Activism

Mustafa Bargouti: Jerusalem is at the heart of the Palestinian cause

mustafa barghouti
Mustafa Barghouti at a demonstration in Bil’in, 2010. (Photo: Dan Halutz)

Every year on March 30th Palestinians around the world celebrate Land Day, which commemorates a general strike and marches in 1976 against Israeli land appropriation, an event that was a pivotal event in bringing about Palestinian national unity. This year Palestinians throughout the Middle East and in the Diaspora will commemorate Land Day by calling attention to the dangers facing Jerusalem.

The Israeli government has long denied most Palestinians – whether Muslim or Christian – access to Jerusalem, even to visit holy sites. The organizers of the Global March allege that through methods of ethnic cleansing, Israel has been forcing Jerusalem’s remaining Arab inhabitants out, thus endangering the multi-religious, multi-ethnic character of the city that is the intended capital of Palestine.

On March 30th, the Palestinians will attempt to get as close to Jerusalem as they can: whether at the borders of Lebanon and Jordan, at checkpoints in the West Bank, or at the Erez crossing in Gaza. There will also be a demonstration in Jerusalem itself. The Palestinians will be joined by supporters from five continents. An eminent Advisory Board includes the Nobel Peace Laureates Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Mairead Maguire. Solidarity vigils and actions are also planned on March 30th at Israeli Embassies and other locations in sixty cities around the world.

The Palestinian coalition organizing this Global March to Jerusalem is perhaps unprecedented in its breadth. Equally unprecedented is the Israeli campaign against the March, which has included faux Websites and Facebook pages to mislead participants regarding gathering places. After seventy supporters from India, Malaysia, Pakistan and other Asian countries visited Iran on their way to Lebanon to join the March, the Israeli press alleged that the March is directed from Iran and that violent “clashes” with Israeli forces are planned.

Among the most outspoken Palestinian supporters and organizers of the Global March is Dr. Mustafa Barghouti, 58, the well-known nonviolence advocate. As General Secretary of the Palestinian National Initiative, Dr. Bargouti played a key role in recent attempts to bring Hamas and Fatah together. He is medical doctor educated in the former Soviet Union, the US and Jerusalem; he founded and leads Palestinian Medical Relief society, which provides health care in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. In 2005 Dr. Bargouti ran for presidency of the Palestinian National Authority and won 19% of the vote. He resides in Ramallah in the West Bank.

Elsa Rassbach: You have joined with Palestinians from many different political perspectives and many places in the world to call for a Global March to Jerusalem. What is this initiative about?

Mustafa Bargouti: It’s an act of solidarity with the Palestinian people. It will take place on Land Day, March 30th, a day that symbolizes the unity of Palestinians in the struggle for freedom and dignity and against theft of their land. We hope to bring to the world’s attention the very grave violations that Israel is committing against Jerusalem. Both the UN and The International Court of Justice hold that annexation of East Jerusalem, which is part of the Occupied Palestinian Territory, is a violation of international law.

ER: But there is illegal Israeli confiscation of Palestinian land throughout the Occupied Territories and also within Israel. Why the focus on Jerusalem?

MB: Jerusalem is at the heart of the Palestinian cause. East Jerusalem should be the capital of the Palestinian state. If Jerusalem is lost, the whole concept and idea of Palestinian statehood is lost, and the possibility of peace is lost. And Jerusalem is an important place for all of humanity, a holy place for Muslims, Christians, and the Jewish people. It should be the place where peace begins.

Today in Jerusalem you see the Israeli system of segregation, apartheid and ethnic cleansing in the sharpest possible way. If a Palestinian man from Jerusalem marries a woman in Ramallah, only sixteen kilometers away, he will not be able to live with her. The Israelis will never grant her the right to move to Jerusalem, but if he moves to Ramallah, he will lose his ID and his residency permit in Jerusalem. And the permit may be withdrawn for political reasons as well. Though I was born in Jerusalem and worked there as a medical doctor for fifteen years, after I ran for president in 2005, the Israeli Army thereafter has refused to allow me in. Most Palestinians including Christians and Muslims, also cannot enter.

But any Jewish person from anywhere in the world who decides to immigrate to Israel, whether from Siberia or the United States, will immediately be granted the right to live in Jerusalem or anywhere else in the Occupied Palestinian Territories.
Jerusalem is accessible to every Jewish person. It should be accessible to everybody. Many Jewish people from Israel and other parts of the world agree and are participating in and even organizing the Global March.

ER: Among the demands of the March is “the right of return.” Why would Palestinians who live in historical Palestine support such a demand?

MB: This demand means a lot to us, too, because there are huge numbers of refugees living in Gaza and West Bank who are denied access to the place they were forced to leave. Even Palestinians living in Israel who carry Israeli citizenship are not allowed to return home to their villages in Israel like Iqrit and Kafr Bir’im. The right of return is a right recognized by international law under a special UN resolution, 194. We do understand that its implementation will have to be negotiated, but the right itself has to be respected.

ER: Last year on May 15th, Nakba Day and also Israeli Independence Day, Israeli soldiers killed dozens and wounded hundreds of unarmed Palestinians who tried to cross over the borders of Lebanon and Syria. Could the Global March lead to a repeat of such violence?

MB: The March will be an act of peace, an act of nonviolence, and that’s why Palestinians everywhere are united in supporting it. It reflects the consensus of Palestinians today on adopting nonviolence totally. We know that Israel is capable of terrible violence. All the organizers in Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt and Israel/Palestine are aware of this risk. We hope that the U.S. and the European countries will pressure Israel not use violence against our nonviolence.
 

98 Comments
Most Voted
Newest Oldest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

How about a fantastic way to celebrate Land Day?

To celebrate Land Day I am going to make another contribution to my favorite Palestinian cause, Teach for Palestine,

http://www.teach-for-palestine.org

I am proud that my incredibly talented daughter will also celebrate Land Day by sending some of her baby-sitting money to teach-for-palestine.org

So, if the faithful followers of mondoweiss.net are looking for a way to celebrate Land Day, check out teach-for-palestine.org (or another deserving Palestinian non-governmental organization) and contribute to help Palestine!!!!

Teach for Palestine information:

“Each year TFP works with hundreds of refugees and at-risk Palestinian youngsters. We instruct our students in English, social responsibility, and physical fitness. …
“For Palestinian children, English language unlocks the door to higher education. It lets them take a role in rebuilding their suffocated economy. It gives them a chance to tell their stories to the outside world. TFP works with youth who would otherwise be denied that chance.”

Maybe mondweiss can consider listing worthy organizations like Teach for Palestine that are desperate for donations so mondoweiss followers can adopt a Palestinian cause (while of course continuing with the all important support of mondoweiss).

البيت لنا و القدس لنا.

Meanwhile look at what the Israelis are doing to the house

http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/hundreds-of-beitar-jerusalem-fans-beat-up-arab-workers-in-mall-no-arrests-1.420270

33 10 View > I have personal experience of watching arabs be abused by Jews
zionist forever 23.03.12 13:01

Not long ago I was walking down the street and I saw a secular Jew verbally abusing an arab shouting things like LEAVE HERE THIS IS MY COUNTRY. The arab was on the ground crying because of the verbal abuse. There were 2 armed security guards hired by the municipality to patrol the streets. They were just a couple of meters away in an open top vehicle and they were watching this guy verbally abuse a crying arab and they did nothing. Plenty of passers by stopped, looked and walked on like it was nothing. In the end a woman came and she started shouting at the Jew to stop and he eventually did. Point is nobody likes arabs which is why this guy was able to verbally abuse him and the security guards hired to patrol the streets and the passers by did nothing to stop it. Arabs will never feel at home in this country because fact is apart from a few idealists on the far left nobody wants them… WELCOME TO ISRAEL.

>> Meanwhile look at what the Israelis are doing to the house
>> link to haaretz.com
—————————
>> Witnesses said that after a soccer game in the nearby Teddy Stadium, hundreds of mostly teenage supporters flooded into the shopping center, hurling racial abuse at Arab workers and customers and chanting anti-Arab slogans, and filled the food hall on the second floor.

Shortly afterward, several supporters started harassing three Arab women, who sat in the food hall with their children. They verbally abused and spat on them.

Some Arab men, who work as cleaners at the shopping center and observed the brawl, came to their rescue. …

It seemed the workers managed to chase the abusers away, but a few minutes later supporters returned and assaulted them. “They caught some of them and beat the hell out of them,” said Yair, owner of a bakery located in the food hall. “They hurled people into shops, and smashed them against shop windows. I don’t understand how none shattered into pieces. One cleaner was attacked by some 20 people, poor guy, and then they had a go at his brother who works in a nearby pizza shop and came to his rescue.”
—————————
Another glorious day in the religion-supremacist Jewish state.

>> The attackers also asked Jewish shop owners for knives and sticks to serve as weapons but none consented, witnesses said.

Small blessings. But:
1. Why do those Jewish shop owners hate the Jewish state so much?
2. The fact that they said ‘no’ simply means that these hateful and immoral Jewish hooligans of the Jewish state will have to make a point of bringing their own weapons next time. It’ll save them the indignity of having to ask for knives with which to hurt and kill.

East Jerusalem accounts for 40% of the Palestinian economy. It is the cultural centre of Palestine. It is the religious centre of palestine. It is vital for the Palestinian people.
And the zionists have almost destroyed what used to be a holy city.

One of the most impressive marketing/social campaigns by a company I ever came across was about 7 or 8 years ago by Jawwal, a Palestinian mobile phone company. They distributed sticker books on the subject of Jerusalem and the sites of the city and kids could collect stickers. The campaign was called Al quds fil baal/Jerusalem in my mind (it’s a famous Fairuz song) and the point of it was to bring the importance of the city to the hundreds of thousands of young West Bank and Gaza kids who will never see it for as long as the Zionists control the city. Most Palestinian kids have never been allowed access to Jerusalem. Zionism can prevent them from entering the city but it will never ever stop them singing about it.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vuxkgP5c5KY