| 
 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
 
	  
           |  | On Heroes and Preachers:
 
 Gaza's New 
	Resistance Paradigm
 
 By Ramzy Baroud
 
 
 Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, August 7, 2014
  
 “Where is the Palestinian Gandhi? In Israeli 
	prison, of course!,” was the title of
	
	an article by Jo Ehrlich published in Modoweiss.net on Dec 21, 2009. 
	That was almost exactly one year after Israel’s concluded a major war 
	against Gaza. The so-called Operation Cast Lead (December 27, 2008 – January 
	18, 2009) was, till then, the deadliest Israeli attack against the 
	impoverished strip for many years.
 
 Ehrlich was not in the least 
	being belittling by raising the question about the ‘Palestinian Gandhi’ but 
	responding to the patronization of others. Right from the onset, he 
	remarked: “Not that I’m in any way playing into the Palestinian Gandhi 
	dialogue, I think it’s actually pretty diversionary/racist. But sometimes 
	you have to laugh in order not to cry..”
 
 Indeed, the question was 
	and remains condescending, ignorant, patronizing and utterly racist. But the 
	question was also pervasive, including among people who classify themselves 
	as ‘pro-Palestinian activists’.
 
 Now that Israel’s latest war – 
	so-called Operation Protective Edge – has surpassed Cast Lead, in terms of 
	duration, causalities, level of destruction, but also the sheer 
	horrendousness of its targeting of civilians, as dozens of families were 
	entirely wiped out – the Gandhi question seems more muted than usual. To 
	understand why, one needs to first examine the reason of why Palestinians 
	were demanded to produce a non-violent Gandhi alternative in their struggle 
	for freedom in the first place.
 
 The Second Palestinian Intifada or 
	uprising (2000-2005) was inaugurated with an extremely violent Israeli 
	response. Israeli leaders at the time meant to send a message to late 
	Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat that they had no patience for any act of 
	collective defiance, as they were convinced that Arafat engineered the 
	Intifada to strengthen his political possession in the ‘peace talks’, which, 
	ultimately proved a farce.
 
 Caught in an impossible situation – 
	massive US-fed Israeli war machine that harvested hundreds of lives every 
	month– and having no faith in their leadership, Palestinians resorted to 
	arms, using suicide bombings as well as other violent methods. The tactic 
	raised much controversy – due to the death toll among Israeli civilians – 
	and was quickly used in Israel-western propaganda to, retrospectively 
	explain Israel’s military occupation, and justify its harsh military 
	tactics.
 
 Those who dared explain Palestinian violence within its 
	proper and larger context, or underscore that many more Palestinian 
	civilians were still being killed by the Israeli army were shunned by the 
	media, and, at times, were seen as a liability by those who insisted to 
	classify Palestinians within a narrative of victimization.
 
 Many 
	westerners (from presidents, to philosophers, to journalists, to social 
	media activists..) deliberated the matter with much enthusiasm. The fact 
	that few western countries have truly experienced anti-colonial national 
	liberation struggle in its modern history, thus lack real understanding of 
	the humiliation and anger experienced by colonized nations, seemed to matter 
	little. Some were simply concerned about Israel, and no one else; others, 
	wanted to preserve the image of the Palestinian as an occupied, hapless, 
	eternal victim.
 
 The most obscene presentation of this language was 
	made by then-newly elected US President Barack Obama, who stood at a Cairo 
	university podium on June 4, 2009, to
	
	convey to Palestinians a most denigrating, insensitive and highly 
	inaccurate message:
 
 “Palestinians must abandon violence.  
	Resistance through violence and killing is wrong and it does not succeed.  
	For centuries, black people in America suffered the lash of the whip as 
	slaves and the humiliation of segregation.  But it was not violence 
	that won full and equal rights..  This same story can be told by people 
	from South Africa to South Asia; from Eastern Europe to Indonesia.  
	It's a story with a simple truth:  that violence is a dead end.”
 
 Obama’s message painted the Palestinian struggle as an abnormality in an 
	otherwise a perfectly peaceful national liberation struggles around the 
	world. The message is of course untrue. More, he either didn’t know or 
	wished to ignore Palestinian history where popular, nonviolent resistance 
	that goes back to the 1920’s and 30’s, and arguably, earlier than that. 
	Obama, like many others, failed to appreciate the level of extreme Israeli 
	violence, which employ weapons that Obama had himself supplied Tel Aviv, to 
	subdue Palestinian resistance and maintain a relatively easy military 
	occupation and thriving Jewish settlements built illegally on stolen 
	Palestinian land.
 
 But the decisive point in the discussion was the 
	Second Intifada, which wrought much Israeli violence resulting in the death 
	of thousands. The political implications of the uprising were also quite 
	significant as it divided Palestinians between those who were intimidating 
	by the Israeli tactics into submissions (the so-called moderates), and 
	others who seemed unrepentant (the so-called radicals).
 
 For nearly 
	ten years now, the debate raged. Some out rightly condemned Palestinian 
	armed resistance, others offered mutual criticism of Israeli and Hamas 
	violence, while another group simply preached about the
	
	futility of armed struggle in the face of a country with nuclear weapons 
	capable of blowing up much of the globe at the push of a button.
 
 That debate, although made for an exquisite discussion on online newspapers 
	and social media, hardly registered amongst ordinary Palestinians, 
	especially those in Gaza. While Gaza intellectuals did contend with new 
	ideas of how to build international solidarity to end the Israeli siege, get 
	their message out to the world, and even question the timing of firing 
	rockets into Israel, few probed the principle of armed resistance.
 
 Of course, Palestinians know best, much better than Obama and other 
	preachers elsewhere. They know that collective resistance is not always a 
	tactic determined through social media discussions; that when one’s children 
	are pulverised by US-supplied killing technology, there is no time to lay 
	flat and sing ‘we shall overcome,’ but to prevent the rest of the tanks from 
	entering into the neighbourhood – be it Shujaiya, Jabalya or Maghazi. They 
	also know that Israeli violence is a result of a decided political agenda, 
	and is not tailored around the nature of Palestinian resistance. But more 
	importantly, history has taught them, that when Israelis come to Gaza as 
	invaders, few will stand in Gaza’s defence before the western-financed death 
	machine, but Gaza’s own sons and daughters. If Gazans don’t defend their 
	cities, no one else will.
 
 Although the disparity of the fight 
	between Israel and Palestinian resistance is as highlighted today as ever 
	before, Palestinian resistance has matured. The fact that they
	
	killed dozens of soldiers and only three civilians should be noted, as 
	is Israel’s disgraceful targeting of hospitals,
	
	schools, UN shelters and even graveyards. Maintaining that level of 
	discipline in the most unequalled fight one can imagine is as close to the 
	very battlefield ethics that the US and Israel often breach, but never, ever 
	respect.
 
 As great as Gandhi was in the context of his country’s 
	struggle against colonialism, which remains a source of inspiration for many 
	Palestinians, Palestine has its own heroes, resisters, women and men who are 
	engraving a legend of their own in Gaza and the rest of Palestine.
 
 As for those who have busily asked the question of where is the Palestinian 
	Gandhi, it is much more affective for them to use their energies to block 
	their governments’ shipments of weapons to Israel, which, as of August 6, 
	killed nearly 1,900 and wounded over 9,500, vast
	
	majority of them are civilians.
 
 - Ramzy Baroud is a PhD scholar 
	in People's History at the University of Exeter. He is the Managing Editor 
	of Middle East Eye. Baroud is an internationally-syndicated columnist, a 
	media consultant, an author and the founder of PalestineChronicle.com. His 
	latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story (Pluto 
	Press, London).
 
   |  |  |