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           |  | The Zionist Plan of Forcing Palestinians to Leave 
	their Homeland Still Going On
 
 By Mazin Qumsiyeh
 
 Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, September 8, 2012
 
 http://popular-resistance.blogspot.com/2012/09/in-occupied-areas.html
 This week, a Christian monastery near Jerusalem was vandalized by 
	Israeli with one of the graffiti statements saying ‘Jesus is a monkey.’ A 
	Bahrain kangaroo court upheld "convictions" of pro-democracy and human 
	rights defenders including life terms for founder of a human rights center. 
	The US is not acting on its own human rights laws and continues close 
	working relationship with the ruling family which includes having a very big 
	military base in Bahrain.  60 people seeking refuge in Turkey died by 
	drowning, many of them were Palestinians. Independent sources confirm that 
	at least two million Syrians were directly affected by the fighting in 
	Syria, fighting that increasingly reminds us of civil war in Lebanon (done 
	by proxies). Israel continued to engage in extrajudicial executions killing 
	three young men with a missile in Gaza just two days ago. A school and 
	community service center are threatened with demolition in Izbet Tabib 
	(gathering Saturday there at noon for those interested in helping).  And the 
	list goes on.
 
 As prices of food and basic commodities including 
	gasoline rise, Palestinians under occupation feel the squeeze.  Poverty 
	continues to rise and with it anger.  In every town in the occupied areas 
	there were loud demonstrations closing streets to traffic and demanding 
	change.  In one case more rational young people talked a few extremists to 
	stop vandalizing and even joined hands to clean the street of rubble and put 
	out burning tires.  Like all spontaneous uprisings, young people lead but 
	many times their organization or agenda is not clear or not present.  Like 
	in other situations, there are established political forces which try to 
	co-opt, misdirect or destroy the nascent popular movement.  Some honest and 
	decent people try to protect it.
 
 It is not clear where all this is 
	heading. The economic misery here is caused by a combination of factors. 
	 First and foremost is the Israeli occupation and colonization that was 
	structured to build a Jewish state in Palestine while simultaneously 
	destroying Palestinian lives.  Thus, Palestinian agriculture, tourism, 
	industry, education etc were methodically targeted and systematically 
	dismantled in the past 90 years (started with Herbert Samuels, the Zionist 
	high commissioner of Palestine under British rule).   But this 
	Zionist plan could not have been executed without help from western powers 
	and from collusionist Arab leaders.  Any serious student of history will 
	realize quickly the extent of the conspiracy to liquidate Palestine and 
	Palestinian identity and replace it with the manufactured, fake, and 
	oxymoronic "Jewish nationalism".  The monstrous product called the state of 
	Israel is directly responsible for the fact that we have today millions of 
	Palestinian refugees and we have had several very destructive wars.  This 
	product is also the instigator of regional conflicts and wars (e.g. on Iraq 
	and now pushing for a war on Iran).  Israel is increasingly identified as a 
	major source of instability, a foreign body implanted in the middle of the 
	Arab world in many ways sustained artificially by Western support. It is 
	increasingly obvious that it is not even "good for the Jews".
 
 With 
	the PLO's 10 point program in 1974 then the fateful Egypt-Israel peace 
	treaty of the late 1970s, the Zionist movement felt invincible.  This 
	directly resulted in Israeli ventures to crush the resistance by invading 
	Lebanon in 1982.  It also led to the disastrous Oslo accords.  Creating a 
	Palestinian authority (the PA) without an intention to end occupation, 
	colonization, and apartheid was a brilliant Israeli move (initially thought 
	of in 1968 but only implemented in 1993-1995).  The PA's mission was to make 
	occupation even more profitable and less troublesome to the state of Israel. 
	 Instead of 4000 Israeli soldiers in the Bethlehem area, we have 4000 
	Palestinian security personnel to ensure no friction. The accords also 
	resulted in the illusion of a "peace process" underway to create 
	"two-states" (something that was never and will never be in the cards).  20 
	years later, 650,000 settlers now live in the West Bank.  Judaization of 
	Jerusalem is accelerating. Israel continues destroying Palestinian lives in 
	the Galilee, in the Negev, in Jerusalem, in Gaza and in the other 
	Bantustans.
 
 Israel offers economic pacification with a twist to its 
	silent partners in these crimes.  The Paris protocols ensured Israel's 
	hegemony over natural resources, that Israel collects taxes from 
	Palestinians, and that the Palestinian economy is merely a captive market 
	for Israeli goods and services.  In return for this, Israel will not hinder 
	but will facilitate "humanitarian assistance" coming from Western and 
	Eastern countries.  The Palestinian economy transformation to a "donor 
	dependent" economy was thus accelerated.  Some Palestinian elites got very 
	wealthy (look at villas and SUVs in the Ramallah area just to see the extent 
	of this).
 
 An artificial system was created to ensure a 
	segment of the Palestinian population is comfortable enough to suppress any 
	potential uprising against the occupation. This segment to protect the 
	status quo would, as the Israeli argument goes, find it difficult or 
	impossible to abandon privilege for the sake of larger national goals such 
	as restorative justice.  Refugees and Jerusalem and liberation etc become 
	old slogans put on the shelf or dumped in the trash bin so that the mahogany 
	desks can be decorated with medals of "pragmatism", stamped by western 
	donors.   I predicted several years ago that this system was 
	unsustainable.  If nothing else, it is hard to keep enough beneficiaries of 
	the 11.5 million Palestinians around the world to sustain it.  Even Israeli 
	elites have started to question the ability of the PA to keep the lid on the 
	restless, angry, and frustrated disenfranchized Palestinian population.  The 
	Hamas-Fatah "division" is not the cause of the current sad state of affairs 
	in Palestine.  It is a mere (mild) symptom of the deterioration in our 
	political institutions over the past few decades.
 
 The Palestinian 
	authority called for municipal elections for next month (October). 
	 Municipal elections are already two years behind schedule.  A presidential 
	commission and local branches of national factions policized what otherwise 
	should be a civil service matter.  Here in my town of Beit Sahour, the mayor 
	who is from Fatah decided to run again.  The last time the main challenge 
	was from left-leaning parties. Hamas is hounded here (as are secular forces 
	hounded in Gaza) so is not running.  The left parties are divided and if 
	united could possibly win.  But something interesting is now happening.  The 
	youth gathered to declare that they are neither with Fatah nor the left 
	parties and do not like the way things have been running.   A 
	facebook page gathered thousands and very interesting discussions ensued. 
	Youth questioned why members of the city council from the left were not 
	willing or able to challenge decisions made unilaterally by the mayor. Youth 
	want a municipal council that is truly representative, effective, and 
	transparent.  They reject actions of current political factions and reject 
	tribal/familial patterns of operations.  They believe change for the better 
	can come from their own actions.  I noticed a shift among many members of 
	our society towards this mode of thinking and working.  I noted even those 
	who are members or supporters of political factions beginning to have 
	internal discussions to reassess.  Sometimes these became heated discussions 
	as I am told by some sympathetic insiders.
 
 I think Palestinian 
	society overall is dynamic, vibrant, educated and flexible.  This makes me 
	optimistic that despite the many obstacles and problems we encountered 
	(especially the "Oslo" disaster), we can regain our footing.  When all is 
	said and done I am not betting on political leaders, I am betting on our 
	people.  Our "history of hope and empowerment"* certainly makes this a sure 
	bet.
 
 *"Popular Resistance in Palestine: a history of hope and 
	empowerment" published in 2010 very briefly goes over 130 years of 
	confronting challenges of Zionism, Western and Arab Collusion.
 
 =======================
 
 One Democratic State gaining momentum - 
	Bethlehem Declaration A conference of those interested in pushing the program of a single 
	democratic state in historic Palestine was held Saturday 1 September 2012 at 
	the Bethlehem Peace Center. Activists from several cities, villages and 
	refugee camps representing different backgrounds and experiences made this 
	meeting a success and another step in the march toward freedom and justice. 
	We reviewed previous achievements and developments, including those via 
	writings, via several working groups on the ground, and via conferences held 
	inside and outside Palestine. Other achievements were introduced including 
	by anti-Zionist colleagues working for change in the areas of 1948. We also 
	discussed the idea of a global conference to happen in one year and include 
	all the parties working to achieve a one-state vision.
 
 Items 
	approved:
 
 * Participation in committees that have been proposed in 
	the Munich conference: Legal Committee, Activities Committee, Committee for 
	Documentation and Communication, Communication Committee, Youth Committee, 
	and Finance Committee
 
 * Creating two other committees: one to propose 
	an internal structure for the work of the various committees and groups (ie. 
	mechanisms of coordination) and the other to discuss the mechanisms of 
	political action/frameworks.
 
 * Working on a major website to interact 
	and exchange news, experiences, documents, and views
 
 * Strengthening 
	youth work and make sure young men and women play key leading roles aof this 
	movement
 
 * Expanding awareness and information programs related to 
	the concept of one state in all areas of historic Palestine and abroad
 
 We formed a temporary follow-up committee and to encourage holding 
	similar conferences and meetings in the all camps, villages and cities: 
	Ghassan Olayan, Awni Mashni, Radi Jerai, Ahmed Taqatqa, Ali Jawhar, Mazin 
	Qumsiyeh, Barak Cohen, Renen Raz, Tamar Aviyah
 
 Those who want to 
	participate in the working committees mentioned and/or wants help to create 
	local working groups (in any part of the world), please write to us at
	onestate@palestinejn.org
 
 
 
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