Unmasking the Second Palestinian Intifada
By Remi Kanazi
10/30/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- Over the last five years, the
Palestinian people have faced a host of obstacles in their fight
for sovereignty, preventing them the opportunity to create a
life those in the Western world brag about. A principal
impediment facing the Palestinian struggle today is the constant
reaffirmation that the Palestinian people—deemed by Israel and
the US—are “terrorists,” “militants,” or animalistic beings
lesser than those of the “civilized world.” In Ramzy Baroud’s
new book, The Second Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of
People’s Struggle, this myth is shattered. The propaganda that
has infiltrated Western discourse has proven counterfeit;
misinformation that has framed US policy regarding Israel,
leading to a multitude of double standards imposed upon
Palestinians. These inconsistencies have exponentially magnified
the suffering of the Palestinian people and hindered their
efforts to gain control of the land in which they live.
Baroud poignantly describes the dilemma Palestinians face. The
generalization that all Palestinians are “terrorists” or
“militants,” allows the Israeli government to act with virtual
impunity and equips Israeli forces with a moral endowment; they
are acting in the name of “good” and challenging this policy is
tantamount to collusion with the “forces of evil.” Baroud offers
the reader this grim truth, “Being a Palestinian activist means
you could be targeted in a taxicab, in your office, sipping
coffee with your neighbors, or sitting in your home. When you
live, you live in poverty, deprived of all freedoms and joys of
life. And when you die, it’s a horrible death by a
surface-to-surface missile, a car bomb, or a sniper’s bullet.”
The sincerity and passion in Baroud’s approach is remarkable and
commendable. The reader is given the opportunity to feel the
angst and heartfelt anger sparked inside Baroud, a Palestinian
born in a Gazan refugee camp and a writer who searched Jenin in
hopes of finding the truth and preserving the stories of those
that had suffered. Baroud has worked tirelessly to shine light
on the mischaracterized Palestinian; civilians and activists who
have been and continue to be sacrificed as inconsequential
variables in Israel’s fight for “the greater good.”
For more than five years, successive Israeli governments
implemented policies that undermined the possibilities of
freedom and democracy in Occupied Territories, the very
principals the United States proclaimed it tried to spread
throughout the region. Palestinians further saw their human
rights and chances for sustenance and sustainability
calculatedly stripped away by Israel’s supposed “moral”
military. Time and again, Baroud debunks the falsehoods put
forth by Israel and America, falsehoods consequently
disseminated by Western media outlets. Israel’s objective is to
reinforce the notion that it is the Palestinian people who are
the aggressors, while Israel is the patient victim—acting in
self defense under only the most extreme cases. Baroud notes,
“It’s the same dreadful scenario repeated incessantly. Israel
murders many innocent civilians; the international community
hears nothing, sees nothing, and does nothing…in anger and
desperation, a Palestinian blows himself up in a crowd of
Israeli…the Western world is utterly overcome with a wave of
condemnations of “Palestinian terrorism,” “the enemies of
peace.”
Baroud comes back to the issue of suicide bombings several times
in his book. An erroneous claim presented in Western circles is
that the Palestinian people are brought up to hate, kill, foment
intolerance and engage in regressive thought and actions. This
supposedly triggers the reason for a Palestinian to become a
suicide bomber. Baroud aptly asserts, however, that Palestinians
are not driven to end their lives because they are products of
intolerance or consumed with hatred. Rather he gives a more
practical motivation for one to commit such an act. Baroud
states, “When a policy of starvation, assassination, and
systematic killing is imposed, when people are brutalized in the
streets, when schools are raided by Apache helicopters…when a
whole nation is collectively abused and violated with almost no
protection…for those victims…blowing oneself up might actually
seem like a rational way out of a despairing situation.”
Baroud makes it clear that the way forward is to take the moral
high ground, no matter how hard the struggle, and no matter what
dividends one may think it yields, politically or personally.
This is what has fundamentally separated the occupier and
occupied for so long in this conflict; a clear cut victim
existed, it was the Palestinians, suffering 39 years of
occupation, with many still affected by the hardships of
dispossession 58 years later. Baroud writes, “To maintain its
moral edge, the Palestinian revolution should not depart from
its all-encompassing, tolerant, and inclusive path, it should
not be tainted by the fallacies of the occupier…These values
must remain untainted, wholesome even, so that the will of the
people might some day prevail over tyranny and oppression. And
it will, of this I am certain.”
The spirit of non-violent resistance has been alive since the
birth of the Palestinian struggle. Most notably, the non-violent
protests of the first Intifada, which were met by the iron fist
of the Israeli state. This iron fist policy was a specialty of
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon during the second Intifada. Baroud
writes, “They go to the streets to protest the killing of a
child, and they return home carrying another shot while
protesting.” Non-violent protests have been plentiful in the
second Intifada, but through growing desperation, measures that
were traditionally absent from the Palestinian struggle were
taken up by individuals consumed with feelings of helplessness
and anger, triggered by the wrongs inflicted upon their people
by the Israeli state.
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, the “Butcher of Beirut,” the rogue
military man who wasn’t afraid of controversy and saw diplomacy
as a nuisance, wasn’t scared to put down resistance of any kind,
whether the resistance came in the form of children throwing
rocks or a group non-violently protesting against the Apartheid
Wall. His bulldog tactics and ruthless policies were not only
his modus operandi but his raison d’être. It was in this context
that his policies were carried out, without regard to
“collateral damage.”
Baroud aptly asserts that the Palestinian response to Israeli
aggression “should have been a wake-up call for the Israeli
government, making it clear that violence begets nothing but
violence and…that a solution to the conflict would only come
through the implementation of international law, not Apache
helicopters and missiles.” If the Israeli government wouldn’t
pull back the reigns of Ariel Sharon, then surely the US, the
UN, the EU or any country with the slightest backbone could have
uttered words of condemnation against Israel. The status quo,
however, continued: America rallied around Israel, the rest of
the international community remained silent and the Palestinians
suffered the consequences.
In deep rooted conflicts, it is important to note that intention
matters much more than action. Take for example, the unilateral
disengagement of the Gaza Strip; Sharon had no intention of
giving the Palestinian people autonomy, nor did he have the
intention of giving Gazans control of their resources, airspace,
territorial water, or borders. Sharon saw the pullout as a
necessary militaristic and political move, a shift in policy
that benefited Israel, without any consideration for the lives
of the 1.4 million Palestinians that would be left living in an
open air prison, under de facto Israeli occupation. Without
missing a beat, the international community and media applauded
Sharon’s “gesture of peace.” This was the fundamental flaw of
the unilateral disengagement of the Gaza Strip, it was
predicated on the assertion that disengagement equated to peace,
and it’s what makes the notion that Sharon had gone through a
transformation such an egregious fallacy.
Throughout the conflict, the primary US excuses to support
Israel has been that “Israel is our friend,” it is the “only
democracy in the Middle East,” and “given the times we live in”
(i.e. the post 9/11 world), it is more crucial than ever to
support Israel’s struggle against “tyranny and Islamic
fanaticism.” After that tragic morning, when nearly 2800
American citizens lost their lives, the people of the US have
been constantly ingested with propaganda promoting policies
suitable for the US government and its “friends”, but directly
contradict the principals of humanity and any sensible
definition of justice. Policy makers and government officials in
the West have used this heartbreaking event to create an “us
versus them” type of world, without educating us on who “them”
is.
Baroud explains the new model, “Fighting terror is the new
trend; whereby aggressive, powerful countries crush their weaker
foes, deprive them of freedom, while continuing to blame them
for all the woes of the world. And we, the people of this world
who mean well but fail to act, are expected to believe
everything we are told. Israel is defending itself as though it
were the Palestinian who occupy Israeli territories, besiege the
Israel people, blow up their homes, steal their land, and gun
down their children.” At some point the light switch has to turn
on in our heads that killing and creating “evil empires” when it
serves interests, rather than when it serves logic, is a flaw
that tears at the very fabric of truly democratic societies.
Baroud writes, “When will we treasure the lives of people of all
nations on an equal level, whether they be American, Afghani,
Iraqi, Israeli, Palestinian, Turkish, Kurdish, Russian, Chechen,
or any other? How long will we remain blinded by empty slogans,
unexplained hatred, and pretentious condemnations?”
Baroud leaves no one untouched in The Second Palestinian
Intifada. He does much to underscore the shortcomings of the
late Yasser Arafat, the weakness and lack of credibility of
Mahmood Abbas, and the many failures of US intervention (passed
off as honest brokering). Baroud doesn’t pull punches when
critiquing the Palestinian Authority (PA), particularly its
corruptness and incompetence.
Baroud specifically uncovers the disingenuousness of
“negotiations” led by Abbas and highlights the acquiescence and
political posturing of Palestinian figures in times when
strength and political purity was needed. Under the rule of the
“old guard,” the PA lost sight of the Palestinian struggle. The
PA’s duties were supposed to include preserving and fighting for
the rights of its people, defending its citizens against the
sordid policies of Israel, and demanding that the international
community intervene. Yet, the leaders within the PA were so
intent on keeping power and following defunct policies rooted in
corruption and nepotism, that they failed to remember that they
weren’t representing themselves, but a population of 3.8 million
people, a people who were suffering the daily realities of
occupation.
Palestinian ineptitude only strengthened Israel’s position and
policy, which Israel had no intention of changing. Israel never
had any desire, or pressure, to implement international law, nor
did it intend to pursue a course of action that respected
Palestinian human rights. Whether Labor, Likud, or Kadima, each
Israeli administration knew that a change in policy would fly in
the face of what it was trying to accomplish: the territorial
control and expropriation of fertile Palestinian land in the
West Bank, the annexation of East Jerusalem, the control of the
Palestinian people’s water supply, and the suppression of the
Palestinians inalienable right to autonomy and freedom from
occupation in any form. This is why resolution 194 (calling for
the right of return), and resolution 242 and 338 (calling on
Israel to pull back to the June 1967 borders) have never been
seriously discussed—not after the signing of the Oslo Accords,
not at Camp David in 2000 and surely not since.
It is not just the ruling Palestinian Authority that faced
problems, but rather all factions, particularly in the lead up
to the unilateral “disengagement” of the Gaza Strip. Baroud
suggests, “By failing to take care of their own destiny in a
unified fashion, Palestinians…were taking the risk of being
marginalized and victimized by mandates and caretakers…A[n]
internal dispute coupled with muscle-flexing would deeply harm
all that the Palestinians had fought long and hard to achieve.
The media was, as ever, willing to condemn and lambaste
Palestinians, their incompetence and failures, retrospectively
validating Israel’s policy”
Baroud’s glimpses of frustration, anger, and jarring sarcasm
gives his story a distinct humanness, a tone that is refreshing,
and one that the reader can identify with. After being inundated
with death tallies and daily reports of carnage, readers many
times become desensitized to the news, making one forget how
horrible, tragic, and grueling occupied Palestinian life truly
is.
At one point, Baroud seems fed up with the almost comical
confines the Palestinian people are put in. Baroud asserts, “It
[Israel] killed and wounded hundreds of civilians in its
‘targeted killing’ sprees. Yet, Palestinians were condemned if
they showed the mere desire to respond. Even the targeting of
occupation soldiers was taboo. So what were the Palestinians
permitted to do in self-defense, in accordance with the twisted
pro-Israeli Bush doctrine? How about marching in a peaceful
demonstration? In, Rafah, that too was anathema and could not be
tolerated. It was handled with resolute vigor, the same way a
‘terrorist’ threat deserved to be handled: A missile fired from
a U.S.-supplied Apache helicopter was all that it took to
eliminate that option of resistance.”
The Second Palestinian Intifada is not merely a tirade on the
Palestinian people being subjected to Israeli policy and US
support of that policy. The way forward is clear: the acceptance
and instituting of international law, the end to the 39 year
occupation, and the emergence of fair brokers, mainly the US,
the UN, and the European Union.
The relevancy and necessity for Baroud’s analysis and critique
in these pressing times cannot be overstated. The genuineness of
Baroud’s approach is one to be admired and applauded. His
insistence to uncover injustices carried out by Israel (with
full support of the US administration) is unwavering, yet
doesn’t cloud his judgment.
At his core, Baroud stays hopeful, “It has always been an old
habit of mine to sign off messages in the days preceding the New
year by expressing: ‘I pray that the coming year will bring
peace and justice to our troubled world.’ Despite disappointing
experiences, I persist in this, because hope is essential.”
The fight for Palestine, a vision to end the injustice imposed
upon them, illustrates the common threat of injustice that
plagues all oppressed people. This struggle is something to be
cherished, to work for and to improve. Baroud explains, “In
spite of dashed hopes and failed summits, peace and justice
movements around the word, representing an array of struggles,
continue to look to the Palestinian people as an icon of
resistance.”
What is happening today in the Occupied Territories isn’t
politics. It is an overwhelming nightmare that plagues 3.8
million people every day. Each person in the Occupied
Territories has a story, a story that is equally significant and
heartbreaking, whether revealing that a relative has been
killed, land has been taken from them, their home has been
bulldozed to the ground or the humiliating act of being stopped,
restricted, or harassed by Israel forces, this is the reality
with which they live. The human story Baroud puts forth is meant
not only to educate and inform, but to encourage and inspire.
The peoples of struggle mustn’t be forgotten, nor should they be
silenced. Baroud does service to this cause and because of it,
has left the flame of struggle burning brighter.
The
Second Palestinian Intifada
: A Chronicle of a People’s Struggle, published by Pluto Press,
can be found on Amazon.com.
Remi Kanazi is the primary writer for the political website
www.PoeticInjustice.net He is the editor of the forthcoming book
of poetry, Poets for Palestine, for more information go to
Poetic Injustice. He lives can reached via email at remroum@gmail.com
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