Fearing the
Palestinian Narrative: Why Israel Banned ‘Jenin Jenin’
BY RAMZY BAROUD
https://www.counterpunch.org/2021/01/22/fearing-the-palestinian-narrative-why-israel-banned-jenin-jenin/
JANUARY 22, 2021
On January 11, the Israeli Lod District Court ruled against a
Palestinian film-maker, Mahmoud Bakri, ordering him to pay hefty compensation
to an Israeli soldier who was accused, along with the Israeli military, of
carrying out war crimes in April 2002, in the Palestinian Jenin refugee camp
located in the northern occupied West Bank.
The case, as presented by Israeli and
other media seemed to deal with typical legal matters such as defamation of
character and so on. To those familiar with the massive clash of narratives
which emanated from that singular event, known to Palestinians as the ‘Jenin
Massacre’, the Israeli court verdict is not only political but historical and
intellectual, as well.
Bakri, a native Palestinian born in the
village of Bi’ina, near the Palestinian city of Akka, now located in Israel,
has been paraded repeatedly
in Israeli courts and censured heavily
in Israeli mainstream media simply because he dared challenge the official
discourse on the violent events which transpired in the Jenin refugee camp
nearly two decades ago.
Bakri’s documentary, “Jenin Jenin”, is
now officially banned in Israel. The film, which was produced only months after
the conclusion of this particular episode of Israeli violence did not make
many claims of its own. It largely opened up a rare space for Palestinians to
convey, in their own words, what had befallen their refugee camp when large
units of the Israeli army, under the protection of fighter jets and attack
helicopters, pulverized much of the camp, killing scores and wounding hundreds.
To ban a film, regardless of how
unacceptable it may seem from the viewpoint of the official authorities, is
wholly inconsistent with any true definition of freedom of speech. But to ban
“Jenin Jenin”, to indict the Palestinian filmmaker and to financially
compensate those accused of carrying out war crimes, is outrageous.
The background of the Israeli decision
can be understood within two contexts: one, Israel’s regime of censorship aimed
at silencing any criticism of the Israeli occupation and apartheid and, two,
Israel’s fear of a truly independent Palestinian narrative.
Israeli censorship dates back to the
very inception of the State of Israel atop the ruins of the Palestinian
homeland in 1948. The country’s founding fathers had painstakingly constructed
a convenient story regarding the birth of Israel, almost entirely erasing
Palestine and the Palestinians from their historical narrative. On this, late
Palestinian intellectual, Edward Said, wrote in his essay, Permission
to Narrate, “the Palestinian narrative has never been officially
admitted to Israeli history, except as that of ‘non-Jews,’ whose inert presence
in Palestine was a nuisance to be ignored or expelled.”
To ensure the erasure of the
Palestinians from the official Israeli discourse, Israeli censorship has
evolved to become one of the most elaborate and well-guarded schemes of its
kind in the world. Its degree of sophistication and brutality has reached the
extent that poets and artists can be tried in court and sentenced to
prison for merely confronting Israel’s founding ideology, Zionism, or penning
poems that may seem offensive to Israeli sensibilities. While Palestinians have
borne the greatest brunt of the ever-vigilant Israeli censorship machine, some
Israeli Jews, including human rights organizations, have also suffered the
consequences.
But the case of “Jenin Jenin” is not
that of routine censorship. It is a statement, a message, against those who
dare give voice to oppressed Palestinians, allowing them the opportunity to speak
directly to the world. These Palestinians, in the eyes of Israel, are certainly
the most dangerous, as they demolish the layered, elaborate, yet fallacious
official Israeli discourse, regardless of the nature, place, or timing of any
contested event, starting with the ‘Catastrophe’ or Nakba of
1948.
Almost simultaneously with the release
of “Jenin Jenin”, my first book, “Searching Jenin: Eyewitness Accounts of the
Israeli Invasion”, was published. The book, like the documentary, aimed to
counterbalance official Israeli propaganda through honest, heart-rending
accounts of the survivors of the refugee camp. While Israel had no jurisdiction
to ban the book, pro-Israeli media and mainstream academics either ignored it
completely or ferociously attacked it.
Admittedly, the Palestinian
counter-narrative to the Israeli dominant narrative, whether on the ‘Jenin
Massacre’ or the Second Palestinian Intifada, was humble, largely championed
through individual efforts. Still, even such modest attempts at narrating a
Palestinian version was considered dangerous, vehemently rejected as
irresponsible, sacrilegious, or anti-Semitic.
Israel’s true power – but also Achilles
heel – is its ability to design, construct and shield its own version of
history, despite the fact that such history is hardly consistent with any
reasonable definition of the truth. Within this modus operandi, even meager and
unassuming counter-narratives are threatening, for they poke holes in an
already baseless intellectual construct.
Bakri’s story of Jenin was not
relentlessly attacked and eventually banned as a mere outcome of Israel’s
prevailing censorship tactics, but because it dared blemish Israel’s diligently
fabricated historical sequence, starting with a persecuted “people with no
land” arriving at a supposed “land with no people”, where they “made the desert
bloom”.
“Jenin Jenin” is a microcosm of a
people’s narrative that successfully shattered Israel’s well-funded propaganda,
sending a message to Palestinians everywhere that even Israel’s falsification
of history can be roundly defeated.
In her seminal book, “Decolonizing
Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples”, Linda Tuhiwai Smith
brilliantly examined the relationship between history and power, where she asserted that
“history is mostly about power”.
“It is the story of the powerful and how
they became powerful, and then how they use their power to keep them in
positions in which they can continue to dominate others,” she wrote. It is
precisely because Israel needs to maintain the current power structure that
“Jenin Jenin” and other Palestinian attempts at reclaiming history have to be
censored, banned, and punished.
Israel’s targeting of the Palestinian
narrative is not a mere official contestation of the accuracy of facts or of
some kind of Israeli fear that the ‘truth’ could lead to legal accountability.
Israel hardly cares about facts and, thanks to Western support, it remains
immune from international prosecution. Rather, it is about erasure; erasure of
history, of a homeland, of a people.
A Palestinian people with a coherent,
collective narrative will always exist no matter the geography, the physical
hardship, and the political circumstances. This is what Israel fears most.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario