Freedom Fighter – refers to 
	  what is likely the same event:
 
 “The town was under bombardment, 
	  and it was surrounded from all directions. There was no way out. The armed 
	  men (the Beit Daras fighters) said they were going to check on the road to 
	  Isdud, to see if it was open. They moved forward and shot few shots to see 
	  if someone would return fire. No one did. But they (the Zionist forces) 
	  were hiding and waiting to ambush the people. The armed men returned and 
	  told the people to evacuate the women and children. The people went out 
	  (including) those who were gathered at my huge house, the family house. 
	  There were mostly children and kids in the house. The Jewish (soldiers) 
	  let the people get out, and then they whipped them with bombs and machine 
	  guns. More people fell than those who were able to run. My sister and 
	  I…started running through the fields; we’d fall and get up. My sister and 
	  I escaped together holding each other’s hands. The people who took the 
	  main road were either killed or injured. The firing was falling on the 
	  people like sand. The bombs from one side and the machine guns from the 
	  other.”
 
 Ben Gurion would not necessarily doubt Um Mohammed’s 
	  account. He candidly stated: “Let us not ignore the truth among 
	  ourselves...politically we are the aggressors and they defend 
	  themselves...The country is theirs, because they inhabit it, whereas we 
	  want to come here and settle down, and in their view we want to take away 
	  from them their country” (as quoted in Chomsky's Fateful Triangle, pp. 
	  91-2).
 
 It is precisely for this reason that neither the old nor 
	  the young have forgotten. Every day is another manifestation of the same 
	  protracted al-Nakba that has lasted 64 years now. Young people's hardships 
	  today are inextricably linked to the violent and horrific uprooting 
	  decades ago.
 
 Al-Nakba has also remained an ongoing project 
	  through generations of Israeli Zionists. When Ben Gurion died in 1973, 
	  current Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was in his mid-twenties. 
	  He was then serving his last year in the Israeli army, and today he rules 
	  Israel with a coalition that includes almost three quarters of the Israeli 
	  parliament. Like most Israeli leaders, he continues to contribute to the 
	  very discourse by which Palestine was conquered. He speaks of peace, while 
	  his soldiers and armed settlers take over Palestinian homes and farms. He 
	  makes repeated offers to Palestinians for ‘unconditional’ talks, as he 
	  repeats his violent rejection of every Palestinian aspiration. His lobby 
	  in Washington is much stronger than ever before. He reigns supreme, as he 
	  continues to fulfill the ‘vision’ of early Zionists.
 
 Old keys and 
	  deeds of stolen lands attest to the intergenerational experience that is 
	  Al-Nakba. Today Palestinians continue to be herded behind military 
	  checkpoints. They are denied the right to proper medical care, and their 
	  ancient olive trees are ruthlessly bulldozed. What Israel has not been 
	  able to control, however, is the resolve of Palestinians. The prison, the 
	  checkpoint and the gun reside in our collective memory in a way that 
	  cannot be held captive, controlled, or shot.
 
 In fact, al-Nakba is 
	  not a specific date or an estimation of time, but the entirety of those 64 
	  years and counting. The event must not be assigned to the shelves of 
	  history, not as long as refugees are still refugees and settlers continue 
	  to rob Palestinian land. As long as Netanyahu speaks the language of Ben 
	  Gurion, other ‘catastrophic’ episodes will follow. And as long as 
	  Palestinians hold on to their keys and deeds, the old may die but the 
	  young will never forget.
 
 - RamzyBaroud (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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