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Last week, Marwan Barghouthi, the prominent Palestinian political prisoner and Fateh leader, called on Palestinians to launch a “large-scale popular resistance” which would “serve the cause of our people”.

The message was widely disseminated as it coincided with Land Day, an event that has unified Palestinians since March 1976. Its meaning has morphed through the years to represent the collective grievances shared by most Palestinians, including dispossession and loss of their land as a result of Israeli occupation.

Barghouthi is also a unifying figure among Palestinians. Even at the height of the Hamas-Fateh clashes in 2007, he insisted on unity and shunned factionalism. It is no secret that Barghouthi is still a very popular figure in Fateh, to the displeasure of various Fateh leaders, not least Mahmoud Abbas, who heads both the Palestinian Authority and Fateh.

Throughout its indirect prisoner exchange talks with Israel, Hamas insisted on Barghouthi’s release. Israel, which officially charged and imprisoned Barghouthi in 2004 on five alleged counts of murder — but more likely because of his leading role in the second Palestinian Intifada — refused. It held on to Barghouthi, largely because of his broad appeal to the Palestinians.

In November 25, 2009, he was quoted by Haaretz as having told the Milan-based Corriere Della Sera that “the main issue topping his agenda currently is achieving unity between rival Palestinian factions”. He claimed that following a unity deal, he would be ready to submit his candidacy to the Palestinian presidency.

Barghouthi is still in prison. Although a unity deal has been signed, it is yet to be actualised.

Barghouthi’s latest statement is clearly targeting the political class that has ruled Palestinians for many years, and is now merely managing and profiting from the occupation.

“Stop marketing the illusion that there is a possibility of ending the occupation and achieving a state through negotiations after this vision has failed miserably,” he said.

“It is the Palestinian people’s right to oppose the occupation [by] all means, and the resistance must be focused on the 1967 territories.” (BBC, March 27)

Last December, Jospeh Dana wrote in The National: “Barghouthi is a figure of towering reverence among Palestinians and even some Israelis, regardless of political persuasion.” However, he did not earn his legitimacy among Palestinians through his prophetic political views or negotiation skills. In fact, he was among the Fateh leaders who hopelessly, although genuinely, pursued peace through the “peace process”, which proved costly, if not lethal to the Palestinian national movement.

Dana wrote on December 23, 2011: “Barghouthi’s pragmatic approach to peace during the 1990s demonstrated his overarching desire to end Israeli occupation at all costs.”

Although his recent message articulated a conclusion that became obvious to most Palestinians — for example, that “it must be understood that there is no partner for peace in Israel when the settlements have doubled” — Barghouthi’s call shows a level of political maturity that is unlikely to go down well, be it in Ramallah or Tel Aviv.

So it is not his political savvy per se that made him popular among Palestinians, but the fact that he stands as the antithesis of traditional Fateh and PA leadership.

Starting his political career at the age of 15, before being imprisoned and deported to Jordan in his early 20s, Barghouthi was viewed among Fateh youth — the Shabibah — as the desired new face of the movement. When he realised that the peace process was a sham intended to win time for Israel to continue the land confiscation and settlement building, and reward a few accommodating Palestinians, Barghouthi broke away from the Fateh echelons. Predictably, it was also then, in 2001, that Israel tried to assassinate him.

Barghouthi still has some support in Israel itself, specifically among the politically sensible who understand that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s rightwing government cannot reach a peaceful resolution, and that the so-called two-state solution is all but dead.

In a Haaretz editorial titled “Listen to Marwan Barghouthi”, the authors discussed how “back when he was a peace loving, popular leader who had not yet turned to violence, Barghouthi made the rounds of Israeli politicians, opinion makers and the central committees of the Zionist parties and urged them to reach an agreement with the Palestinians”.

The authors recommended that “Jerusalem” listen to Barghouthi because he “is the most authentic leader Fateh has produced and he can lead his people to an agreement”. (March 30)

In his article titled “The New Mandela”, Uri Avnery wrote that Barghouthi “is one of the very few personalities around whom all Palestinians, Fateh as well as Hamas, can unite”. (Counterpunch, March 30).

However, it is essential that a conscious separation be made between how Barghouthi is interpreted by the Palestinians and by the Israelis (even those in the left). Among the latter, Barghouthi is presented as a figure who might have been involved in the “murderous terror” of the second Intifada (Haaretz) but who can also “lead his people to an agreement” — as if Palestinians were reckless multitudes desperate for their own Mandela who is capable, through his natural leadership skills, of uniting them into signing another document.

For years, but especially after the Oslo peace process, successive Israeli governments and officials have insisted that there was “no one to talk to on the Palestinian side”. The tired assertion was meant to justify Israel’s unilateral policies, including settlement construction.

However Barghouthi is a treasured leader in the eyes of many Palestinians, not because he is the man that Israel can talk to, and not because of any stereotypical undertones about him being a “strong man” who can lead the unruly Arabs. Nor can his popularity be attributed to his political savvy or the prominence of his family.

Throughout the years, hundreds of Palestinians were targeted in extrajudicial assassinations; hundreds were deported and thousands continue to be imprisoned. Barghouthi is an epitome of all of them and more, and it is because of this legacy that his message matters, and greatly so.

In his last one, he said that the Palestinian Authority should immediately halt “all coordination with Israel — economic and security — and work towards Palestinian reconciliation” rather than another peace agreement.

Most Palestinians already agree.

 
 
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