Palestine - The
Amazing Power of People
Dr. Mustafa Barghouthi
19 December 2001
The
number of foreigners on the streets of the West Bank, Gaza Strip and
Jerusalem in the last few weeks was not unfortunately due to seasonal
festivities in the Holy Land. Nor has Palestine become a new holiday
destination for Europeans and Americans. Rather, hundreds of people of
various nationalities including Italians, French, Belgians, Americans,
Dutch and British were responding to the call of Palestinian NGOs for
international observers.
For
fifteen months now we have been waiting for an international
observer/protection force to be sent to the region to provide some kind
of security for Palestinians. Every time one of the 32 people who were
prevented from receiving medical treatment died, we called for
international observers to be located at checkpoints to prevent the same
thing happening again. As the Israeli army mercilessly shelled civilian
neighbourhoods, opened fire - unprovoked - on children at
demonstrations, destroyed acres of land and agricultural produce or
invaded areas under the Palestinian Authority, we have called for an
international protection force to be sent here.
Unfortunately to no avail.
The
United Nations call for observers to be sent here was vetoed three times
by countries aware that Israel was not in favour of the resolution; 934
Palestinians have died, 26,00 people have been injured, and still the
international community dragged its feet.
Members
of Palestine's vibrant civil society took the initiative and in
coordination with foreign non governmental organisations, churches and
church related institutions, aid agencies, solidarity groups, human
rights activists and concerned individuals, decided to launch their own
campaign for the protection of the Palestinian people.
The
objectives were simple, non violent and peaceful; to protect the
Palestinian people through the presence of international civilians by
deterring Israeli army and settler aggression, to express concrete
solidarity with the Palestinian people and with those who struggle in
Israel for a just and sustainable peace, to report on the experience and
raise awareness in their respective countries about the
Palestinian-Israeli conflict, and finally, to send out a political
signal to the international community and to the Israeli government
demanding the deployment of a genuine international force of protection,
the implementation of the UN resolutions and the end of the occupation.
The
itinerary of the Grassroots International Protection for the Palestinian
people (GIPP) activists, all of whom made the visit at their own
expense, has been full: planting olive trees, lectures, visits with
grass roots organizations, and demonstrations. They were prevented from
entering Gaza, and some found themselves victims of Israeli soldiers
aggression after which one woman was hospitalised overnight. An entirely
peaceful demonstration in Ramallah in which thousands of Palestinians
and around 400 GIPP delegates demonstrated, was typically met with
Israeli violence when troops opened fire on the march with tear gas,
sound bombs and rubber coated steel bullets. And now, after tearing down
the Israeli checkpoint separating Ramallah from Birzeit the Israeli army
has, in its typical petty, malicious and vengeful manner, erected a new
checkpoint closer to Ramallah, meaning Palestinians have to walk an
extra kilometer -up hill.
The
occupation is still here, the foreign delegates will leave in a few
days, and the lives of Palestinians will no doubt continue to be
difficult and quite miserable.
So what
has the visit demonstrated?
It has
given Palestinians a huge boost of morale - proving to them that there
are people out there, despite the demonization of Palestinians in the
international media, who care about their cause, are aware of the
inherent justice of their struggle, and are concerned with what is
currently happening to them. It has also wrecked Sharon's effort to
isolate the Palestinians, to cast them in the "terrorist" mould and to
dehumanize them in order to enable him to continue his war against the
Palestinian civilian population. Moreover, their courage has been
immeasurable, in standing face to face with a ruthless army that has no
understanding of peaceful marches, nor cares. They have shown us, and
the world, that justice will prevail through the power and sheer will of
the people.
Furthermore, not only did these people come, witness and learn, they
will return to their homes, families, churches, political parties,
social clubs, workplaces and tell and show others what they saw and
experienced whilst they were here, and slowly break down the wall of
silence that shrouds the Palestinian cause.
The
delegates illustrated the power of non-violent, peaceful resistance to
the continuing military occupation to the Palestinians, and have perhaps
empowered them to use these very methods to abort the Israeli efforts to
subjugate and dehumanise them. Perhaps we will see these long-term
effects over time.
As
equally remarkable is the dynamism shown by Palestinian civil society.
It is one of the recent illustrations that there is an alternative voice
in Palestinian society.
Last
week 31 Palestinian intellectuals, human rights and democracy activists,
all leading members of Palestinian civil society published a petition
demanding reform of the Palestinian Authority. "The Palestinian public
demands immediate internal reform which cannot be postponed or delayed,
that will strengthen our struggle in the exceptional circumstances the
Palestinians are living under. The reforms should be immediate," the
statement read.
The
petition also called on the Authority "to improve and fix official
political institutions which have been weakened and paralysed and to
also ensure an independent justice system' as well as calling for new
elections to the parliament - a move that needs to be encouraged, and is
long overdue since elections have been postponed indefinitely since
1999.
Others
have criticized the lack of respect for the law, and the lack of
separation of power between the executive, legislature and judiciary, in
addition to criticism of the concentration of power in the hands of few,
and the lack of accountability of the executive branch of the Authority.
This is
the same civil society that has mobilized and united to bring the heroic
foreign GIPP delegates here, and this mobilization and outspokenness
shows that there is a strong democratic political alternative in
Palestine. This group of people believes that a democratic alternative
is the only way of preventing a dangerous polarization between the
fundamentalists and autocracy that the future Palestinian political
society appears to be facing. It also confirms that Palestinians
struggle, not only for any state but also for a free and democratic one.
The
overall significance of the GIPP delegates is that of power and
steadfastness - because it is only through sustained steadfastness and
survival in the face of the military aggression of occupation, and in
calling for internal political reforms, can Palestinians struggle to
achieve freedom, justice, and democracy.