Palestine: Those Who Inspired Us in 2011
By Ramzy
Baroud
Mustafa Tamimi was a 28-year-old resident of
the West Bank village of Nabi Saleh. His meticulously
trimmed beard served as the centerpiece of his handsome
face.
In December 2009, when an Israeli soldier shot
him from a short distance with a tear gas canister, half of
Mustafa’s face went missing. More soldiers laughed as his
horrified family tried to accompany him to a nearby
hospital, according to activists present at the scene. Only
the mother was finally able to obtain a special permit from
the Israeli military, which allowed her to be with her son.
Mustafa’s crime? He, along with Palestinian,
Israeli and international peace activists, protested the
besiegement of Nabi Saleh by the illegal Jewish settlement
of Halamish. Halamish has existed since 1977 and drastically
grown in size and population ever since, taking over
privately-owned Palestinian land. As of late, Nabi Saleh has
been struggling for mere survival as its fresh water spring
has also been seized by settlers under the watchful eye of
the Israeli army.
Mustafa died so that the village of
Nabi Saleh could live. The struggle will continue for years.
A young man may now be gone, but he also left behind
a legacy which has become the cornerstone of the augmenting
international solidarity with Palestinians around the globe.
The struggle for justice in Palestine is ultimately
between a Palestinian – protesting, with a rock or rifle
in hand – and an Israeli, often equipped with the latest
killing technology the arms industry has to offer. The
former fights for basic rights – land, water, freedom,
equality and such – while the latter is determined to
intimidate, silence, imprison, and, when compelled, commit
murder or even large scale massacres to prolong Israeli
occupation and military dominance over Palestinians.
Things are not always so clear-cut, of course. Some
Palestinians have learned with time the benefits of
co-existing with the occupation. Some Israelis have jointly
struggled with Palestinians against the inhumanity of the
occupation, the brutality of the military and the illegality
of the land seizure.
One such Israeli is Tamar
Fleishman, of Machsomwatch. She is simply indefatigable. Her
mission is to document the daily violations committed by the
Israeli army at a series of checkpoints extending between
Ramallah (in the West Bank) and Jerusalem. Showing a
complete disregard for international law, and even the
official foreign policy of the United States, Israel has
insisted that the entirety of Jerusalem is Israel’s
eternal capital. But illegally occupied East Jerusalem - or
al-Quds - has been the beating heart of Palestinian
national, religious and even intellectual identity for many
generations. To split the heart from the body, Israel has
been choking occupied East Jerusalem since 1967, encircling
it with illegal Jewish settlements, Jewish-only bypass
roads, and a dizzying checkpoint structure intended to
create a permanent divorce between the West Bank and a city
that Palestinians see as their future capital.
Armed with a camera and her own willpower, Tamar is
relentless. She knows by name all the tired-looking children
who sell tea in plastic cups, newspapers and gum at all the
checkpoints. She narrates their stories of humiliation, pain
and struggle. She tells of the people crammed between glass
walls, barbed wire and blocks of cement. As long as these
women and men keep the checkpoints populated, Jerusalem will
maintain its historic attachment with the rest of Palestine.
And Tamar, the habitual visitor of these very spots,
will resume her daily toil to convey the stories that
capture the essence of this enduring conflict.
But
without the numerous media outlets that challenge the
inherent pro-Israeli bias, censorship and apathy of
mainstream media, Mustafa’s story and Tamar’s photos
would have remained confined to Nabi Saleh, or some
checkpoint manned by cruel soldiers.
In fact, the
story of Palestine is getting more than a good share of
coverage in old and new alternative media outlets. More,
2011 has concluded on a positive note as far as media
coverage of this conflict is concerned. In an article
entitled, ‘The media consensus on Israel is collapsing’,
Jordan Michael Smith reveals that “slowly but
unmistakably, space is opening up among the commentariat for
new, critical ideas about Israel and its relationship to the
United States” (salon.com, December 21). While Smith
rightly credits the academics Tony Judt, Stephen Walt and
John Mearsheimer for “expanding the permissible,” the
pressure on mainstream media has been obstinately championed
by numerous individuals from all walks of life. It is they,
who, for many years, refused to subscribe to the convenient
narrative that venerates and vindicates Israel - not only at
the expense of Palestinians, but also at the expense of the
United States’ foreign policy.
The popular
solidarity movement continues to score new victories with
each passing day. Israel’s attempt at countering its gains
seems to achieve little more than inviting controversy,
which actually recruits more support for Palestinian rights.
One platform that has become very successful in
recent years, and particularity so in 2011, was the Boycott,
Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement.
“The BDS
movement is growing relentless,” wrote Eric Walberg,
author and editor at al-Ahram Weekly. His ‘BDS Updates’
regularly highlight the overwhelming success of the
worldwide initiative that is partly modeled on the
triumphant anti-Apartheid movement of South Africa. His
year-ender updates for 2011 included the cancelation of an
Israel tour by the famous musician Natacha Atlas (though
sadly, not all artists were so principled). Walberg also
reported that “in a wonderfully shocking divestment move,
Israeli powers-that-be are furious at BNP Paribas for
shutting down its operations in Israel. (They) believe the
bank’s board of directors caved to pressure groups, in the
first case in years of a foreign bank leaving Israel…”
Such reports are now stable items crowding social media
channels on a regular basis.
True, 2011 had its share
of tragedy. Human lives were lost in Palestine. But hope was
also sustained by the sacrifices of numerous ‘ordinary’
people who collectively managed to achieve many hard-earned
feats. It is these numerous small victories that will make
it difficult for Israel to continue with its futile campaign
to occupy and dominate a people so determinately entrenched
in their land - from the small village of Nabi Saleh to the
proud Palestinian city of al-Quds.
- Ramzy Baroud
(www.ramzybaroud.net) is an internationally-syndicated
columnist and the editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His
latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza's
Untold Story (Pluto Press,
London).
ends