A talk given at today in Edinburgh hosted by the Scottish
Palestinian Solidarity Campaign
peacepalestine
Let’s face it; while the Palestinian and Arab resistance
evolves into an absolute example of the ultimate
heroism and collective patriotism, the
Palestinian solidarity movement in the UK and
around the world is not exactly what could be
called a profound success story. In fact, it
would be erroneous to state that this is really
the fault of those who dedicate their time and
energy to it. Supporting the Palestinians is a
complicated subject. Though the crimes against
the Palestinians have taken place in broad
daylight and are not some well-kept secret, the
priorities of the solidarity movement are far
from being clear.
When thinking about Palestinian society we are basically
used to thinking of some sharp ideological and
cultural disputes between the Hamas and PLO. Not
that I wish to undermine that staunch
disagreement, but I am here to suggest an
alternative perspective that perhaps could lead
towards a different understanding of the notion
of Palestinian activism and solidarity both
ideologically and pragmatically.
I maintain that Palestinian people are largely divided into
three main groups and it is actually this
division that dictates three different political
narratives, with three different political
discourses and agendas to consider:The three
groups can be described as follows:
1. The Palestinians who happen to live within the Israeli
State and possess Israeli citizenship - The
Israelis have a name for them; they call them
‘Israeli Arabs’. These Palestinians are largely
discriminated by Israeli law in all aspects of
their lives; their struggle is for civil rights
and civil equality.
2. The Palestinians who live in the Occupied Territories - In
most cases those Palestinians are locked behind
walls and barbed wire in Bantustans and
concentration camps in the so-called
‘Palestinian Authority Controlled Area’ (PA).
Practically speaking, those people live under a
criminal occupation. For three decades these
people have been terrorised on a daily basis by
Israeli soldiers in roadblocks and incursions,
they are subject to air raids and artillery
bombardments. Their civil system is shattered,
their educational system is falling apart, their
health system is extinct. These Palestinian
people are craving for a single day with no
casualties.
3. The Diaspora Palestinians - Palestinians who were
ethnically cleansed over the course of the years
and denied return to their homes by the racially
orientated Israeli legal system (the Law of
Return and Absentee Laws). The Israelis do not
have a name for them, they simply deny their
existence. The Diaspora Palestinians live all
over around the world. According to the UN
statistics every third refugee is a Palestinian.
Millions of exiled Palestinians live in the
region in refugee camps, the others can be found
in every corner of the globe, many are here may
be among us tonight. The Diaspora Palestinians
know their rights and they want to be able to
come home if they so choose, they demand their
right of return.
Confronting very different realities, the three groups above
have managed to develop three competing
political discourses: The 1st group, the
so-called ‘Israeli Arabs’, struggle for
equality. The means they have to achieve their
goals are largely political. They search for a
voice within the racially orientated Israeli
society.
The 2nd group, namely the ‘PA inhabitants’, battle against
the occupation. They fight for liberation. Their
means are political, civil resistance as well as
armed struggle (in fact it is within the 2nd
group where the bitter struggle for hegemony
between the PLO and the Hamas is taking place).
Being out of Israel and lacking international support as well
as adequate political representation, the 3rd
group is still ignored by the entire Israeli
political system and even by major players
within the international community. The exiled
Palestinians are largely neglected and their
demand for the right of return is yet to be
addressed properly.
Apparently, the Palestinian discourse is fragmented. It is
divided into at least three different, sometimes
opposing discourses. Cleverly, not to mention
mercilessly, on their behalf, it is the Israelis
who maintain this very state of fragmentation.
It is the Israelis who manage to stop the
Palestinian political and cultural discourse
from integrating into a single grand solid
narrative. How do they do it? They apply
different tactics that maintain the isolation
and conflict between the three distinct groups.
Within the State of Israel the Israelis maintain
a racially orientated legal system that turns
the Israeli Palestinians into 10th class
citizens. When PA inhabitants are concerned, the
Israeli military maintains solid and constant
pressure on the civilian population. Gaza is
kept starving, it is bombed on a daily basis.
Some of it is flattened. More than a few
observers regard the situation in the PA as
nothing but slow extermination and genocide.
In order to humiliate the 3rd group, the Israelis enforce a
racist legislation that welcomes Jews to the
country but rejects others (Law of Return). In
practice it is a racially orientated system that
stops exiled Palestinians from returning to
their land.
Paradoxically enough, the more pain the Israelis inflict on
any of the groups, the further the Palestinians
get from establishing a grand narrative of
resistance. Similarly, the more vicious the
Israelis are, the further the Palestinian
Solidarity movement is getting from establishing
a unified agenda of activism.
Indeed the Palestinian solidarity campaigner is confused and
asks himself what campaign to choose. Who should
be supported? The division of the Palestinian
discourse into three conflicting narratives
makes the issue of solidarity rather
complicated. Seemingly, different Palestinian
solidarity groups follow different political
calls and Palestinian causes. Some call for an
end to the Israeli occupation, others call for
the right of return. Some call for equality.
Many of the solidarity campaigners are divided
amongst themselves. Those who call for the right
of return and ‘one State’ are totally unhappy
with what they regard as a watery and limited
demand for the ‘end of occupation’. Seemingly,
Palestinian solidarity is trapped.
Joining one call and not another is actually surrendering to
a discourse that is violently and criminally
imposed by the Israelis. This is exactly where
Zionism is maintaining its hegemony within the
Palestinian solidarity discourse. It is Israeli
brutality that dictates a state of ideological
fragmentation upon the Palestinian solidarity
discourse. Whatever decision the Palestinian
activist is willing to make is set a priori to
dismiss a certain notion of the Palestinian
cause. It is indeed painful to admit that it is
the Israelis who have set us into this trap. Our
work, discourse and terminology as activists are
totally shaped by Israeli aggression.
The Battle Is Not Lost
However, there is a way around that complexity. Rather than
surrendering to the Zionist practice which
splits the Palestinian solidarity discourse, we
can simply redefine the core of the Palestinian
tragedy, which is now turning into a global
crisis.
Once we manage to internalise that the discourse of
solidarity with Palestinians is dominated by the
malicious and brutal Israeli practices, we are
more or less ready to admit: it is the Jewish
State: a racist nationalist ideology that we
must oppose primarily. It is Jewish State and
its supporters around the world that we must
tackle. It is Zionism and global Zionism that we
must confront immediately.
Yet, this is exactly where the solidarity campaigner loses
his grip. To identify the Palestinian disaster
with the concept of ‘Jews Only State’ is a leap
not many activists are capable to do for the
time being. To admit that the Jewish State is
the core of the problem implies that there may
be something slightly more fundamental in the
conflict than merely colonial interests or an
ethnic dispute over land. To identify the ‘Jews
Only State’ as the core of the problem is to
admit that peace is not necessarily an option.
The reason is rather simple: the ‘Jews Only
State’ follows an expansionist and racially
orientated philosophy. It leaves no room for
other people as a matter of fact and principle.
Yet, once we come to grips with this very understanding, once
we are enlightened and realise that something
here is slightly more fundamental than merely a
battle between an invader facing some indigenous
counter freedom fighting. We are probably more
or less ready to engage in a critical enquiry
into the notion of Zionism. We are more or less
ready to grasp the notion of the emerging
secular emancipated Jewish collective identity.
We are ready to confront the modern notion of
Jewishness (rather than Judaism). Once we are
brave enough to admit that Zionism is a
continuation of Jewishness (rather than
Judaism), once we admit that Israel draws its
force from a racist ideology, harboured in
national chauvinism and blatant expansionism,
once we admit that Zionism, which was once a
marginal Jewish ideology, has become the voice
of world Jewry, once we accept it all, we may be
ready to defeat the Zionist disease. We do it
for the sake of the Palestinians but as well for
the sake of world peace.
The Gatekeepers
Let’s try to think of an imaginary situation in which a dozen
exiled German dissident intellectuals insist
upon monitoring and controlling Churchill’s
addresses to the British public at the peak of
the Blitz. Every time Churchill speaks his heart
calling the British people to stand firm against
Germany and its military might, the exiled
dissident Germans raise their voice: “It isn’t
Germany, Mr Prime Minister, it is the Nazi
party, the German people and the German spirit
are innocent.” Churchill obviously apologises
immediately.
I assume that you all realise that such a scene is totally
surreal. Britain would never allow a bunch of
German exiles to control its rhetoric at the
time of a war against Germany. Moreover,
dissident German intellectuals would not have
the Chutzpah to even consider telling the
British what should or what shouldn’t be the
appropriate rhetoric to use at time of a war
with Germany.
However, when it comes to the Palestinian solidarity
discourse, we are somehow far more tolerant. In
spite of the fact that it is the ‘Jews Only
State’ that we struggle against, we allow a
bunch of self-appointed Jewish leaders and
activists to become our gatekeepers. As soon as
anyone identifies the symptoms of Zionism with
some fundamental or essential Jewish precepts a
smear campaign is launched against that person.
Moshe Machover, a legendary Israeli dissident and a Jewish
Marxist who happens to be the intellectual
mentor of the British progressive Jewish
activists, expressed the following view just a
few days ago when he stated a complaint he had
with a petition.(http://www.petitiononline.com/grosveno/petition.html)
“anti-Semitism is a Palestinian problem, as it
pushes Jews into the arms of Zionism. This has
long been understood by all progressive
Palestinians. Anti-semitism is an objective ally
of Zionism, and the common enemy of
Palestinians, Jews, and all humankind.”
Indeed anti-Semitism may be a problem, yet, is
it really a Palestinian problem? Should the
Palestinian solidarity campaign engage in
fighting anti-Semitism? Shouldn’t we leave it to
ADL and Abe Foxman? I think that we better try
to do whatever we can to save the people of Beit
Hanoun. This is where we are needed. I am
certain that the vast majority of the
Palestinian activists know that I am right.
Every PSC campaigner I have ever spoken to admits to me that
only very few Palestinians find interest in the
Palestinian Solidarity Campaign. In fact, the
statement by Machover provides the reason.
According to Machover, those amongst the
Palestinians who fail to see that anti-Semitism
is the problem are nothing but reactionary, as
only the ‘Progressive’ Palestinians acknowledge
that anti-Semitism is indeed a problem. Let me
tell you, the Palestinians I know do not like it
when Machover or anyone else calls them
reactionaries just because they are not that
concerned with anti-Semitism. Reading Machover,
it is rather clear that such views serve as a
body shield for Jewish secular collectivism and
the Zio-centric historical narrative. If to be
honest, there is not much reason for any
Palestinian to join a movement predominated by
the obsession with anti-Semitism.
May I tell you, I am not an historian. I am academically
trained as a philosopher and particularly as a
continental one. I am interested in the notion
of essence. For me to attack Zionism is to aim
towards a thorough realisation of the essence of
Zionism. To a certain extent I am indeed an
essentialist. This is pretty worrying for those
who try to reduce the discourse into
positivistic exchange regarding numbers and
historical facts. I am interested in the spirit
of Zionism. I’m concerned about that which
transforms the Israelis and their supporters
into ethically blind killing machines.
Beyond Chutzpah
You may have heard of the book I am holding in my hand.
Probably, it’s the ultimate Zionist filth: Alan
Dershowitz’s The Case For Israel. I don’t
know whether any of you have ever considered
reading this banal not to say idiotic text. I
did, it fell into my hands a few days ago.
Shockingly enough, this book is structured as a beginner’s
guide for the Zionist enthusiast, a kind of
“Israel for Dummies”. It teaches the nationalist
Jew how to be an advocate and defend the ‘case
of Israel’. We know already that Norman
Finkelstein has managed to prove beyond doubt
that the text is academically a farce. Yet,
there is something revealing in this text.
The book is a set of deconstructions of ‘the anti-Zionist
argument’. It starts with the heaviest
ideological and moral accusation against Israel
and it gets lighter, more historical and
forensic as you progress.
Dershowitz launches with the ‘million Shekels’
question “Is Israel a Colonial, Imperialist
State?” To a certain degree Dershowitz manages
to tackle the question. He asks, “if it is
indeed a colonial state, what flag does it
serve?” Fair enough, I say, he may be right. I
myself do not regard Zionism as a colonial
adventure. However, hang on for a second, Mr.
Dershowitz. It seems you might be getting off
the hook easily here. Our problem with Israel
has nothing to do with its colonial
characteristics. Our problems with the ‘Jews
Only State’ have something to do with its
racist, expansionist and nationalist qualities.
Our problems with Israel have something to do
with it being a Fascist State supported by the
vast majority of Jewish people around the world.
Now if you, Scottish activists stop for a second, ask
yourselves why Dershowitz starts his book
tackling the colonial aspect of Israel rather
than facing its Fascist characteristics. My
answer is simple. We are afraid to admit that
Israel is indeed a Fascist State. It is
predominantly the politically correct groups
that furnish Dershowitz with a Zionist fig leaf.
In fact, it is the Jewish gatekeepers on the
left who have managed to reduce Zionism merely
into a colonial adventure. Why did they do it? I
can think of two reasons:
1. If Israel, the ‘Jews Only State’ is wrong for being a
racially orientated adventure, then ‘Jews for
peace’, ‘Jews against Zionism’, ‘Jewish
Socialists’, ‘Jews Sans Frontieres’ etc. are all
wrong for the very same reason (being a racially
orientated adventure).
2. To regard the Israeli Palestinian conflict as a colonial
dispute is to make sure it fits nicely into
their notion of working class politics. May I
suggest that a universal working class vision of
Israel implies that the Jewish State is nothing
but a Fascist experiment.
I would use this opportunity and appeal to our friends
amongst the Jewish socialists and other Jewish
solidarity groups. I would ask them to clear the
stage willingly, and to re-join as ordinary
human beings. The Palestinian Solidarity
movement is craving for a change. It needs open
gates rather than gatekeepers. It yearns for an
open and dynamic discourse. The Palestinians on
the ground have realised it already. They
democratically elected an alternative vision of
their future. Isn’t it about time we support the
Palestinians for what they are rather than
expecting them to fit into our worldview?