The Electronic Intifada (EI)
is a not-for-profit, independent publication committed to comprehensive public education on the question of Palestine,
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and the economic, political,
legal,
and human dimensions of Israel's 39-year occupation of Palestinian
territories.
When I saw some of the images coming out of the
infighting in Gaza last week, I suppressed my anguish and steaming
anger, recalling the wise, almost prophetic, words of the great
Brazilian educator, Paulo Freire, who wrote:
"The central problem is this: How can the
oppressed, as divided, unauthentic beings, participate in developing
the pedagogy of their liberation? Only as they discover themselves
to be 'hosts' of the oppressor can they contribute to the midwifery
of their liberating pedagogy. As long as they live in the duality
in which to be is to be like, and to be like is to be like the
oppressor, this contribution is impossible. The pedagogy of
the oppressed is an instrument for their critical discovery
that both they and their oppressors are manifestations of dehumanization."
Apparently, neither of the two warring factions
succeeded in transcending the being "like the oppressor"
part.
The lightening success of Hamas, in forcefully
taking over the supposed symbols of Palestinian power in Gaza,
cannot and ought not obscure the fact that, given the overbearing
presence of Israel's military occupation, the bloody clash between
the Islamist group and its secular counterpart, Fatah, and irrespective
of motives, it has descended into a feud between two slaves fighting
over the crumbs thrown to them by their common colonial master,
whenever they behave.
There is no doubt that a faction within Fatah -
overtly funded, trained and steered by the US and Israel - is
the primary suspect behind the flare-up of this bloody internecine
strife, which many observers view as a thinly veiled attempt to
destabilize Hamas's democratically-elected government, coercing
it into accepting Israeli dictates from which it has so far balked.
Furthermore, any decent legal expert will readily admit that the
so-called "emergency government," declared by the Palestinian
Authority chairman, Mahmoud Abbas, in response to Hamas's take-over
in Gaza, violates several articles in the Basic Law, the equivalent
of the Palestinian Authority's (PA's) constitution.
While the corruption, lawlessness, profiteering
and even betrayal of sections of Fatah have been known and well
documented for some time, the brutal, reckless and in some cases
criminal tactics used by armed groups within Hamas were fresh
reminders to neutral bystanders who were willing to give the group
the benefit of the doubt that it, too, contains a strong, power-hungry
faction that is eager to sacrifice principles and human rights
to reach its political objectives. Hamas cannot be exonerated
from the accusation that, by participating in the legislative
and municipal elections according to laws and parameters
set by the Oslo agreements, it has already contributed to legitimizing
the products of those agreements and forsaken its claim to being
a resistance movement that is primarily dedicated to realizing
the main tenets of the Palestinian national program of liberation
and self-determination. On top of that, and unlike the far more
sophisticated and responsible Hizballah in Lebanon, Hamas, in
the last year and a half of ruling at various levels, has revealed
its inherent tendency, like all Islamist movements, to impose
its exclusionary ideological and social order, and to dismiss
and whenever possible suppress diverse views and cultural outlooks
that conflict with that order.
In the short term, the political vacuum that will
inevitably result from the growing rift between Ramallah and Gaza
and the steady collapse of the PA structures and remaining authority
on the ground is most likely to be filled by an all-out Israeli
reoccupation of the entire West Bank and Gaza. This would announce
the official death of the so-called Oslo peace process, which
actually collapsed long ago under the weight of Israel's incessantly
expanding colonies, apartheid wall - declared illegal by the International
Court of Justice - and intricate apparatus of oppression and humiliation
of the Palestinians under its control.
Such a scenario may either lead to threatening
the very survival of the Palestinian national movement and the
completion of the well-underway disintegration of Palestinian
society or trigger a renaissance of the Palestinian struggle for
self-determination. For the latter to occur, however, two difficult
but realistic conditions must be met: first, Palestinian structural
democratization and political reform and resetting Palestinian
national priorities; and second, a critical review and revamping
of the Palestinian resistance strategy, both from moral and pragmatic
perspectives. Both are urgently called for, to realign the Palestinian
struggle with the international social movement and to put the
question of Palestine back on the world's agenda as essentially
a morally and politically justifiable and viable liberation struggle
that can - again - capture the imagination and support of progressives
and freedom lovers the world over.
In order to counter Israel's dual strategy of,
on the one hand, fragmenting, ghettoizing, and dispossessing Palestinians,
and, on the other hand, reducing the conflict to a dispute over
a partial set of Palestinian rights, the Palestine Liberation
Organization (PLO) must be resuscitated and remodeled to embody
the claims, creative energies, and national frameworks of the
three main segments of the Palestinian people: Palestinians in
the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT), Palestinian refugees,
and Palestinian citizens of Israel. The PLO's grassroots organizations
need to be rebuilt from the bottom up with mass participation,
and they must be ruled by unfettered democracy and proportional
representation. This process must entail a well-planned transfer
of power from the withering PA back to a rejuvenated PLO, including
the entire spectrum of the Palestinian political movement.
As to resistance strategies, one cannot and should
not strictly separate means from ends. If the struggle for freedom
in Algeria, Northern Ireland and South Africa taught us anything,
it is this fact. Irrespective of the right of Palestinians to
resist foreign occupation by all means, as granted in international
law, we have a moral duty to avoid tactics that indiscriminately
target innocent civilians and inevitably corrupt our own humanity.
Concurrently, and with full deference to the first principle,
we have a political obligation to select methods that maximize
our gains. Given the ongoing nihilistic abuse and utter futility
of Palestinian armed resistance, the uniquely harsh geopolitical
context of the Palestinian resistance movement, and the de facto
fragmentation of the Palestinian people and isolation of its resistance
core from potential sources of supply and logistical support,
civil resistance that has the potential of engaging and mobilizing
the Palestinian grassroots seems not only morally but also pragmatically
preferable.
The young Palestinian campaign for boycott, divestment
and sanctions (BDS) against Israel, modeled after the anti-apartheid
struggle in South Africa, has already shown ample evidence that
it has the potential of unifying Palestinians and international
solidarity movements in a resistance strategy that is moral, effective
and sustainable. In the last few years alone, many mainstream
and influential groups and institutions have heeded Palestinian
boycott calls and started to consider or apply diverse forms of
effective pressure on Israel. These include the British University
and College Union (UCU); Aosdana, the Irish state-sponsored academy
of artists; the Church of England; the Presbyterian Church (USA);
top British architects led by Architects and Planners for Justice
in Palestine (APJP); the National Union of Journalists in the
UK; the Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU); the South
African Council of Churches; the Canadian Union of Public Employees
in Ontario; and dozens of celebrated authors, artists and intellectuals,
led by John Berger, among many others.
The intensification of Israel's colonial and racist
oppression of the Palestinians, particularly in Gaza, with unprecedented
impunity was the main trigger for the spreading boycott. With
its wanton destruction of Palestinian infrastructure, willful
killing of civilians, particularly children, apartheid wall, Jews-only
colonies and roads, incessant confiscation of land and water resources,
and horrific denial of freedom of movement to millions under occupation,
Israel has shown the international community its total disregard
for international law and fundamental human rights.
This latest dose of American - Israeli-inspired
- "constructive chaos" in the occupied Palestinian territory
may well wreak havoc on US-Israeli policy in the region. With
the imminent dissipation of the illusion that a national Palestinian
sovereignty can be established under the overall colonial hegemony
of Israel, many Palestinians are now seriously questioning the
wisdom of the two-state mantra and considering to repose their
plight as one for equal humanity and full emancipation, within
the framework of a unitary, democratic state solution in historic
Palestine. After almost three decades of "searing into the
consciousness" of Palestinians that only a two-state solution
can deliver any of their demands, the US and Israel are harvesting
what they sowed: the collapse of any semblance of independence
and integrity of the PA - which was, all along, charged with relieving
Israel's colonial burdens vs. the inhabitants of the
occupied West Bank and Gaza - and the mounting Palestinian discontent
with, if not yet revolt against, the game of unilateral Palestinian
compromise leading only to insatiable Israeli demands for further
compromise, with the simultaneous loss of land, resources, freedoms
and the bleak - and real - prospects of social breakdown.
The demise of the two-state solution should not
be mourned. Besides having passed its expiry date, it was never
a moral solution to start with. In the best-case scenario, if
UN Resolution 242 were meticulously implemented, it would have
addressed most of the legitimate rights of less than a third of
the Palestinian people over less than a fifth of their ancestral
land. More than two thirds of the Palestinians, refugees plus
the Palestinian citizens of Israel, have been maliciously and
shortsightedly expunged out of the definition of the Palestinians.
It is now clearer than ever that the two-state
solution - other than being only a disguise for continued Israeli
occupation and a mechanism to permanently divide the people of
Palestine into three disconnected segments - was primarily intended
to induce Palestinians to give up the inalienable right of their
refugees to return to their homes and lands from which they were
ethnically cleansed by Zionists during the 1948 Nakba (catastrophe).
A secular, democratic state solution is increasingly
being perceived by Palestinians and people of conscience around
the world as the moral alternative to Israeli apartheid and colonial
rule. Such a solution, which promises unequivocal equality in
citizenship, as well as individual and communal rights, both to
Palestinians (refugees included) and to Israeli Jews, is the most
appropriate for ethically reconciling the ostensibly irreconcilable:
the inalienable, UN-sanctioned rights of the indigenous people
of Palestine to self-determination, repatriation, and equality
in accordance with international law and the acquired and internationally
recognized rights of Israeli Jews to coexist in the land of Palestine
- as equals, not colonial masters.
Omar Barghouti is an independent Palestinian
political analyst who writes for The
Electronic Intifada where this article originally appeared.
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