MIFTAH
Tuesday, 2 July. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

Today, Israelis throughout the country are celebrating the 40th anniversary of their so-called “Unification of Jerusalem Day.” Israeli flags throughout the illegally occupied city can be spotted at every turn and today, the predominantly Palestinian-inhabited Old City of Jerusalem will be crawling with Israeli settlers, puffed up with Jewish pride, singing and dancing the praises of their country’s heroic capture of the city in 1967.

The event takes place every year. As Israeli police cordon off streets and highways around the city center, Palestinians brace themselves for an evening of loud, belligerent Israeli enthusiasts who take over their narrow alleyways and cobblestone streets where they break out in provocative song and dance, banging on Palestinian storefronts and hanging Israeli flags where they are not welcomed.

Lately, Israel has enough to celebrate. Not only has it secured a firm grasp on Jerusalem, which it occupied in the 1967 War and unilaterally annexed in 1981, but it has continued to enforce facts on the ground since then that have systematically pushed Palestinians further and further away from their goal of declaring Jerusalem the capital of their future Palestinian state.

While Israel’s settlement policies have continued undeterred since 1967 in and around Jerusalem, this policy has recently taken on a particular vengeance. Last week, Israeli authorities announced a plan to build 20,000 new illegal homes on the outskirts of East Jerusalem as part of three new Jewish neighborhoods. Such actions, coupled with Israel’s discriminatory measures against the Palestinians such as the Apartheid Wall and its Kafkaesque family reunification laws, are severely undermining the Palestinian Arab presence in Jerusalem.

So, it is safe to say the Palestinians have gargantuan challenges before them vis-à-vis their ongoing struggle to end the Israeli occupation of their land, Jerusalem in particular. However, Israel is not the only party sabotaging their chances at realizing their national goals. Today, the Palestinians themselves are embroiled in bitter, senseless and dangerously destructive internal battles that have set them back gigantic steps on their path to liberation.

Since the Legislative Council elections last January, which brought Hamas to the helm of power and won them the majority seats of the Palestinian parliament, this movement has been butting heads with Palestine’s other major faction, Fateh, which has been at the forefront of the Palestinian political movement since its inception in 1964.

While the Palestinians have long prided themselves on political pluralism and tolerance, the bitter battles between the two movements have resulted in an unprecedented level of internal violence, which has claimed scores of lives despite the numerous calls and agreements between the two sides demanding a halt to the chaos. To date, there have been 12 truces called between the two sides, all of which have been disregarded.

The formation of a national unity government, which included both parties along with other, now marginalized Palestinian political factions, seems to have made little difference. The Presidency remains in the hands of Fateh, under one of its most seasoned veterans, Mahmoud Abbas, while the Prime Ministry is held by Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh.

The mix has proven poisonous, at least how it has translated on the street, and the result has been catastrophic. Over the past four days alone in the Gaza Strip, a total of 28 people have been killed during inter-factional fighting between Hamas and Fateh loyalists with more than 100 injured. On May 15, when Palestinians everywhere commemorate the killing and expulsion of their people in 1948, armed gunmen attacked the home of Palestinian Public Security Chief Rashid Abu Shbak, killing four of his guards. His home was burned to the ground.

This incident was only the end to a day of horror. According to medical and media sources, 17 people were killed yesterday in the infighting between Hamas and Fateh forces.

The fighting has even taken on the eerie shape and form of Israeli military operations in the Palestinian territories. According to Palestinian media reports, unidentified gunmen opened fire on a Palestinian Relief Agency ambulance in Gaza City, moderately wounding a volunteer inside. Furthermore, breaking news on the Maan website reported that security services officer, Hasan Sweidan was killed by a sniper bullet in the Tal Al Hawa neighborhood in Gaza. The Health Ministry has made an urgent plea to all capable persons to donate blood in the Gaza Strip’s hospital.

Hence, while the bullets and accusations continue to fly in Gaza, Israel has taken a front seat to the show. The Palestinians have clearly lost all perspective, their slogans of unity and liberation drowned out by the sound of gunfire. Israel’s “Jerusalem Unification Day” will no doubt go unnoticed much less un-protested in the Palestinian territories and Israel will build its Jewish neighborhoods in the already drained eastern sector of the city, with barely a blink of an eye.

Instead of waging these battles, which are worth the fight, some of our people have become so muddled in their personal and factional agendas that they have lost sight of the prize they are assumedly fighting for. If this path of self-destruction continues, Israel will not need to actively annihilate the Palestinian cause, which it has striven to accomplish for some many years. We would have done it ourselves.

Joharah Baker is a Writer for the Media and Information Programme at the Palestinian Initiative for the Promotion of Global Dialogue and Democracy (MIFTAH). She can be contacted at mip@miftah.org.

 
 
Read More...
 
 
By the Same Author
 
Footer
Contact us
Rimawi Bldg, 3rd floor
14 Emil Touma Street,
Al Massayef, Ramallah
Postalcode P6058131

Mailing address:
P.O.Box 69647
Jerusalem
 
 
Palestine
972-2-298 9490/1
972-2-298 9492
info@miftah.org

 
All Rights Reserved © Copyright,MIFTAH 2023
Subscribe to MIFTAH's mailing list
* indicates required