It
is possible for a single person to engage in an act of resistance
against oppression and change the world.
A
16-year-old Palestinian girl named Ahed
Tamimi is such an individual. On December 19, in a simple yet
profound act of defiance against the occupation, she slapped Israeli
soldiers who had entered the yard of her house. Just hours earlier
members of the Israeli armed forces had shot her teenage cousin
Mohammed in
the face with a rubber-coated bullet. The young boy was placed in
a medically induced coma as doctors operated on him to remove the
bullet fragments embedded in his skull.
Much
like American civil rights icon Rosa Parks - who was arrested six
decades ago by breaking the law for refusing to give up her seat on a
Montgomery, Alabama bus to a white man - Tamimi has become the face
of a nonviolent movement against injustice.
Ahed
Tamimi is from the West Bank village of Nabi
Saleh, where Israelis have confiscated the villagers' water
source and land and built settlements. The village of 600 has
regularly protested these encroachments, and the Israeli army has
shot, maimed and killed Ahed's family members.
The
Israeli authorities arrested Ahed, and an Israeli military court
indicted her, with prosecutors portraying her as a terrorist. She
could remain in prison until the end of her trial, and, if convicted,
she could serve up to 10 years in prison. Ahed's mother, Nariman
faces five
charges, including incitement for posting the incident on
Facebook.
Israeli
military tribunals have a conviction rate nearing 100
percent.
The
real crime this 16-year-old Palestinian girl committed was resisting
a hostile and racist military occupation and its human rights
violations, and having the temerity to challenge the toxic
masculinity of the Israeli military. This has made her the target of
ridicule, with Israelis giving her the nickname "Shirley
Temper", and chalking up the incident to "Pallywood"
(Palestinian "propaganda" discrediting Israel). there have
been accusations that the Palestinians such as Ahed stage hoax
incidents wearing "American clothes" to garner support
among Americans and other Western audiences.
One
Israeli journalist, Ben
Caspit, called for her rape and murder, saying: "In the case
of the girls, we should exact a price at some other opportunity, in
the dark, without witnesses and cameras." Member of the Knesset
Michael Oren, former Israeli ambassador to the US, accused
the Tamimi family of using their children as "pawns" in a
propaganda war, and suggested that Ahed may not even be their
daughter.
As
Martin Luther King, Jr - wrote in "Letter From Birmingham Jail
(pdf)"
an unjust law "is a code that a numerical or power majority
group compels a minority group to obey but does not make binding on
itself." Just as people have a legal and moral responsibility to
obey just laws, King argued, "one has a moral responsibility to
disobey unjust laws".
On
a December day in 1955, Rosa Parks refused to yield her seat on a
public bus to a white man, breaking the local racial segregation law
requiring black people to sit in the back of public transportation
vehicles. Her arrest triggered the Montgomery
Bus Boycott, a yearlong boycott of the city bus system by African
Americans, of which King was a leader. Ultimately, this boycott led
to the US Supreme Court ruling the segregation of Montgomery public
transportation unconstitutional. Parks' arrest was the catalyst for a
movement.
"Any law that
uplifts human personality is just. Any law that degrades human
personality is unjust," King said. "All segregation
statutes are unjust because segregation distorts the soul and damages
the personality. It gives the segregator a false sense of superiority
and the segregated a false sense of inferiority."
Like
Rosa Parks before her, Ahed Tamimi is struggling against unjust laws,
in her case the injustice of a 50-year military occupation that
denies Palestinians their land, right to travel and
self-determination. Israel maintains an apartheid system of democracy
for Israeli Jews - and discrimination against Israelis of colour -
second-class citizenship for Israeli citizens of Arab descent, and
dispossession and disenfranchisement for Palestinian Arabs in the
territories.
Consider
that Israel is the only nation that systematically detains and
prosecutes children in a military court system lacking the right of
due process. The Israeli military detains hundreds of Palestinian
children between the ages of 12-17 every year (pdf),
including many who are locked up for throwing stones - something that
would never happen to Israeli children. Palestinian
children face mistreatment by the military, according to Defense
for Children International-Palestine, with 75 percent subjected to
physical violence upon arrest, and 97 percent interrogated without a
parent present.
UNICEF
calls the ill-treatment of Palestinian children in military detention
"widespread, systematic and institutionalised," (pdf)
and according to the US
Department of State, Palestinian children are tortured through
“beatings, long-term handcuffing, threats, intimidation, and
solitary confinement.”
Further,
the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs (UNOCHA) found that last December, at least 345
Palestinian children were injured by the Israeli military, of
which over a third involved live ammunition. The Israeli military has
killed at
least 32 Palestinian children
in 2016. This, from a force which calls itself "the
most moral army" in the world. In
Israel's apartheid system of justice, Palestinians face the army, but
West Bank Jewish settlers face civil courts. A West Bank settler teen
who beat a left-wing rabbi and human rights activist at knifepoint
received community
service. Yifat Alkobi, a Jewish West Bank settler who slapped a
soldier who tried to stop her from throwing stones, was released on
bail the same day she was arrested and sent home. Prior to the
incident, she had been convicted five times for disorderly conduct,
throwing rocks and assaulting a police officer, yet never faced jail
time. And Eliraz Feiz, another settler who called for violent
action, even lethal force against Palestinians and Israeli
soldiers was sentenced to five months community service.
Israel
threatens Ahed Tamimi with years in prison because they fear her
power, the power of a resistance movement to the occupation that has
gained momentum. The BDS movement (Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions)
supported by Palestinian civil society is working, creating a
backlash and a blacklist in which the Israeli government has banned
such human rights groups as the American Friends Service Committee -
which saved Jews from Nazi Germany - and Jewish Voice for Peace from
entering Israel.
Meanwhile,
the extremist right-wing, ethno-nationalist settler regime of
Benjamin Netanyahu, and the white nationalist government of Donald
Trump have no intentions of allowing a just peace settlement of the
conflict. Israel seized 1012
hectares of Palestinian land in 2017, a threefold increase in
settlements in the West Bank and Jerusalem over the previous year.
At
the same time, the Palestinian population is expected to soon surpass
the number of Jews in Israel and the occupied territories. With the
two-state solution now
impossible, we will be left with only two alternatives: a fully
democratic state in which Palestinians have citizenship and equal
rights to Jewish Israelis, or what is taking place now, an apartheid
state where one group rules the other.
The
continuation of the status-quo is unacceptable. Whatever form
self-determination takes for the Palestinians, the injustice of the
occupation must end. And youth like Ahed Tamimi are leading the
resistance that will eventually make the Israeli apartheid regime
crumble. Ahed is the Rosa Parks of Palestine.
This
commentary was originally published by Aljazeera.com
|