The Nakba Continues
BY ALICE ROTHCHILD Counterpunch
As my grief and outrage mount at the predictable escalations of violence in Israel/Palestine, I once again marvel at the chasms of misunderstanding and miscalculations in describing events as they unfold and the script that frames most mainstream media reporting. (Recently, The New York Times is a notable exception.)
The
both-sides-have-their reasons-but-Israel-is-the-victim stories follow an
expected pattern. Israeli Jews, still living in the shadow of the Holocaust,
return to their rightful homes and then fight for every inch of what is justly
theirs. They are repeatedly faced with intractable Arab terrorists who
attack innocent civilians and must be crushed with all the might the Israeli
military has at its disposal. Never Again! Add “barely human” Hamas and Iranian
militants, and armed and aggressive ultra-Orthodox Jews and settlers abetted by
Israeli soldiers defending God’s promises and marching defiantly through
Jerusalem yelling “Death to the Arabs!” and we have the narrative in place. The
United Nations, a host of human rights groups, and the International Court
protest, suggesting various crimes against humanity, while Israelis wring their
hands and cry foul. Victim again. The US remains remarkably silent given that
much of the weaponry is ours. Could both sides just de-escalate, please?
What is different
this time?
While there have
been uprisings of Palestinian citizens in Israel against land confiscations and
other violations, as well as in support of Palestinians suffering in the
territories (Land Day in 1976 comes to mind), now Palestinians in
Acre, Haifa, Jaffe, Lod, Nazareth, and Ramle are protesting loudly and vigorously.
The mayor of Lod may call this “Kristallnacht” but Palestinian
citizens have reached a breaking point, unable to tolerate the 72 year history
of racist and exclusionary policies by the Israeli government, its most recent
attacks in Jerusalem, and ever-increasing rightward, tending toward fascistic,
political parties.
The Israeli
government may have miscalculated, although it is entirely possible that the
wily Netanyahu thinks that a war would rally the fractured Israeli populace and
improve his chances of reappearing Houdini-like as a viable candidate and of
course staying out of prison. I suspect that most Israeli politicians believe
that anything that causes a rift in the dysfunctional Hamas/ Palestinian
Authority relationship and provides an excuse to assassinate a few Hamas
leaders is also good for Israel. Israel has already thrown a monkey wrench into
the now cancelled Palestinian elections by denying East Jerusalemites the right
to vote, thus increasing the distress of the already pandemic stressed occupied
Palestinian population.
Although Israeli
officials claim the usual Hamas-plot-to-destroy-Israel scenario which I would
argue is an egregious attempt at distraction, the reasons for the current
eruptions of rage are much more understandable as another spike in the ongoing
Nakba that started well before 1948.
The families
in the Sheikh Jarrar neighborhood in East Jerusalem were expelled by
Israeli soldiers from their homes in Haifa and Jaffa in 1948. Twenty-eight
families were settled in Sheikh Jarrar in the 1950s by the Jordanian government
in coordination with UNRWA. They moved into houses built by wealthy
Palestinian families who had escaped the crowded winding streets of the Old
City in the early 20th century as well as into newly built homes. The area
was named for the personal physician of the Islamic general Saladin, who
settled there when Muslim armies captured the city from Christian crusaders in
1187.
In the 1960s, the
families made a deal with Jordan (who controlled the area until 1967) to become
owners of their homes; they received official land deeds in return for
renouncing their refugee status with its international protections. The
Jordanian government has repeatedly provided documents proving Palestinian
ownership of their properties. After the ’67 War, the Israeli government
developed a settlement plan for the area, called the Holy Basin,
which involves building a string of settler units and parks around the Old City
and the removal of Palestinian homes using outright confiscation and endless
tortured legal battles. Employing Israeli laws that allow Jews to reclaim
ownership of land lost in 1948 as well as a host of forged documents, settlers
have challenged Palestinian ownership and repeatedly won in Israeli
courts. For the Israeli government to call this merely a “real-estate dispute”
is unfathomably dishonest. Needless to say, Palestinians who have lost homes
and property in West Jerusalem or anywhere in Israel for that matter have no
such legal remedy. Twenty-thousand Palestinian homes are currently at
risk for demolition in the city.
As Palestinians
faced new evictions, tensions mounted, Ramadan was coming to a close, and the
Israeli government chose this moment to block Palestinians from outside
Jerusalem from entering the Al Aqsa Mosque on one of their most sacred
religious holidays. Violence erupted further on Jerusalem Day, a raucous
nationalistic celebration of the Israeli capture of the city in 1967, pouring
acid into the already seething wound. Israeli police stormed Al Aqsa, firing
rubber tipped bullets, stun grenades, and tear gas at praying Palestinians and
others (not surprisingly) throwing stones, (the weapon of choice for the
disenfranchised, enraged, and humiliated). Three hundred thirty Palestinians were
injured.
It is not
surprising that Hamas felt obligated to respond to these repeated provocations.
I have to wonder if the provocations were indeed deliberate. Over the past
few days, hundreds of rockets from Hamas have hit several Israeli cities,
killing seven, and Israeli forces have repeatedly bombed the Strip,
killing over 113, with 530 wounded. More death and destruction will undoubtedly
follow as Israeli forces prepare for a land invasion, children will die, the
tragic numbers in Israel will be dwarfed by the magnitude of horrifying death
in Gaza. Mothers and fathers will weep and young men will vow vengeance. We
know this story. The Israeli Defense Minister Benny
Gantz stated “Israel is not preparing for a ceasefire. There is
currently no end date for the operation.” Hamas
leader Ismail Haniyeh announced that the rocket attacks
would continue until Israel stopped “all scenes of terrorism and aggression in
Jerusalem and al-Aqsa mosque”.
Now protests have
erupted in the West Bank in Hebron, Jenin, Nablus, Qalqilya, and Tulkarem.
The thing to
remember is that this is not a battle between two equal parties; this is a
struggle between one of the strongest military powers in the world, backed by
the US, bent on disinheriting and humiliating a dispossessed people. This is a
frightful example of ongoing violent settler colonialism, of the inability of
the world to see Palestinians as equally human, traumatized, and deserving as
their powerful Jewish Israeli neighbors and occupiers. If the international
community does not force Israel to deal with the root causes of this disaster,
the tragedy will repeat itself over and over again. The narrative of
Jewish liberation and entitlement has been poisoned by decades of racist,
unjust policies that have been called by many a slow genocide for Palestine. No
one wins.
It is up to the
international media, governments, human rights and grassroots organizations,
and communities all over the world to make this story different this time.
Alice
Rothchild is a physician, author, and filmmaker who has focused her
interest in human rights and social justice on the Israel/Palestine conflict
since 1997. She practiced ob-gyn for almost 40 years. Until her recent
retirement she served as Assistant Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology,
Harvard Medical School. She writes and lectures widely, is the author of Broken
Promises, Broken Dreams: Stories of Jewish and Palestinian Trauma and
Resilience, and On the Brink: Israel and Palestine on the Eve of the 2014 Gaza
Invasion. She directed a documentary film, Voices Across the Divide and is
active in Jewish Voice for Peace.
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