Did
the Arabs Betray Palestine?
by Ramzy Baroud,
April 28, 2016
Antiwar.com
At the age
of 21, I crossed Gaza into Egypt to pursue a degree in political science. The
timing could have not been worse. The Iraq invasion of Kuwait in 1990 had
resulted in a US-led international coalition and a major war, which eventually
paved the road for the US invasion of Iraq in 2003. I became aware that
Palestinians were suddenly “hated” in Egypt because of Yasser Arafat’s stance
in support of Iraq at the time. I just did not know the extent of that alleged
“hate.”
It was in a
cheap hotel in Cairo, where I slowly ran out of the few Egyptian pounds at my
disposal, that I met Hajah Zainab, a kindly, old custodian who treated me like
a son. She looked unwell, wobbled as she walked, and leaned against walls to
catch her breath before carrying on with her endless chores. The once
carefully-designed tattoos on her face, became a jumble of wrinkled ink that
defaced her skin. Still, the gentleness in her eyes prevailed, and whenever she
saw me she hugged me and cried.
Hajah Zainab
wept for two reasons: taking pity on me as I was fighting a deportation order
in Cairo – for no other reason than the fact that I was a Palestinian at a time
that Arafat endorsed Saddam Hussein while Hosni Mubarak chose to ally with the
US. I grew desperate and dreaded the possibility of facing the Israeli
intelligence, Shin Bet, who were likely to summon me to their offices once I
crossed the border back to Gaza. The other reason is that Hajah Zainab’s only
son, Ahmad, had died fighting the Israelis in Sinai.
Zainab’s
generation perceived Egypt’s wars with Israel, that of 1948, 1956 and 1967 as
wars in which Palestine was a central cause. No amount of self-serving politics
and media conditioning could have changed that. But the war of 1967 was that of
unmitigated defeat. With direct, massive support from the US and other western
powers, Arab armies were soundly beaten, routed at three different fronts.
Gaza, East Jerusalem and the West Bank were lost, along with the Golan Heights,
the Jordan Valley and Sinai, as well.
It was then
that some Arab countries’ relations with Palestine began changing. Israel’s
victory and the US-West’s unremitting support convinced some Arab governments
to downgrade their expectations, and expected the Palestinians to do so, as
well. Egypt, once the torchbearer of Arab nationalism, succumbed to a
collective sense of humiliation and, later, redefined its priorities to free
its own land from Israeli Occupation. Without the pivotal Egyptian leadership,
Arab countries were divided into camps, each government with its own agenda. As
Palestine, all of it, was then under Israeli control, Arabs slowly walked away
from a cause they once perceived to be the central cause of the Arab nation.
The 1967 war
also brought an end to the dilemma of independent Palestinian action, which was
almost entirely hijacked by various Arab countries. Moreover, the war shifted
the focus to the West Bank and Gaza, and allowed the Palestinian faction,
Fatah, to fortify its position in light of Arab defeat and subsequent division.
That division
was highlighted most starkly in the August 1967 Khartoum summit, where Arab
leaders clashed over priorities and definitions. Should Israel’s territorial
gains redefine the status quo? Should Arabs focus on returning to a pre-1967
situation or that of pre-1948, when historic Palestine was first occupied and
Palestinians ethnically cleansed?
The United
Nations Security Council adopted resolution 242, on November 22 1967,
reflecting the US Johnson Administration’s wish to capitalize on the new status
quo: Israeli withdrawal “from occupied territories” in exchange for
normalization with Israel. The new language of the immediate post-1967 period
alarmed Palestinians who realized that any future political settlement was
likely to ignore the situation that existed prior to the war.
Eventually,
Egypt fought and celebrated its victory of the 1973 war, which allowed it to
consolidate its control over most of its lost territories. A few years later,
the Camp David accords in 1979 divided the ranks of the Arabs even more and
ended Egypt’s official solidarity with the Palestinians, while granting the
most populous Arab state a conditioned control over its own land in Sinai. The
negative repercussions of that agreement cannot be overstated. However, the
Egyptian people, despite the passing of time, have never truly normalized with
Israel.
In Egypt, a
chasm still exists between the government, whose behavior is based on political
urgency and self-preservation, and a people who, despite a decided
anti-Palestinian campaign in various media, are as ever determined to reject
normalization with Israel until Palestine is free. Unlike the well-financed
media circus that has demonized Gaza in recent years, the likes of Hajah Zainab
have very few platforms where they can openly express their solidarity with the
Palestinians. In my case, I was lucky enough to run into the aging custodian
who cried for Palestine and her only son all those years ago.
Nevertheless,
that very character, Zainab, was reincarnated in my path of travel, time and
again. I met her in Iraq in 1999. She was an old vegetable vendor living in
Sadr City. I met her in Jordan in 2003. She was a cabby, with a Palestinian
flag hanging from his cracked rearview mirror. She was also a retired Saudi
journalist I met in Jeddah in 2010, and a Moroccan student I met at a speaking
tour in Paris in 2013. She was in her early twenties. After my talk, she sobbed
as she told me that Palestine for her people is like a festering wound. “I pray
for a free Palestine every day,” she told me, “as my late parents did with
every prayer.”
Hajah Zainab
is also Algeria, all of Algeria. When the Palestinian national football team
met their Algerian counterparts last February, a strange, unprecedented
phenomenon transpired that left many puzzled. The Algerian fans, some of the
most ardent lovers of football anywhere, cheered for the Palestinians, nonstop.
And when the Palestinian team scored a goal, it was if the bleachers were lit
on fire. The crowded stadium exploded with a trancing chant for Palestine and
Palestine alone.
So, did the
Arabs betray Palestine? The question is heard often, and it is often followed
with the affirmative, “yes, they did.” The Egyptian media scapegoating of
Palestinians in Gaza, the targeting and starving of Palestinians in Yarmouk,
Syria, the past civil war in Lebanon, the mistreatment of Palestinians in
Kuwait in 1991 and, later, in Iraq in 2003 are often cited as examples. Now
some insist that the so-called “Arab Spring” was the last nail in the coffin of
Arab solidarity with Palestine.
I beg to
differ. The outcome of the ill-fated “Arab Spring” was a massive letdown, if
not betrayal, not just of Palestinians but of most Arabs. The Arab world has
turned into a massive ground for dirty politics between old and new rivals.
While Palestinians were victimized, Syrians, Egyptians, Libyans, Yemenis and
others are being victimized, as well.
There has to
be a clear political demarcation of the word “Arabs.” Arabs can be unelected
governments as much as they can be a kindly old woman earning two dollars a day
in some dirty Cairo hotel. Arabs are emboldened elites who care only about
their own privilege and wealth while neither Palestine nor their own nations
matter, but also multitudes of peoples, diverse, unique, empowered, oppressed,
who happen at this point in history to be consumed with their own survival and
fight for freedom.
The latter
“Arabs” never betrayed Palestine; they willingly fought and died for it when
they had the chance.
Most likely,
Hajah Zainab is long dead now. But millions more like her still exist and they,
too, long for a free Palestine, as they continue to seek their own freedom and
salvation.
Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) is a media consultant, 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).
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