Hunger Strikers’ Goal is Not Peace (COMMENTARY MAGAZINE) Jonathan S. Tobin 05/04/12)
Source: http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2012/05/04/palestinian-hunger-strikers-goal-is-not-peace/
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For decades, foreign cheerleaders for the Palestinians have sought to
portray those fighting against Israel as potential disciples of
Gandhi as they seek to portray the Jews as stand-ins for the role of
colonial oppressor. But there have always been two main problems with
this scenario. The first is the fact that most Palestinians view
violence against Israelis as not only a legitimate tactic but also
something that is integral to their national identity. The second is
that even if they were to adopt a policy of non-violence, the
Palestinian goal is not their own state living in peace beside Israel
but the end of the Jewish state and its replacement by one in which
Arabs will rule.
These obstacles to the creation of a movement of Palestinian Gandhis
remain. But that didn’t stop the New York Times from going back to a
familiar theme today with a feature by new Israel bureau chief Jodi
Rudoren in which a hunger strike by some security prisoners is used
as a launching point for a discussion about a possible change in
tactics by the Palestinians. Since, as she notes, the peace process
is “stalled” and “internal Palestinian politics adrift,” activists
hope to use “the hunger strike as a potential catalyst to bring an
Arab Spring-style uprising to the West Bank.” But the question
Rudoren fails to ask is what do the hunger strikers or their
supporters think will come from what they hope will be a new
intifada? Do they see it as a path to a Palestinian state or
something else? If the goal is a state, then they need not bother
with non-violent resistance or violence. What they need to do is to
instruct their leaders to negotiate with Israel.
The peace process remains “stalled” for one main reason: the
Palestinians won’t negotiate unless Israel guarantees in advance that
they will give in on every territorial dispute. But even then there
is no guarantee or any likelihood that the leadership of the
Palestinian Authority as currently constituted, let alone after it
consummates its unity deal with Hamas, would be able to recognize the
legitimacy of a Jewish state no matter where its borders are drawn.
A new intifada, whether conducted by people throwing rocks and
Molotov cocktails or mere demonstrators, is no substitute for a
commitment on the part of the Palestinians to live in peace with
their Jewish neighbors. With even Israel’s supposedly right-wing
government willing to accept a two-state solution, the time is long
passed for stunts whose only purpose is to embarrass or intimidate
the Israelis.
As it happens, even the supposedly non-violent Palestinians gave away
some of the game in Rudoren’s account:
On Thursday in Ramallah, 300 women marched to Al Manara Square,
chanting, “Yes for hunger strike, no to submission” and “Down with
the olive branch, long live the rifle.”
Is there another way to interpret a chant that calls for an end to
peace and the use of “the rifle” but as a call for violent attacks on
Israel?
The featured hunger striker, one Thaer Halahleh, is described as a
sympathetic character. We are told that he “stopped political
activity” soon after his marriage in 2009. But given the Palestinian
definition of that term, a more experienced observer than Ms. Rudoren
might have concluded that this meant he was a terrorist operative.
Because people involved in such activities rarely voluntarily retire,
the suspicion of Israeli authorities that he was not innocent is
understandable. While the policy of administrative detention which
can result in long periods of incarceration without trial may seem
contrary to an American sense of justice, it should be pointed out
that neither does the usual expression of Palestinian “politics”
which is terrorism. As the return to violence on the part of
Palestinians released in the Gilad Shalit exchange deal illustrate,
the idea that Halahleh, if sent home will not engage in violence, is
either naďve or deceitful.
However, the article does accurately portray the difficulties
encountered by those seeking to create this new intifada. Their
biggest problem is apathy from a Palestinian population that
understands this latest plan for confrontation will not improve their
lives and won’t lead to self-determination. Despite the obstacles the
imperatives of Palestinian political culture of Palestinian society
put in the way of peace, perhaps some are starting to recognize that
the glorification of those who engage in violence and the
identification of communal rights only in juxtaposition to the denial
of the same to Jews is a dead-end street.
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