Uri Avnery: A Man And His People
A Hebrew version soon at the site //òáøéú á÷øåá áàúø
http://www.gush-shalom.org/archives/article329_heb.html
A Man and his People
Wherever he may be buried when he
passes away, the day will come when his remains will be
reinterred by a free Palestinian government in the holy
shrines in Jerusalem.
Yasser Arafat is one of the
generation of great leaders who arose after World War
II.
The stature of a leader is not simply
determined by the size of his achievements, but also by the
size of the obstacles he had to overcome. In this respect,
Arafat has no competitor in the world: no leader of our
generation has been called upon to face such cruel tests and
to cope with such adversities as he.
When he
appeared on the stage of history, at the end of the 1950s,
his people was close to oblivion. The name Palestine had
been eradicated from the map. Israel, Jordan and Egypt had
divided the country between them. The world had decided that
there was no Palestinian national entity, that the
Palestinian people had ceased to exist, like the
American Indian nations - if, indeed, it had ever
existed at all.
Within the Arab world the
"Palestinian Cause" was still mentioned, but it served only
as a ball to be kicked around between the Arab regimes. Each
of them tried to appropriate it for its own selfish
interests, while brutally putting down any independent
Palestinian initiative. Almost all Palestinians lived under
dictatorships, most of them in humiliating
circumstances.
When Yasser Arafat, then a young
engineer in Kuwait, founded the "Palestinian Liberation
Movement" (whose initials in reverse spell Fatah), he meant
first of all liberation from the various Arab leaders, so as
to enable the Palestinian people to speak and act for
itself. That was the first revolution of the man who made at
least three great revolutions during his life.
It was a dangerous one. Fatah had no independent base. It
had to function in the Arab countries, often under merciless
persecutions. One day, for example, the whole leadership of
the movement, Arafat included, was thrown into prison by the
Syrian dictator of the day, after disobeying his orders.
Only Umm Nidal, the wife of Abu Nidal, remained
free and
so she assumed the command of the fighters.
Those
years were a formative influence on Arafat's characteristic
style. He had to manoeuver between the Arab leaders, play
them off against each other, use tricks, half-truths and
double-talk, evade traps and circumvent obstacles. He became
a world-champion of manipulation.
This way he saved the
liberation movement from many dangers in the days of its
weakness, until it could become a potent force.
Gamal Abd-al-Nasser, the Egyptian ruler who was the hero of
the entire Arab world at the time, got worried about the
emerging independent Palestinian force. To choke it off in
time, he created the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO)
and put at its head a Palestinian political mercenary, Ahmed
Shukeiri. But after the shameful rout of the Arab armies in
1967 and the electrifying victory of the Fatah fighters
against the Israeli army in the battle of Karameh (March
1968), Fatah took over the PLO and Arafat became the
undisputed leader of the entire Palestinian
struggle.
In the mid-1960s, Yasser Arafat
started his second revolution: the armed struggle against
Israel. The pretension was almost ludicrous: a handful of
poorly-armed guerillas, not very efficient at that, against
the might of the Israeli army. And not in a country of
impassable jungles and mountain ranges, but in a small,
flat, densely populated stretch of land. But this struggle
put the Palestinian cause on the world agenda. It must be
stated frankly: without the murderous attacks, the world
would have paid no attention to the Palestinian call for
freedom.
As a result, the PLO was recognized as
the "sole representative of the Palestinian people", and
thirty years ago Yasser Arafat was invited to make his
historic speech to the UN General Assembly: "In one hand I
carry a gun, in the other an olive branch."
For
Arafat, the armed struggle was simply a means, nothing more.
Not an ideology, not an end in itself. It was clear to him
that this instrument would invigorate the Palestinian people
and gain the recognition of the world, but that it would not
vanquish Israel.
The October 1973 Yom Kippur war
caused another turn in his outlook. He saw how the armies of
Egypt and Syria, after a brilliant initial victory achieved
by surprise, were stopped and, in the end, defeated by the
Israeli army. That finally convinced him that Israel could
not be overcome by force arms.
Therefore,
immediately after that war, Arafat started his third
revolution: he decided that the PLO must reach an agreement
with Israel and be content with a Palestinian state in the
West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
That confronted
him with a historic challenge: to convince the Palestinian
people to give up its historic position denying the
legitimacy of the State of Israel, and to be satisfied with
a mere 22%of the territory of pre-1948 Palestine. Without
being stated explicitly, it was clear that this also entails
the giving up of the unlimited return of the refugees to the
territory of Israel.
He started to work to this
end in his own characteristic way, with persistence,
patience and ploys, two steps forwards, one step back. How
immense this revolution was can be seen from a book
published by the PLO in 1970 in Beirut, viciously attacking
the two-state solution (which it called "the Avnery plan",
because I was its most out-spoken proponent at the time.)
Historic justice demands that it be clearly
stated that it was Arafat who envisioned the Oslo agreement
at a time when both Yitzhak Rabin and Shimon Peres still
stuck to the hopeless "Jordanian Option", the belief that
one could ignore the Palestinian people and give the West
Bank back to Jordan. Of the three recipients of the Nobel
Peace Prize,
Arafat deserved it most.
From
1974 on, I was an eye-witness to the immense effort invested
by Arafat in order to get his people to accept his new
approach. Step by step it was adopted by the Palestinian
National Council, the parliament in exile, first by a
resolution to set up a Palestinian authority "in every part
of Palestine liberated from Israel", and, in 1988, to set up
a
Palestinian state next to Israel.
Arafat's
(and our) tragedy was that whenever he came closer to a
peaceful solution, the Israeli governments withdrew from it.
His minimum terms were clear and remained unchanged from
1974 on: a Palestinian state in the West Bank and the Gaza
Strip; Palestinian sovereignty over East Jerusalem
(including the Temple Mount but excluding the Western Wall
and the Jewish Quarter); restoration of the pre-1967 border
with the possibility of limited and equal exchanges of
territory; evacuation of all the Israeli settlements in the
Palestinian territory and the solution of the refugee
problem in agreement with Israel. For the Palestinians, that
is the very minimum, they cannot give up more than
that.
Perhaps Yithak Rabin came close to this
solution towards the end of his life, when he declared on TV
that "Arafat is my partner". All his successors rejected it.
They were not prepared to give up the settlements, but, on
the contrary, enlarged them incessantly. They resisted every
effort to fix a final border, since their kind of Zionism
demands perpetual expansion. Therefore they saw in Arafat a
dangerous enemy and tried to destroy him by all means,
including an unprecedented campaign of demonization. So
Golda Meir ("there is no such thing as a Palestinian
people"). So Menachem Begin ("Two-footed animal.the man with
hair on his face.the Palestinian Hitler"), so Binyamin
Netanyahu, so Ehud Barak ("I have torn the mask from his
face"), so Ariel Sharon, who tried to kill him in Beirut and
has continued trying ever since.
No liberation
fighter in the last half-century has faced such immense
obstacles as he. He was not confronted with a hated colonial
power or a despised racist minority, but by a state that
arose after the Holocaust and was sustained by the sympathy
and guilt-feelings of the world. In all military, economic
and technological respects, the Israeli society is vastly
stronger than the Palestinian. When he was called upon to
set up the Palestinian Authority, he did not take over an
existing, functioning state, like Nelson Mandela or Fidel
Castro, but disconnected, impoverished pieces of land, whose
infrastructure had been destroyed by decades of occupation.
He did not take over a population living on its land, but a
people half of which consists of refugees dispersed in many
countries and the other half of a society fractured along
political, economic and religious lines. All this while the
battle for liberation is going on.
To hold this
packet together and to lead it towards its destination under
these conditions, step by step, is the historic achievement
of Yasser Arafat.
Great men have great faults.
One of Arafat's is his inclination to make all decisions
himself, especially since all his close associates were
killed. As one of his sharpest critics said: "It is not his
fault. It is we who are to blame. For decades it was our
habit to run away from all the hard decision that demanded
courage and boldness. We always said: Let Arafat
decide!"
And decide he did. As a real leader, he
went out ahead and drew his people after him. Thus he
confronted the Arab leaders, thus he started the armed
struggle, thus he extended his hand to Israel. Because of
this courage, he has earned the trust, admiration and love
of his people, whatever the criticism.
If Arafat
passes away, Israel will lose a great enemy, who could have
become a great partner and ally.
As the years
pass, his stature will grow more and more in historical
memory.
As for me: I respected him as a Palestinian
patriot, I admired him for his courage, I understood the
constraints he was working under, I saw in him the partner
for building a new future for our two peoples. I was his
friend.
As Hamlet said about his father: "He was a
man, take him for all in all, I shall not look upon his
like again."
web-version soon at:
English: http://www.gush-shalom.org/archives/article329