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"Don't deny peaceful protests in West Bank" by Bill Fletcher Jr.
From time to time, the
Palestine Center distributes
articles it believes will enhance understanding
of the Palestinian political
reality. The following article by Bill Fletcher
Jr. was published on CNN.com on 17 February
2010. To view
this article online, please go to http://www.cnn.com/2010/OPINION/02/16/fletcher.palestinians.protest/?hpt=C2.
"Don't deny peaceful protests in West
Bank"
By Bill Fletcher
Jr.
Every year, beginning with
the January birthday celebrations for the Rev.
Martin Luther King and moving through Black
History Month in February, Americans and others
revisit the history, role and significance of
the black freedom movement in the United
States.
But there is a frequent tendency
to misrepresent the lessons of that movement
and apply them to other social movements
overseas in a way that misses the mark. This
has been happening increasingly with the
historical lessons that are being misapplied to
the Palestinian freedom movement.
It has
become almost a cliché, yet people, including
Irish rocker Bono, continue to wield King's
name when they bemoan the alleged absence of
his like among the Palestinians. It seems no
matter what Palestinian activists do, they are
condemned as terrorists.
Whether they
are engaged in armed struggle or nonviolent
direct action, it does not matter: Palestinian
activists are often portrayed as extremists who
threaten life and property. The obvious
exceptions are those Palestinians who are
prepared to accept whatever terms the United
States insists upon for the resolution of the
Palestinian-Israeli conflict.
The recent
arrests of Palestinian human rights activists
Jamal Juma', Abdallah Abu Rahma, Ibrahim Amirah
and Mohammed Othman are prime examples. Juma'
and Othman were imprisoned without charge,
Amirah faces charges of incitement, organizing
illegal demonstrations, and stone-throwing, and
Abu Rahma is confronted with a charge of
"illegal weapons possession," apparently
because a protest sign he created included a
spent tear gas canister
In fact, they
were imprisoned (Juma' was released on January
12 and Othman on January 13 after he was held
nearly four months) not for firing missiles or
ambushing Israeli troops, but for protesting
what the International Court of Justice has
called the illegal Israeli separation wall that
carves up the West Bank and places Palestinian
communities in an existence that recalls South
African apartheid.
The systematic
detention of such leaders has been condemned by
Amnesty International, but the U.S. public is
unlikely to get even a hint that the Israeli
government is furthering its efforts to smash
dissent in the occupied
territories.
These recent crackdowns
make even more ironic the hope expressed by
Bono last month in The New York Times "that
people in places filled with rage and despair,
places like the Palestinian territories, will
in the days ahead find among them their Gandhi,
their King, their Aung San Suu Kyi." As a
commenter on his column noted, these people
exist today and have existed within the
Palestinian movement. They are just in jail ...
or dead.
Bassem Abu Rahme, for example,
was killed by a teargas canister fired at close
range by an Israeli soldier on April 17 while
taking part in one of the weekly nonviolent
protests that are regularly met with tear gas,
billy clubs, rubber bullets and the threat of
arrest.
I believe that Bassem, like many
others, was following in Gandhi's
path.
While it is certainly true that
some of the protests by Palestinians are
violent, the same could be said of the
anti-colonial protests that took place on the
Indian subcontinent against the British at the
time of Gandhi. Gandhi certainly preached
nonviolent direct action, yet there were others
within the independence movement that advocated
forceful courses of
action.
Nevertheless, smearing or
repressing all protests in the name of moving
against those who use violence is disingenuous,
a point well understood when viewing other
freedom struggles, whether the Indian
independence movement or the black freedom
struggle in the United States. In fact, this
repression becomes a means not of suppressing
violence, but of suppressing all resistance to
injustice. This is experienced today by the
Palestinian movement.
Its objectives are
caricatured and maligned by Israel in order to
make the repression easier.
In this
period -- from King's birthday through the
celebrations and discussions that take place
during Black History Month -- it is useful to
recall similar treatment King and other freedom
fighters endured, and reflect on the true
lessons from his life and struggles that are
relevant to the Palestinian struggle and its
hopes for a lasting peace.
Despite
King's acceptance now in mainstream circles, he
was first and foremost a troublemaker in the
cause of justice. While King believed in peace,
he was more importantly a person of action, and
one completely intolerant of injustice. In that
sense he was a thorn in the side of the powers
that be and the status quo.
King did not
achieve credibility by simply preaching peace
and good will, and certainly not by being
passive or submissive in the face of
oppression. He gained credibility because he
was a person who was prepared to challenge the
unjust laws and practices of his period, laws
and practices that were summarized in the
notion of Jim Crow segregation.
Even
though Jim Crow was the law in much of the
United States, King and countless others were
prepared to break the law and, thereby,
threaten the stability of this country. He was
branded a communist, a malcontent and a
criminal, all with the aim of discrediting him.
And, when that was not enough, and his
following did not disappear into the night, he
was harassed and faced repeated death threats,
ultimately leading to his murder.
The
condemnation of Palestinian activists as
terrorists, no matter their approach, shares a
great deal in common with the manner in which
King and African-American freedom fighters (and
their allies) were demonized and repressed. It
was the basic cause that needed to be destroyed
by the oppressor and not just the
individuals.
The same is true today as
Palestinian activists, including those who have
consciously and openly repudiated armed
struggle, are sidelined so that the Israeli
government can claim, with a straight face,
that it has no Palestinian partner with which
it can discuss peace.
The "partners" are
there in Palestine. When we celebrate the
courage and vision of freedom fighters such as
King or Fannie Lou Hamer and the countless
others who are remembered during Black History
Month, we should think of those Palestinian
Kings and Fannie Lou Hamers whose nonviolent
struggle for freedom, justice and equality
continues.
Bill Fletcher
Jr. is
the executive editor of BlackCommentator.com.
He is a senior scholar with the Institute for
Policy Studies, the immediate past president of
TransAfrica Forum and the co-author of
Solidarity
Divided.
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