MIFTAH
Sunday, 30 June. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

The Fifth National Conference to Confront Settlements declared June 3rd as a “Day of Anger” to signal a massive popular protest against Israeli settlement activities.

Protest activities will continue in the ensuing days.

Such a move, reminiscent of the Intifada “Days of Anger,” serves several objectives.

In a most immediate way, these protests aim to stop the encroaching settlements by preventing the settlers and bulldozers from moving in to create more facts on the ground.

They also seek to alert public opinion, in Palestine, Israel, and abroad, to this most provocative and explosive issue.

Primarily, it is a direct and public message to the incoming government in Israel, and to prime minister-elect Ehud Barak in particular, with a simple equation: No Peace with Settlements!

The period of transition between the outgoing Netanyahu government and the incoming Barak government has been extremely costly to the peace process, to the Palestinians, and to internal stability of the Israeli public.

A “lame duck” government traditionally refrains from taking decisions, adopting policies, or implementing measures of significance either to embarrass the incoming government or to face it with a fait accompli.

The defeated Likud-led government, however, has willfully embarked on a policy of filling the interim period with as many explosive land mines as possible (Key Issues, Lethal Legacy, May 29).

Its settlement legacy has been the most lethal in terms of the peace process and Palestinian rights, as well as relative to Palestinian-Israeli relations and the intensification of distrust and loss of confidence. Throughout the West Bank and Gaza, land theft and settlement expansion have intensified.

The Jerusalem area, however, was subjected to the most dangerous measures. The Jabal Abu Ghneim (Har Homah) settlement has now reached the stage of issuing tenders and signing contracts (700 units already sold), while the Ras al-Amud settlement has begun the ground leveling stage.

It was the approval of the expansion of Ma’ale Adomim that set off alarm bells throughout Palestine, effectively ringing the death knoll of peace.

Barak’s silence has been deafening.

His earlier statements on the “four no’s” sent a message of alarm to the Palestinians and of appeasement to the Israeli hardliners.

Instead of issuing a clear and decisive response to the previous government’s prejudicial and explosive measures, Barak seemed to be oblivious to the warning signals indicating that he may be inheriting conditions rapidly escalating beyond his control.

Preoccupied with negotiations to form his new government coalition, Barak is attempting to reconcile the irreconcilables—secular and religious, extremists and moderates, peace camp parties and hardliners, Zionist Jewish parties and Arab Palestinian parties.

If Barak is trying to be all things to all people, his mission is indeed impossible.

If he is trying to form a broad coalition on the basis of the lowest common denominator, then his government will be a failure.

If he is trying to design a peace agenda with a Likud or Mifdal component, then peace will be the loser.

If he is trying to demonstrate that “silence is golden” at the time of Likud’s most provocative and illegal preemptive strikes, then his message is one of collusion or weakness.

If he is trying to prove that the Palestinian Arabs are good enough to vote for him but not good enough to be his coalition partners, or if he thinks that their support can be taken for granted while their message and rights can be ignored, then he is guilty of perpetuating the racist policies of his predecessors.

The Israeli public clearly wanted a “change.” The recent elections were a vote and message of “no-confidence” in the extremist, hard line, racist, anti-peace policies of those parties that Barak is now trying to woo.

The issue is one of substance, not form.

The dictates of the politics of fear and ideology and the imperatives of the politics of peace and legality are mutually exclusive.

It is time for Barak to decide (Key Issues, Ehud Barak and the Peace Option, May 21).

The question is one of political will and determination to restore a peace partnership with the Palestinians.

The alternative is to pick up where Netanyahu left off, thus running the risk of his predecessor’s defeat and widening the rift with the Palestinians while increasing the likelihood of conflict and hostility.

In the current hiatus (or period of indecision) the Palestinian people are angry, and rightly so.

Our anger may have stopped short of rage, or the point of no return, but ours is the positive anger (or moral indignation) that still gives rise to action.

So far, the chances for rectification and prevention of further deterioration are still available.

The opportunity is not open-ended.

The Palestinian people also need positive signals from their own Authority if their anger is to remain a positive force for resistance and reform.

Anger that gives rise to the exercise of the collective will and spirit of national defiance and self-confidence must be reinforced.

It can be sustained only through internal confidence and trust.

Officials who call upon the people to rise in defiance against the injustice of Israeli settlements and other measures capable of destroying the chances for peace must themselves be at the forefront of the popular protests.

Those who declare that there can be no negotiations while the settlements continue must themselves refrain from negotiations.

Those who publicly pledge that there can be no signing of agreements with the side that persists in settlement activities must themselves abstain from signing further agreements.

Those who call for comprehensive plans to confront the settlements and save the land must themselves read and implement the existing plans.

Those who claim that the threatened areas must be at the top of the development agenda must themselves allocate the necessary funds, resources, and projects capable of realizing that claim.

Palestinians have never been “push button people.”

But they have always been politically aware, active, and critical.

Suspicious of “orders from above,” the Palestinian people need to be persuaded that their sacrifices are not being manipulated for the narrow self-interest of the few or for the purpose of short-term political maneuvers.

The key terms (and requirements) are trust, consistency, and unity.

Palestinian public officials must win the damaged trust of the people by acting in the best interests of the collective good. This requires serious internal reform and an active respect of democratic principles and issues of human rights and rule of law.

They must also exhibit consistency and an unwavering and constant commitment to the essential rights of the people, both in negotiations and in matters of internal policy and nation building. If settlements are antithetical to negotiations and peace, then they must be so at all times, not just sporadically or on politically convenient occasions.

Unity is a concept that operates both vertically and horizontally.

Popular/official unity emerges organically from the unity of struggle, the price to be paid as well as the gains to be made. It requires the restoration of the concept of government as public servants, contracted to protect the lives, rights, and property of the people and entirely accountable to them.

National political unity comes from a genuine respect for diversity, political pluralism, and the right to peaceful dissent. It is a factor of a dynamic system of inclusive, participatory governance that respects all constituents of Palestinian society and life.

Territorial unity then emerges from these unities and from the unity of purpose and vision.

Only then will the anger of the Palestinians maintain its course, direction, and constructive objectives.

Rage that leads to paralysis, or to its opposite extreme of destructive violence (and self-destruction), is the unhealthy form of anger.

The healthy anger of the Palestinian people is being stretched to its limits, along with their patience.

Internally and externally, locally and globally, the constructive anger of the Palestinians is an open invitation for constructive engagement and intervention before the rage of desperation takes over and sweeps all else aside.

 
 
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