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Why a popular uprising is yet to take off

Mar 29,2016 - Last updated at Mar 29,2016

Whether history moves in a straight or cyclical line, it matters little. The uncontested fact is that it is in constant motion.

Thus, the current situation in Palestine is particularly frustrating to a generation that has grown up after the Oslo Accords because they have been brought up within a strange historical phenomenon where the earth below their feet keeps shrinking and time stands still.

The nature of the current uprising in the West Bank and East Jerusalem is testament to that claim.

Previous uprisings were massive in their mobilisation, clear in their message and decisive in their delivery.

Their success or failure is not the point of this discussion, but the fact is that they were willed by the people and, within days, they imprinted themselves on the collective consciousness of Palestinians everywhere. 

The current uprising is different; so different, in fact, that many are still hesitating to call it an Intifada, as if Intifadas are the outcome of some clear-cut science, an exact formula of blood and popular participation that must be fully satisfied before a eureka moment is announced by some political commentator.

It is different, nonetheless, for there is yet to be a clear sense of direction, a leadership, a political platform, demands, expectations and short- and long-term strategies.

At least that is how the 1987-93 Intifada played out and, to a lesser extent, the 2000-2005 Al Aqsa Intifada as well.

But is it not possible that the outcome of these previous Intifadas is what is making the current uprising different? 

The first Intifada metamorphosed into a worthless peace process that eventually led to the signing of the Oslo Accords in 1993. A year later, the Palestinian leadership of the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) was metamorphosed into the emasculated form that is now the Palestinian Authority (PA). Since then, the latter has served largely as a conduit for the Israeli occupation. 

The second Intifada had less success than the first. It quickly turned into an armed rebellion, thus marginalising the popular component of the revolt which is required to cement the collective identity of Palestinians, forcing them to overcome their division and unify behind a single flag and a distinct chant.

This Intifada was crushed by the brutal Israeli army; hundreds were assassinated and thousands were killed in protests and clashes with Israeli soldiers.

It was a watershed moment in the relationship between the Israeli government and the Palestinian leadership in Ramallah, and between the Palestinian factions themselves.

The late PLO leader, Yasser Arafat, was held hostage by the Israeli army in his Ramallah headquarters. The soldiers taunted him in his office while blocking his movement for years. Finally, he was slowly poisoned and died in 2004.

Israel then went through the painstaking effort of revamping the PA leadership, flushing out the nonconformists — through murder and imprisonment — and allowing the so-called moderates to operate, but even then, under very strict conditions.

Mahmoud Abbas was elected president of the PA in 2005. His greatest achievements include cracking down on civil society organisations, ensuring total loyalty towards him, personally, and towards his branch within the Fateh faction.

Under Abbas, there has been no revolutionary model for change, no “national project”; in fact, no clear definition of nationhood, to begin with.

The Palestinian nation became whatever Abbas wanted it to be. It consisted, largely, of West Bank Palestinians living mostly in Area A, loyal to Fateh and hungry for international handouts.

The more the Abbas nation agreed to play along the more money was allowed to rake in. 

In 2006, this fragmentation became absolute. Many will recall that period of discord when Hamas was allocated majority of the seats in the Palestinian Legislative Council; but the conflict, which resulted in the violent summer of 2007, had little to do with democracy.

The paradigm — of endless “peace talks”, generous donor money, growing illegal Jewish settlements, etc. — suited both Abbas and the Israelis. No one, Hamas especially, was to be allowed to impose a paradigm shift.

Israel immediately besieged Gaza, launched successive wars and committed numerous war crimes with little criticism emanating from Gaza’s brethren in Ramallah.

Bolivia and Venezuela seemed more furious with Israel’s war crimes in Gaza than Abbas’ West Bank clique.

Until October last year, when the current uprising slowly began building momentum, the situation on the ground seemed to have come at a standstill.

In the West Bank, occupation was slowly normalised in accordance to the formula: occupation and illegal settlements in exchange for money and silence.

Gaza, on the other hand, met with barbarity regularly, meted out by Israel as a reminder to those in the West Bank that the price of revolt is besiegement, hunger, destruction and death. 

It is against this backdrop of misery, humiliation, fear, oppression and corruption that Palestinians arose.

They were mostly young people born after Oslo who became politically conscious after the Fateh-Hamas clash, raised in the conflicting world of their leadership co-existing with the occupation, on the one hand, and clashing with other Palestinians on the other.

These young people, however, never perceived occupation to be normal; never came to terms with the fact that the earth beneath their feet kept shrinking while illegal, massive Jewish cities kept on being erected on their land.

True, they learned to navigate their way across the checkpoints, but never assented to the superiority of their occupier. They abhorred disunity; rejected identity politics and factionalism; never understood why Gaza was being disowned and slowly slaughtered.

This is a generation that is the most educated, most politically savvy and, thanks to the huge leaps in digital media technology, most connected and informed about the world around it.

The ambitions of these youth are huge, but their opportunities are very limited; their earth has shrunk to the size of a single-file queue before an Israeli military checkpoint, where they are corralled on their way to school, to work and back home.

And like the Israelis who shoot at anyone who dares to protest, Abbas imprisons those who attempt to do so. 

It is a generation that simply cannot breathe.

The current Intifada is an expression of that dichotomy, of a generation that is so eager to break free, to define itself, to liberate its land, yet is resisted by an old guard unremittingly holding on tight to the few perks and dollars they receive in the form of allotments every month.

History must remain in constant motion, and the last six months have been the attempt of an entire generation to move the wheels of history forward despite a hundred obstacles and a thousand checkpoints.

This might be the most difficult Intifada yet; for never before did Palestinians find themselves so leaderless, yet so ready to break free.

The outcome of this tension will not only define this whole generation, as it defined my generation of the 1987 Intifada, it will also define the future of Palestine altogether.

 

The writer, www.ramzybaroud.net, has been writing about the Middle East for over 20 years. He is an internationally syndicated columnist, a media consultant, author of several books and the founder of PalestineChronicle.com. His books include “Searching Jenin”, “The Second Palestinian Intifada” and “My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story”. He contributed this article to The Jordan Times.

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