Unity at Last: The
Palestinian People Have Risen
by Ramzy Baroud Posted on May 21, 2021
From the outset, some
clarification regarding the language used to depict the ongoing violence in
occupied Palestine and Israel. This is not a ‘conflict’.
Neither is it a ‘dispute’ nor ‘sectarian violence’ nor even a war in the
traditional sense.
It is not a conflict,
because Israel is an occupying power and the Palestinian people are an occupied
nation. It is not a dispute, because freedom, justice and human rights cannot
be treated as if a mere political disagreement. The Palestinian people’s
inalienable rights are enshrined in international and
humanitarian law and the illegality of Israeli violations of human rights in
Palestine is recognized by the United Nations
itself.
If it is a war, then it is
a unilateral Israeli war, which is met with humble, but real and determined
Palestinian resistance.
Actually, it is a
Palestinian uprising, an Intifada unprecedented in the history of the
Palestinian struggle, both in its nature and outreach.
For the first time in many
years, we see the Palestinian people united, from Jerusalem Al Quds,
to Gaza, to the West Bank and, even more critically, to the Palestinian
communities, towns and villages inside historic Palestine – today’s Israel.
This unity matters the
most, is far more consequential than some agreement between Palestinian
factions. It eclipses Fatah and Hamas and all the rest, because without a
united people there can be no meaningful resistance, no vision for liberation,
no struggle for justice to be won.
Right-wing Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu could never have anticipated that a routine act of
ethnic cleansing in East Jerusalem’s neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah could lead to a Palestinian
uprising, uniting all sectors of Palestinian society in an unprecedented show
of unity.
The Palestinian people have
decided to move past all the political divisions and the factional
squabbles. Instead, they are coining new terminologies, centered on resistance,
liberation and international solidarity. Consequently, they are challenging
factionalism, along with any attempt at making Israeli occupation and apartheid
normal. Equally important, a strong Palestinian voice is now piercing through
the international silence, compelling the world to hear a single chant for
freedom.
The leaders of this new
movement are Palestinian youth who have been denied participation in any form
of democratic representation, who are constantly marginalized and oppressed by
their own leadership and by the relentless Israeli military
occupation. They were born into a world of exile, destitution
and apartheid, led to believe that they are inferior, of a lesser race. Their
right to self-determination and every other right were postponed indefinitely.
They grew up helplessly watching their homes being demolished, their land being
robbed and their parents being humiliated.
Finally, they are rising.
Without prior coordination
and with no political manifesto, this new Palestinian generation is now making
its voice heard, sending an unmistakable, resounding message to Israel and its
right-wing chauvinistic society, that the Palestinian people are not passive
victims; that the ethnic cleansing of Sheikh Jarrah and
the rest of occupied East Jerusalem, the protracted siege on Gaza, the ongoing
military occupation, the construction of illegal Jewish settlements, the racism
and the apartheid will no longer go unnoticed; though tired, poor,
dispossessed, besieged and abandoned, Palestinians will continue to safeguard
their own rights, their sacred places and the very sanctity of their own
people.
Yes, the ongoing violence
was instigated by Israeli
provocations in the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood in East Jerusalem. However, the
story was never about the ethnic cleansing of Sheikh Jarrah alone. The
beleaguered neighborhood is but a microcosm of the larger Palestinian struggle.
Netanyahu may have hoped to use Sheikh Jarrah
as a way of mobilizing his right-wing constituency around him, intending to
form an emergency government or increasing his chances of winning yet a fifth
election. His rash behavior, initially compelled by entirely selfish reasons,
has ignited a popular rebellion among Palestinians, exposing Israel for the
violent, racist and apartheid state that it is and always has been.
Palestinian unity and
popular resistance have proven successful in other ways, too. Never before have
we seen this groundswell of support for Palestinian freedom, not only from
millions of ordinary individuals across the globe, but also from celebrities –
movie stars, footballers, mainstream intellectuals and political activists,
even models and social media influencers. The hashtags #SaveSheikhJarrah and
#FreePalestine, among numerous others, are now interlinked and have been
trending on all social media platforms for weeks. Israel’s constant attempts at
presenting itself as a perpetual victim of some imaginary horde of Arabs and
Muslims are no longer paying dividends. The world can finally see, read and
hear of Palestine’s tragic reality and the need to bring this tragedy to an
immediate end.
None of this would be
possible were it not for the fact that all Palestinians have legitimate reasons
and are speaking in unison. In their spontaneous reaction and genuine, communal
solidarity, all Palestinians are united, from Sheikh Jarrah, to all of
Jerusalem, to Gaza, Nablus, Ramallah, Al-Bireh and even Palestinian towns
inside Israel – Al-Lud, Umm Al-Fahm, Kufr Qana and elsewhere. In Palestine’s
new popular revolution, factions, geography and any political division are
irrelevant. Religion is not a source of divisiveness but of spiritual and
national unity.
The ongoing Israeli
atrocities in Gaza are continuing, with a mounting death toll. This devastation
will continue for as long as the world treats the devastating siege of the
impoverished, tiny Strip as if irrelevant. People in Gaza were dying long
before the Israeli airstrikes began blowing up their homes and neighborhoods.
They were dying from the lack of medicine,
polluted water, the lack of electricity and the dilapidated
infrastructure.
We must save Sheikh Jarrah,
but we must also save Gaza; we must demand an end to the Israeli military
occupation of Palestine and, with it, the system of racial discrimination and
apartheid. International human rights groups are now precise and decisive in
their depiction of this racist regime, with Human Rights Watch – and Israel’s
own rights group, B’tselem, joining the call for the dismantlement of apartheid
in all of Palestine.
Speak up. Speak out. The
Palestinians have risen. It is time to rally behind them.
Ramzy Baroud is a
journalist and the Editor of The Palestine Chronicle. He is the author of
five books. His latest is These Chains Will Be
Broken: Palestinian Stories of Struggle and Defiance in Israeli Prisons (Clarity
Press). Dr. Baroud is a Non-resident Senior Research Fellow at the Center for
Islam and Global Affairs (CIGA) and also at the Afro-Middle East Center (AMEC).
His website is www.ramzybaroud.net.
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