| Today
is the great day of remembrance. We are not
looking back to dig up the evidence of a past
crime, for the Nakba is an extended present
that promises to continue in the future. We
do not need anything to help us remember the
human tragedy we have been living for the
past 53 years: we continue to live in the
here and now. We continue to resist its consequences,
here and now, on the land of our homeland,
the only homeland we have.
Nor
will we forget what was done to us on this
land of grief and what continues to be done.
And this is not because collective and individual
memory is fertile, is capable of recalling
our sad lives, but because the tragic and
heroic story of the land and the people continues
to be told in blood -- in the open conflict
between what they want us to be and what we
want to be.
As
the Israeli engineers of the Nakba announce
on this day of remembrance that the 1948 War
has not yet ended, they unmask, and scandalously
so, only the mirage of their peace, a mirage
that appeared over the last decade with its
suggestion of a promise of the possibility
of bringing an end to the conflict, an end
that would be based on [two peoples] sharing
the same land; they unmask, too, and scandalously
so, the incompatibility of the Zionist project
-- so long as that project's aim of exterminating
the Palestinian people remains on the agenda
-- with peace.
For
the Palestinians the meaning of this war consists
in their being subjected to continual uprooting,
in their transformation into refugees on their
own land and beyond it, in the attempt, following
the occupation of their land and history,
to banish their existence, to turn their existence
from an unequivocal entity in space and time
to redundant shadows exiled from space and
time.
But
the Nakba-makers have not managed to break
the will of the Palestinian people or efface
their national identity -- not by displacement,
not by massacres, not by the transformation
of illusion into reality or by the falsification
of history. After five decades they have managed
neither to force us into absence and oblivion
nor to divorce Palestinian reality from world
consciousness through their false mythologies
and the fabrication of a moral immunity bestowing
upon the victim of the past the right to create
his own victims. There is no such thing as
a sacred executioner.
Today
the memory of the Nakba comes at the height
of the Palestinian struggle in defence of
their being, of their natural right to freedom
and self-determination on a part of their
historical homeland, and this after conceding
more than was ever necessary for international
legitimacy to make peace possible. When the
moment of truth drew near, the true essence
of the Israeli concept of peace was unmasked:
continued occupation under another name, under
better conditions [for the occupier], and
at a lower cost.
The
Intifada -- yesterday, today, tomorrow --
is the natural and legitimate expression of
resistance against slavery, against an occupation
characterised by the ugliest form of apartheid,
one that seeks, under the cover of an elusive
peace process, to dispossess the Palestinians
of their land and the source of their livelihood,
and to restrict them to isolated reservations
besieged by settlements and by-passes, until
the day comes when, after consenting to "end
their demands and struggle," they are allowed
to call their cages a state.
The
Intifada is, in essence, a popular and civil
movement. It does not constitute a break with
the notion of peace but seeks to salvage this
notion from the injustices of racism, returning
it to its true parents, justice and freedom,
by preventing Israel's colonialist project
from continuing in the West Bank and Gaza
under the cover of a peace process Israeli
leaders have emptied of any content.
Our
wounded hands are yet capable of extracting
the wilting olive branch from the rubble of
massacred groves, but only if the Israelis
attain the age of reason and concede our legitimate
national rights, defined by international
resolutions foremost among which are: the
right of return, complete withdrawal from
Palestinian land occupied in 1967, and the
right to self-determination and an independent
sovereign state with Jerusalem as its capital.
For just as there can be no peace with occupation,
neither can there be one between masters and
slaves.
The
international community cannot -- as it did
in the year of Nakba -- turn a blind eye to
what is happening in the land of Palestine
for much longer. Israeli aggression is still
besieging Palestinian society, still killing
and assassinating with the excess of destructive
power it commands over an unarmed people,
a people defending all that remains of their
imperiled existence, the rubble of their houses,
their olive groves threatened with yet more
uprooting.
The
nature of the war declared on the Palestinian
people will be determined by the international
attention it attracts, for it embodies the
struggle between conflicting international
values: on the one hand are the forces that
aim to enable colonialist Zionism and apartheid
to live on under new names and formulas, on
the other forces that insist on the necessity
of justice and truth in this part of the world.
The
involvement of other states and peoples in
the confrontation raging in Palestine today,
and their standing by a Palestinian people
deprived of normal life, proves not only that
these states and peoples are committed to
political stability in the Middle East as
a means of protecting their interests but
tests, too, a moral position that, in turn,
examines the credibility of freedom, justice
and equality in the lives and cultures of
these peoples.
International
protection against the brutal terrorism practised
against them by the Israeli regime --which
seems to place itself above international
law and order-- has, for the Palestinians,
become an urgent necessity. It is necessary
not only to purge the sin of the past but
also to prevent the perpetration of future
sins, the adding of yet another chapter to
the book of the Nakba. But instead of acknowledging
its responsibility for the Naqba and the tragedy
of the refugees -- a necessary prerequisite
for any political settlement -- Israel is
enlarging the Book of the Nakba, reversing
the struggle back to its original cultural
premise, its initial battlefield -- reminding
us that no story can begin at the end.
We
have not forgotten the beginning, not the
keys to our houses, the street lamps lit by
our blood, not the martyrs who nourished the
unity of land, people and history, not the
living who were born on the road that can
only, as long as the spirit of the homeland
remains alive inside us, lead to a homeland
of the spirit.
We
shall forget neither yesterday nor tomorrow.
Tomorrow begins now. It begins with an insistence
that the road be travelled to the end, the
road of freedom, the road of resistance, travelled
all the way till the eternal twins -- freedom
and peace -- meet.
Related
Story:
See
50 Years of Arab dispossession
Intifada
in focus
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