Rashida Tlaib pushes for Palestinian Nakba recognition in US
Resolution in US Congress says a just peace
cannot be reached without addressing the mass displacement of Palestinians.
By Ali Harb
Published On 11 May 2023
Washington, DC – United
States Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib has introduced a resolution to recognise
the Palestinian Nakba,
the term used to describe the forced displacement of hundreds of thousands of
Palestinians before and during the establishment of the State of Israel in
1948.
The measure, put forward in the US House of
Representatives on Wednesday, comes amid a growing push by progressives in the
US to advance Palestinian rights and restrict US aid to Israel.
The motion describes the Nakba – the Arabic for
“catastrophe” – as “Israel’s uprooting, dispossession and exile of the
Palestinian people from their homeland”.
“A just and lasting peace cannot be established
without addressing the Nakba and remedying its injustices towards
the Palestinian people,” the proposal reads, adding that the Nakba is the “root
cause” of the issues that divide Israelis and Palestinians.
As Tlaib, a Michigan Democrat of Palestinian descent,
was set to introduce the resolution this week, Republican House Speaker Kevin
McCarthy pushed to cancel an event by the congresswoman on Capitol Hill to
commemorate the Nakba.
“This event in the US Capitol is cancelled,” McCarthy
wrote on Twitter.
The commemoration did take place on Wednesday, but it
was moved from the US Capitol Visitor Center to a nearby Senate office building
– still on the Capitol campus.
With the change of venue, dozens of Palestinian rights
supporters crammed into a Senate committee hearing room, with many sporting
keffiyehs and wearing Palestinian thobes.
“I say it loud and clear by introducing a historic
resolution in Congress: The Nakba happened in 1948 and it never ended,” Tlaib
told the crowd.
‘This is the people’s Congress’
Earlier this week, Jonathan Greenblatt, head of the
pro-Israel group the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), wrote a letter to McCarthy
slamming the event and describing rights groups involved in it, including
Jewish Voice for Peace Action, as using “anti-Israel and even anti-Semitic
language”.
Greenblatt also accused Tlaib of using “incendiary and
offensive language”, including accusing Israel of imposing apartheid on Palestinians.
On Wednesday, Tlaib noted that several prominent human
rights organisations, including Amnesty International and
Human Rights Watch, had concluded that Israel imposes a system of apartheid on
Palestinians.
“This is the people’s Congress, and you all have a
right to exist,” Tlaib told the attendees.
The event featured Nakba survivors as well as
academics and activists who stressed that the dispossession of Palestinians has
not stopped.
This is the second time that Tlaib has introduced a Nakba resolution in
Congress. This year, the measure was put forward just days before Palestinians
and their supporters commemorate Nakba Day on May 15.
The resolution was co-sponsored by five Democrats,
including Betty McCollum, Jamaal Bowman, Cori Bush, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
and Ilhan Omar.
The measure is unlikely to pass in Congress, which
remains staunchly pro-Israel despite the recent rise of progressive voices
critical of Israel.
But the Palestinian-American congresswoman told Al
Jazeera in 2022 that one of the aims of the resolution is to spread awareness
about the Nakba, noting that many of her colleagues are not familiar with the
history of the plight of Palestinians.
“I want them to understand what the Palestine
liberation movement is about, what human rights for Palestinians is really
about – and it means understanding the history of what has happened to
Palestinians since 1948,” Tlaib said at
the time.
‘To heal from our past, we have to be honest
about history’
About 750,000 Palestinians were driven out of their
homes when the Israeli state was founded and hundreds of Palestinian towns and
villages were wiped out in what many historians describe as a campaign of
ethnic cleansing.
Millions of survivors of the Nakba and
their descendants continue to live in refugee camps in the West Bank and Gaza,
as well as in neighbouring Arab countries.
The Nakba is rarely discussed in mainstream US
politics, where Israel has enjoyed widespread support from legislators and
successive presidents of both major parties for decades.
Still, during the final weeks of the administration of
former President Barack Obama in late 2016, then-Secretary of State John Kerry
made a rare reference to the Nakba as a top US official.
“When Israel celebrates its 70th anniversary in 2018,
the Palestinians will mark a very different anniversary: 70 years since what
they call the Nakba, or catastrophe,” Kerry said in a speech addressing the
conflict.
Tlaib’s resolution urges continued backing for the
United Nations agency that supports Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, and calls for
prohibiting the use of US weapons to forcibly remove Palestinians from their
lands or demolish their homes.
In early May, Congresswoman McCollum also introduced a
bill to restrict US aid to
Israel to ensure it is not used to enable abuse against Palestinians, including
the detention of children.
Meanwhile, 14 Democratic legislators last month issued
a letter urging President Joe Biden to
investigate whether US weapons were used to commit rights violations against
Palestinians.
Although Congress remains overwhelmingly pro-Israel,
many of the speakers at the Nakba commemoration event on Wednesday found irony
in that McCarthy succeeded in moving the event but not making it go away.
“We’ve been displaced; how fitting?”
Palestinian-American academic and rights advocate Noura Erakat said.
McCarthy’s office did not return Al Jazeera’s request
for comment.
The groups organising the event, which included the
Institute for Middle East Understanding (IMEU) and Democracy for the Arab World
Now (DAWN), hailed Wednesday’s gathering as “historic”.
“Kevin McCarthy attempted to once again silence
Palestinians and our supporters, but we were not silenced,” they said in a joint
statement, adding that denying the “documented truth of the Nakba” is
anti-Palestinian racism.
“The event and Rep. Tlaib’s resolution are major
milestones that reflect the shift in support for Palestinian rights in this
country. To heal from our past, we have to be honest about history.
Acknowledging the Nakba is an important step towards freedom and justice for
Palestinians.”
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