Losing
Focus: Peace And Justice Movement In Britain At Crossroad
By Ramzy Baroud
10 March, 2007
Countercurrents.org
Growing up in a Palestinian refugee
camp in the Gaza Strip, it was a very familiar encounter: Israeli soldiers
storming our house accompanied by shouts of terror and a barrage of
insults. Such recollections make me shudder to this day.
Just the mere summoning of
those memories of my childhood in the Nuseirat refugee camp haunting
me not only in childhood but in my adulthood as well, shall most likely
accompany me for the rest of my life - almost instantaneously forcing
me to relive my mother’s agonizing cries, my father’s pleas
for the welfare of his children, my brothers and I clutching to each
other as the soldiers try to break us a part, the physical degradation,
the verbal abuse, then the utter silence when the soldiers finally leave,
the sounds of the engines fading away into the camp’s darkened
roads, followed by far away screams from some other family in some other
place, as the tragic scenario faithfully repeats itself.
My family’s house was
positioned in a location that was simply a nightmare, since it stood
at the helm of the camp’s main square, often referred to as Red
Square by locals, remembering the many Palestinians killed in and around
it while protesting the occupation during the uprising or Intifada of
1987. Israeli soldiers began their nightly hunts for terrorists, i.e.
stone throwing kids, from that central point. My house was often the
first in the soldiers’ route: it was there where they initiated
their formidable mission. As horrifying as it was, it was a most predictable
routine: we would turn all lights off in anticipation, my parents would
take their positions to open the door as quickly as possible once the
loud banging at the door commenced; once the Israeli jeeps’ engines
were turned off, it was the matter of a few seconds before it all began:
a fury of pounding at the door; “who is it?” my dad would
ask, as if he suspected anyone else but the tormenting soldiers: their
reply was always the same, always as confident as it was terrifying;
“Yahoud”, they would reply.
I grew up making the association
between “Yahoud”, the Arabic word for “Jews”,
and the horror my family and had experienced. When my cousin Wael was
shot dead in his teenage years, while on his way to study with me- it
was the “Yahoud” who killed him. When my childhood friend
Raed Munis was shot repeatedly as he dug a grave for a neighbor of ours,
shot just an hour earlier, he was killed by the “Yahoud”.
When my mother was struck in the chest repeatedly by the butt of an
Israeli soldier’s machine gun, a beating that led to her untimely
death 50 days later, that too was carried out by the “Yahoud”.
Palestinians in the Occupied
Territories ascribe all of these practices to the “Yahoud”,
simply because this is how Israel wishes to define itself, a Jewish
state. As a child, in my many many terrifying encounters with the army,
this is, without exception, how they chose to address themselves. Thus,
every inch of land that was stolen from Palestinians in the last 40
years of occupation was done in the name of the “Yahoud”
and their security; every settlement erected on a poor Palestinian farmer’s
orchard, every life that was taken, every brick of every wall that was
built and continues to be constructed over confiscated Palestinian land
in defiance of international law was also done in the name of the “Yahoud”.
Palestinians, thus - most Arabs and Muslims and others as well - hold
the “Yahoud” responsible for their plight, not out of their
ingrained and inherent anti-Semitism, as some so shrewdly or naively
choose to believe, but because on the basis of its Jewishness Israel
excused all of its inexcusable actions. If someone is to blame for this,
it is Israel, not its detractors. It’s as simple as that.
But, of course, it’s
not always as simple as that. When I moved to the US, I realized, correctly
that the term “Yahoud” is not befitting, for the old connotations
of the name cannot be accepted in Western societies where Jews have
historically been a recurring victim, and where a large number of activists
and fellow writers, of which many became close friends of mine are also
Jewish. A distinction between a Jew and a Zionist was indeed an imperative,
though not always easy, for Israel extorts much needed financial, political,
moral and other forms of support relying primarily on Jewish constituents
in North America and Western Europe. Many of the latter demonstrate
their allegiance to Israel in more ways than one can recall. Unfortunately,
in the minds of many, being Jewish requires one to unquestionably support
the “Jewish State”. Most publications that define themselves
as Jewish in the Western hemisphere seem more absorbed by Israeli politics,
Israel’s security, and so forth, than engaged in their own political
and cultural realms. The relationship has in fact become so blurred
that it’s becoming nearly impossible and most confounding to set
apart the anti-occupation activist from the anti-Zionist from the anti-Semitic.
Naturally Israel and its supporters embrace, if not contribute to this
confusion in most underhanded ways: labeling at a whim whomever is critical
of the Israeli occupation, be it a respected Harvard Professor or a
former President as anti-Semitic. Israel’s crowd hurl such designations
so very often that many people prefer to steer clear from the whole
matter, failing to take a moral stance on an issue that has for long
irked the conscience of humanity and has contributed to global instability
in countless ways.
However, instead of confronting
the Zionist scheme that has brought such untold harm to the image of
one of the greatest and oldest monotheistic faiths by holding Israel
and its associates to account, there is a growing an alarming trend
where members of the peace and justice movement have themselves fallen
into the ominous trap: engaging in most ruinous and consuming scuffles,
isolating members and entire groups for allegedly being anti-Semitic.
While taking a moral stance against racism in all of its forms is a
requisite to for any genuine peace and justice activist, the intense
debate in some instances is reaching such grievous points that is threatening
to tear apart the peace and justice movement.
A most notable example is
the quarrel in the United Kingdom between members of Jews against Zionism
and those of Deir Yassin Remembered; the former, accusing members of
the latter of anti-Semitism, is endorsing a motion at an upcoming conference
of the Palestine Solidarity Campaign that would ostracize the Deir Yassin
group from the peace and justice movement. Members of both groups have
spoken out strongly against the maltreatment of Palestinians in the
past and both have a lot to offer PSC and its various activities. However,
the motion, but the entire episode is a continuation of an alarming
trend that began in the US several years ago, and has consumed activists,
distracting them from the real fight. Moreover, it is dangerously compromising
constructive dialogue and freedom of speech, the lack thereof has historically
sidelined the pro Palestinian voice for decades. If members of both
groups are unable to work jointly and sort out their differences through
dialogue, then they should refrain from taking their fights to the public,
as has been the case in Britain, in ways that are demoralizing the entire
movement. It also ought to be noted that as far as Israel is concerned,
any criticism of its occupation of the West Bank, no matter how polite
or subtle, is an unforgivable form of anti-Semitism; thus there is no
need for any member of the peace and justice movement to exasperate
the Israeli witch hunt. Indeed, Israel is more than capable of prolonging
such campaigns on its own.
There are many Palestinian
children who are still huddling inside their homes in fear of the encroaching
tanks and the hordes of unforgiving soldiers, who continue to commit
untold atrocities in the name of the “Jewish State”; it’s
those depraved individuals and the government that has assigned them
to their vile mission, who deserve to be isolated and labeled; it’s
Israel who must be held to account, by Jewish and non Jewish individuals
and groups alike, to end its exploitation of the Jewish people and their
religion.
I believe that the action
of a true peace and justice activist must stem from concern for humanity,
not from racism and prejudice; however, to suppress freedom of expression,
settle personal grievances at the expense of a most colorful and ideologically
diverse movement, thus the honorable cause it stands for, is to do an
immense disservice to all of us concerned with bringing to a halt a
most bloody and raging conflict in the Middle East
According to the World Food
Program (WFP) forty-six percent of Palestinians in the Occupied Territories
are food insecure; the Israeli wall is snaking around the West Bank
at an astonishing speed; human rights violations are committed against
vulnerable Palestinians with impunity in broad day light with tacit
or explicit support from various Western countries led by the United
States; there is no time to be wasted: all energies must be channeled
in so prudent a way to stop Israel’s inhumane treatment of the
Palestinians and end the occupation. I plead to all of you, to work
for peace, to redress injustice or at least to do nothing that would
jeopardize the work of the peace and justice movement, neither in Britain,
nor anywhere else.
-Ramzy Baroud’s latest
book: The Second Palestinian Intifada: A Chronology of a People’s
Struggle (Pluto Press, London) is now available at Amazon.com.