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

These are extremely trying times for the Palestinians. Not only have they failed to rid themselves of a 40-year old military occupation, which has only become more solidified, they are struggling against poverty, unemployment, land expropriation and national annihilation. To top things off, they are squabbling among each other, turning their hostilities against one another instead of directing it at the source of the problem, which is the foreign rule over Palestinian land.

In the midst of these troubling times, it is easy to lose ourselves in the myriad of difficulties we face everyday. However, in order for us not to lose our humanity in the mix, it is important to take a step back from it all and remember those who made the ultimate sacrifice. It is not enough to count off those who lost their lives to Israeli military violence like a teacher taking morning attendance. Just like funding granted from Japan or the United States makes the morning news with all the hullabaloo that comes with it, the same importance and reverence should always be given to those who died in the service of our struggle.

This is particularly relevant at present. Over the past 24 hours, Israeli military forces have killed 12 Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Yesterday, two of those who died were children, 12-year-old Ubeid Ashour and 9-year-old Fadi Kafarneh, who were killed by Israeli artillery shelling east of Beit Hanoun.

Before that, three Islamic Jihad activists were killed in Khan Younis while six Hamas operatives were shot down in Gaza City. On the same day a PFLP activist was shot and killed in Nablus.

It would be almost obscene for such atrocities to be reduced to cold, impersonal numbers. Not only did these young men and children have real lives, families, friends and loved ones, but they were symbolic of what we as Palestinians continue to aspire for.

In theory, the Palestinians have it all figured out. We want to establish an independent Palestinian state on land occupied in the 1967 War, having relinquished our demand to all of historical Palestine in 1988. Nonetheless, this is our demand, one which we are supposedly united over regardless of our diverse political or ideological views.

In practice, however, it is another story. We have become so mired in our internal political struggles that we have lost sight of what is really important. Not only have we resorted to turning our guns on one another, but we have dissected and segregated our own people in a way the Israeli occupation was never able to achieve. What is worst of all is that we are burying our dead day after day, going through the motions so mechanically that we are not seeing the bigger picture, seeing why these young souls sacrificed their lives and the cause for which they died.

When the Palestinians conceded to accept a state on 22 percent of historical Palestine – that is, the West Bank and Gaza Strip including East Jerusalem – one nonnegotiable point was that the West Bank and Gaza Strip would be considered one political entity. By this time, the Palestinians had already been dissected enough – those living in refugee camps in the Diaspora, those inside the 1948 borders in what is now Israel, those in the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and in East Jerusalem. There could be no further segregation between one people. At the time, the leadership seemed to understand the dire consequences of such a move, one which had been initially perpetuated by the Zionist project in its aim to annihilate the Palestinian cause.

Therefore, even as Israel continued to cut into the pre-1967 borders through various means including the separation wall, land confiscation and settlement expansion, the Palestinians remained united in their insistence that the West Bank and Gaza is one national unit.

Unfortunately, somewhere along the line, we lost our way. Following the battle for Gaza last June in which the growing tension between Fateh and Hamas reached its peak, priorities suddenly shifted and holding a unified front in the face of Israeli aggression was no longer at the top of the list. Hamas, once an opposition party bent on the liberation of Palestine by popular resistance has morphed into a power thirsty quasi-government unwilling to relinquish its iron grip over Gaza.

Meanwhile, the new government is taking control of the West Bank and while it pays lip-service to the Palestinian demand of maintaining unity between the West Bank and Gaza, it has done close to nothing to realize this goal, including bridging the treacherous gap between the two political giants.

So, while the Palestinian territories continue to spiral downward into more misery, as a result of Israeli oppression, almost complete economic dependency on foreign assistance and the ongoing internal disputes, it is those poor souls who fall between the cracks that need some recognition. It is also time to refocus on the Israeli occupation, that illegal colonization of our land that must be obliterated before any seats of power have even a morsel of significance.

If we continue on this destructive path, which inadvertently gives Israel a carte blanche to continue usurping our land and chip away any legitimacy to the justness of our cause, our years long struggle against the occupation, the hundreds of thousands of prisoners that have endured the degradation of Israeli jails and the thousands of Palestinians who lost their lives in the name of Palestine, would have been in vain.

Over the past six decades since Israel was created, several thousand Palestinians have died for their country. If only we keep this in mind each time another young man, woman or child is cut down by Israel’s military machine, all other secondary struggles will certainly pale in comparison. We must not allow ourselves to see them as inanimate numbers, or worse, political pawns used to forward this or that agenda. It is imperative that the 12 martyrs who died in the past two days, and the thousands of others who came before them are given the reverence they deserve, not only by those who may write about the lives they lost but by the leaders who claim to be fighting for the same cause they died for.

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.

 
 
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