Palestine Days Freiburg
By Ramzy Baroud
September 14, 2011
To truly appreciate the situation in Gaza ~ whether the
suffering, the struggle, or the steadfastness and the resistance ~ the Gaza
story would have to be placed within its proper context, as an essentially
Palestinian story, of historical and political dimensions that surpass the
current geographic and political boundaries, demarcated by mainstream media and
official narrators. The common failure to truly understand Gaza within an
appropriate context is largely based on who is telling the story, how it is
told, what is included and what is omitted.
Here is an alternative attempt at understanding.
CHALLENGING HISTORY
When American historian Howard Zinn passed away on January 27,
2010, he left behind a legacy that redefined our relationship to history
altogether.
Professor Zinn dared to challenge the way history was told and
written. In fact he went as far as to defy the conventional construction of
historical discourses through the pen of victor or of elites who earned the
right of narration though their might, power and affluence.
This kind of history might be considered accurate insofar as it
reflects a self-seeking and self-righteous interpretation of the world by a
very small number of people. But it is also highly inaccurate when taking into
account the vast majority of peoples everywhere.
The oppressor is the one who often articulates his relationship
to the oppressed, the colonialist to the colonized, and the slave-master to the
slave. The readings of such relationships are fairly predictable.
Even valiant histories that most of us embrace and welcome, such
as those celebrating the legacy of human rights, equality and freedom left
behind by Martin Luther King, Malcolm X and Nelson Mandela still tend to be
selective at times.
Martin Luther King’s vision might have prevailed, but some tend
to limit their admiration to his ‘I have a dream’ speech. The civil rights hero
was an ardent anti-war champion as well, but that is often relegated as
non-essential history.
Malcolm X is often dismissed altogether, despite the fact that
his self-assertive words have reached the hearts and minds of millions of black
people throughout the United States, and many more millions around the world.
His speech was in fact so radical that it could not be ‘sanitized’ or
reinterpreted in any controllable way.
Mandela, the freedom fighter, is celebrated with endless
accolades by the very foes that branded him a terrorist. Of course, his
insistence on his people’s rights to armed struggle is not to be discussed. It
is too flammable a subject to even mention at a time when anyone who dares
wield a gun against the self-designated champions of ‘democracy’ gets
automatically classified a terrorist.
Therefore, Zinn’s peoples’ histories of the United States and of
the world have represented a milestone in historical narration.
As a Palestinian writer who is fond with such luminaries, I too
felt the need to provide an alternative reading of history, in this case,
Palestinian history. I envisioned, with much hesitation, a book that serves as
a people’s history of Palestine. I felt that I have earned the right to present
such a possible version of history, being the son of Palestinian refugees, who
lost everything and were exiled to live dismal lives in a Gaza refugee camp. I
am the descendant of ‘peasants’ ~ Fellahin ~ whose odyssey of pain, struggle,
but also heroic resistance is constantly misrepresented, distorted, and at
times overlooked altogether.
It was the death of my father (while under siege in Gaza) that
finally compelled me to translate my yearning into a book. My
Father was a Freedom Fighter, Gaza’s Untold Story offered a version
of Palestinian history that was not told by an Israeli narrator ~ sympathetic
or otherwise ~ and neither was it an elitist account, as often presented by
Palestinian writers. The idea was to give a human face to all the statistics,
maps and figures.
History cannot be classified by good vs. bad, heroes vs.
villains, moderates vs. extremists. No matter how wicked, bloody or despicable,
history also tends to follow rational patterns, predictable courses. By
understanding the rationale behind historical dialectics, one can achieve more
than a simple understanding of what took place in the past; it also becomes
possible to chart fairly reasonable understanding of what lies ahead.
Perhaps one of the worse aspects of today’s detached and
alienating media is its production of history ~ and thus characterization of
the present ~ as based on simple terminology. This gives the illusion of being
informative, but actually manages to contribute very little to our
understanding of the world at large.
Such oversimplifications are dangerous because they produce an
erroneous understanding of the world, which in turn compels misguided actions.
For these reasons, it is incumbent upon us to try to discover
alternative meanings and readings of history. To start, we could try offering
historical perspectives which try to see the world from the viewpoint of the
oppressed ~ the refugees, the fellahin who have been denied, amongst many
rights, the right to tell their own story.
This view is not a sentimental one. Far from it. An elitist
historical narrative is maybe the dominant one, but it is not always the elites
who influence the course of history.
History is also shaped by collective movements, actions and popular struggles. By denying this fact, one denies the ability of the collective to affect change.In the case of Palestinians, they are often presented as hapless multitudes, passive victims without a will of their own. This is of course a mistaken perception; the Palestinians’ conflict with Israel has lasted this long only because of their unwillingness to accept injustice, and their refusal to submit to oppression.Israel’s lethal weapons might have changed the landscape of Gaza and Palestine, but the will of Gazans and Palestinians are what have shaped the landscape of Palestine’s history.
Touring with My Father was a Freedom Fighter in South Africa,
months after the release of the original English version of the book, was a
most intense experience. It was in this country that freedom fighters once rose
to fight oppression, challenging and eventually defeating Apartheid.
My father, the refugee of Gaza has suddenly been accepted
unconditionally by a people of a land thousands of miles away. The notion of
‘people’s history’ can be powerful because it extends beyond boundaries, and
expands beyond ideologies and prejudices.
In that narrative, Palestinians, South Africans, Native
Americans and many others find themselves the sons and daughters of one
collective history, one oppressive legacy, but also part of an active community
of numerous freedom fighters, who dared to challenge and sometimes even change
the face of history.
RESISTANCE AS A CULTURE
One of the concepts that were largely defaced as a result of the
flawed understanding of history is the concept of resistance.
Deliberately fallacious, self-serving definitions left
“resistance’ wide open to all sorts of interpretations, that change and
fluctuate depending on who is resisting whom, in which period or political
context, and again, on the narrator.
But unlike the current prevailing definitions, resistance is not
a band of armed men hell-bent on wreaking havoc. It is not a cell of terrorists
scheming ways to detonate buildings.
True resistance is a culture.
It is a collective retort to oppression.
Understanding the real nature of resistance, however, is not
easy. No newsbyte could be thorough enough to explain why people, as a people,
resist. Even if such an arduous task was possible, the news might not want to
convey it, as it would directly clash with mainstream interpretations of
violence and non-violent resistance.
The Afghanistan story must remain committed to the same language: al-Qaeda and the Taliban.Lebanon must be represented in terms of a menacing Iran-backed Hizbullah.Palestine’s Hamas must be forever shown as a militant group sworn to the destruction of the Jewish state.
Any attempt at offering an alternative reading is tantamount to
sympathizing with terrorists and justifying violence.
The deliberate conflation and misuse of terminology has made it
almost impossible to understand, and thus to actually resolve bloody conflicts.
Even those who purport to sympathize with resisting nations
often contribute to the confusion.
Activists from Western countries tend to follow an academic
comprehension of what is happening in Palestine, Iraq, Lebanon, and
Afghanistan. Thus certain ideas are perpetuated: suicide bombings bad,
non-violent resistance good; Hamas rockets bad, slingshots good; armed
resistance bad, vigils in front of Red Cross offices good.
Many activists will quote Martin Luther King Jr., but not Malcolm X. They will infuse a selective understanding of Gandhi, but never of Guevara.
This supposedly ‘strategic’ discourse has robbed many of what
could be a precious understanding of resistance ~ as both concept and culture.
Between the reductionst mainstream understanding of resistance
as violent and terrorist and the ‘alternative’ defacing of an inspiring and
compelling cultural experience, resistance as a culture is lost. The two
overriding definitions offer no more than narrow depictions. Both render those
attempting to relay the viewpoint of the resisting culture as almost always on
the defensive.
Thus we repeatedly hear the same statements: no, we are not
terrorists; no, we are not violent, we actually have a rich culture of
non-violent resistance; no, Hamas is not affiliated with al-Qaeda; no,
Hizbullah is not an Iranian agent.
Ironically, Israeli writers, intellectuals and academicians own
up to much less than their Palestinian counterparts, although the former tend
to defend aggression and the latter defend, or at least try to explain their
resistance to aggression.
Also ironic is the fact that instead of seeking to understand why people resist, many wish to debate about how to suppress their resistance.
By resistance as a culture, I am referencing Edward Said’s
elucidation of
“culture (as) a way of fighting against extinction and obliteration.”
When cultures resist, they don’t scheme and play politics. Nor
do they sadistically brutalize. Their decisions as to whether to engage in
armed struggle or to employ non-violent methods, whether to target civilians or
not, whether to conspire with foreign elements or not are all purely strategic.
They are hardly of direct relevance to the concept or resistance itself. Mixing
between the two suggests is manipulative or plain ignorant.
If resistance is “the action of opposing something that you
disapprove or disagree with”, then a culture of resistance is what occurs when
an entire culture reaches this collective decision to oppose that disagreeable
element ~ often a foreign occupation.
The decision is not a calculated one. It is engendered through a
long process in which self-awareness, self-assertion, tradition, collective
experiences, symbols and many more factors interact in specific ways. This
might be new to the wealth of that culture’s past experiences, but it is very
much an internal process.
It’s almost like a chemical reaction, but even more complex
since it isn’t always easy to separate its elements. Thus it is also not easy
to fully comprehend, and, in the case of an invading army, it is not easily
suppressed. This is how I tried to explain the first Palestinian uprising of
1987, which I lived in its entirely in Gaza:
“It’s not easy to isolate specific dates and events that spark popular revolutions. Genuine collective rebellion cannot be rationalized though a coherent line of logic that elapses time and space; its rather a culmination of experiences that unite the individual to the collective, their conscious and subconscious, their relationships with their immediate surroundings and with that which is not so immediate, all colliding and exploding into a fury that cannot be suppressed.” (My Father Was A Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story)
Foreign occupiers tend to fight popular resistance through
several means. One includes a varied amount of violence aiming to disorient,
destroy and rebuild a nation to any desired image (read Naomi Klein’s The Shock
Doctrine).
Another strategy is to weaken the very components that give a
culture its unique identity and inner strengths ~ and thus defuse the culture’s
ability to resist. The former requires firepower, while the latter can be
achieved through soft means of control.
Many ‘third world’ nations that boast of their sovereignty and
independence might in fact be very much occupied, but due to their fragmented
and overpowered cultures ~ through globalization, for example ~ they are unable
to comprehend the extent of their tragedy and dependency.
Others, who might effectively be occupied, often possess a
culture of resistance that makes it impossible for their occupiers to achieve
any of their desired objectives.
In Gaza, Palestine, while the media speaks endlessly of rockets
and Israeli security, and debates who is really responsible for holding
Palestinians in the strip hostage, no heed is paid to the little children
living in tents by the ruins of homes they lost in the latest Israeli
onslaught. These kids participate in the same culture of resistance that Gaza
has witnessed over the course of six decades.
In their notebooks they draw fighters with guns, kids with
slingshots, women with flags, as well as menacing Israeli tanks and warplanes,
graves dotted with the word ‘martyr’, and destroyed homes. Throughout, the word
‘victory’ is persistently used.
If we keep all of this in mind, one is likely to find a need to
reexamine the Gaza story altogether, replacing the selective history that we
know, whether sympathetic or otherwise, with a wider, more inclusive
understanding that goes beyond the familiar dates, names and events, to an
appreciation of the very Palestinian individual in Gaza, who existed prior to
Fatah and Hamas, to the siege and the rockets, the elections of 2006 or even
Oslo of 1993.
If we follow that line of logic, then the story will certainly
be traced to its true origins, and that is the Palestinian Nakba of 1947-48.
But even the Nakba history would have to be retold for it was
not merely that of suffering, Arab disadvantage, fragmentation and
international betrayal, but that of resistance as well.
CONCLUSION
Although there is a constant attempt at reducing major events to
specific names and dates ~ for example, first Intifada is attributed to (or
‘blamed’ on) specific individuals seen as the ‘masterminds’ of the popular
uprising ~ the fact is, it was not the elites, but the collective will of the
Palestinian people that shaped their history of resistance.
It doesn’t mean that some, in fact many have tried to co-opt,
deceive, crush or manipulate the Palestinian masses, with a certain degree of
success, but ultimately, it has been the Palestinian people who have shaped
this history.
Without them the elites had nothing but mere slogans and afford nothing but empty promises.
As cliché as this may sound, it’s the power of the people, the
Palestinian people who has defeated every attempt at canceling and undermining
Palestinian rights and freedom.
It’s the Palestinian people that we celebrate, with whom we
stand in everlasting solidarity, and along with whom we will carry on with the
fight, until freedom and victory are proudly and decisively achieved.
Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net)
is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of
PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story
(Pluto Press, London), available on Amazon.com.
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