Opinion

Right of Return, Nakba are back on the Palestinian agenda 

Palestinians have been pressured to abandon their rights as refugees since the Oslo Accords, even by their leaders. Now 30 years later, Israeli settler-colonialism has unwittingly re-unified Palestinians around the Nakba.

The Nakba is back on the Palestinian agenda. 

For nearly three decades, Palestinians were told that the Nakba – or Catastrophe – is a thing of the past. That real peace requires compromises and sacrifices, therefore, the original sin that has led to the destruction of their historic homeland should be entirely removed from any ‘pragmatic’ political discourse. They were urged to move on. 

The consequences of that shift in narrative were dire. Disowning the Nakba, the single most important event that shaped modern Palestinian history, has resulted in more than political division between the so-called radicals and the supposedly peace-loving pragmatists, the likes of Mahmoud Abbas and his Palestinian Authority. It also divided Palestinian communities in Palestine and across the world around political, ideological and class lines. 

Following the signing of the Oslo Accords in 1993, it became clear that the Palestinian struggle for freedom was being entirely redefined and reframed. It was no longer a Palestinian fight against Zionism and Israeli settler colonialism that goes back to the start of the 20th century, but a ‘conflict’ between two equal parties, with equally legitimate territorial claims that can only be resolved through ‘painful concessions’. 

The first of such concessions was relegating the core issue of the ‘Right of Return’ for Palestinian refugees who were driven out of their villages and cities in 1947-48. That Palestinian Nakba paved the way for Israel’s ‘independence’, which was declared atop the rubble and smoke of nearly 500 destroyed and burnt Palestinian villages and towns. 

At the start of the ‘peace process’, Israel was asked to honor the Right of Return for Palestinians, although symbolically. Israel refused. Palestinians were then pushed to relegate that fundamental issue to a ‘final status negotiations’, which never took place. This meant that millions of Palestinian refugees – many of whom are still living in refugee camps in Lebanon, Syria and Jordan, as well as the occupied Palestinian territories – were dropped from the political conversation altogether. 

If it were not for the continued social and cultural activities of the refugees themselves, such terms as the Nakba and Right of Return would have been completely dropped out of the Palestinian political lexicon. 

If it were not for the continued social and cultural activities of the refugees themselves, insisting on their rights and teaching their children to do the same, such terms as the Nakba and Right of Return would have been completely dropped out of the Palestinian political lexicon. 

While some Palestinians rejected the marginalization of the refugees, insisting that the subject is a political not merely a humanitarian one, others were willing to move on as if this right was of no consequence. Various Palestinian officials affiliated with the now defunct ‘peace process’ have made it clear that the Right of Return was no longer a Palestinian priority. But none came even close to the way that PA President Abbas, himself, framed the Palestinian position in a 2012 interview with Israeli Channel 2. 

“Palestine now for me is the ’67 borders, with East Jerusalem as its capital. This is now and forever … This is Palestine for me. I am [a] refugee, but I am living in Ramallah,” he said

Abbas had it completely wrong, of course. Whether he wished to exercise his right of return or not, that right, according to United Nations General Assembly Resolution 194, is simply “inalienable”, meaning that neither Israel, nor the Palestinians themselves, can deny or forfeit it. 

Let alone the lack of intellectual integrity of separating the tragic reality of the present from its main root cause, Abbas lacked political wisdom as well. With his ‘peace process’ floundering, and with the lack of any tangible political solution, he simply decided to abandon millions of refugees, denying them the very hope of having their homes, land or dignity restored. 

Since then, Israel, along with the United States, has fought Palestinians on two different fronts: one, through denying them any political horizon and, the other, by attempting to dismantle their historically enshrined rights, mainly their Right of Return. Washington’s war on the Palestinian refugees’ agency, UNRWA, falls under the latter category as the aim was – and remains – the destruction of the very legal and humanitarian infrastructures that allow Palestinian refugees to see themselves as a collective of people seeking repatriation, reparations and justice. 

Yet, all such efforts continue to fail. Far more important than Abbas’ personal concessions to Israel, UNRWA’s ever-shrinking budget or the failure of the international community to restore Palestinian rights, is the fact that the Palestinian people are, once again, unifying around the Nakba anniversary, thus insisting on the Right of Return for the seven million refugees in Palestine and the shattat – Diaspora. 

With Palestinian reality worsening under the deepening system of Israeli settler colonialism and apartheid, Palestinians now understand that they have no possible alternative but their unity, their resistance and the return to the fundamentals of their struggle. The Unity Intifada of last May was a culmination of this new realization.

Ironically, it was Israel that has unwittingly re-unified Palestinians around the Nakba. By refusing to concede an inch of Palestine, let alone allow Palestinians to claim any victory, a State of their own – demilitarized or otherwise – or allow a single refugee to go home, Palestinians were forced to abandon Oslo and its numerous illusions. The once popular argument that the Right of Return was simply ‘impractical’ no longer matters, neither to ordinary Palestinians nor to their intellectual or political elites. 

In political logic, for something to be impossible, an alternative would have to be attainable. However, with Palestinian reality worsening under the deepening system of Israeli settler colonialism and apartheid, Palestinians now understand that they have no possible alternative but their unity, their resistance and the return to the fundamentals of their struggle. The Unity Intifada of last May was a culmination of this new realization. Moreover, the Nakba anniversary commemoration rallies and events throughout historic Palestine and the world on May 15 have further helped crystallize the new discourse that the Nakba is no longer symbolic and the Right of Return is the collective, core demand of most Palestinians. 

Israel is now an apartheid state in the real meaning of the word. Israeli apartheid, like any such system of racial separation aims at protecting the gains of nearly 74 years of unhinged colonialism, land theft and military dominance. Palestinians, whether in Haifa, Gaza or Jerusalem, now fully understand this, and are increasingly fighting back as one nation. 

And since the Nakba and the subsequent ethnic cleansing of Palestinian refugees are the common denominator behind all Palestinian suffering, the term and its underpinnings are back at center stage of any meaningful conversation on Palestine, as should have always been the case. 

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“Israel has a right to defend itself” just as any defendant in a trial has a right to defend himself.

But Israelis do not have a right to rig the trial, nor a right to escape justice for their crimes.

“Justice, justice shall you pursue.”

“The times, they are now ‘a’changin.'”

https://www.palestinechronicle.com/former-israeli-attorney-general-my-country-is-now-an-apartheid-regime/
The Palestine Chronicle, Feb/12 2022
Former Israeli Attorney-General: “‘My country is Now an Apartheid Regime’””Michael Ben-Yair, a former Israeli Attorney General, has called on the international community to take meaningful steps to end Israel’s apartheid rule in occupied Palestine, in an op-ed published by Ireland’s The Journal magazine on Thursday.
“’It is with great sadness that I must conclude that my country has sunk to such political & moral depths that it is now an apartheid regime,’ Ben-Yair wrote. ‘It is time for the international community to recognize this reality as well.’
“Ben-Yair added that he has spent much of his career analyzing the legal questions concerning Israel’s occupation of the West Bank, Gaza & Jerusalem. He confessed that during his tenure he approved the expropriation of private Palestinian land to build the infrastructure for the expansion of settlements in the occupied territories.
“Ben-Yair’s remarks come less than two weeks after Amnesty International released a report which described Israel as an apartheid state.
“Last year, B’Tselem & Human Rights Watch came to the same conclusion, while a legal opinion issued by Yesh Din in 2020 also said that ‘the crime against humanity of apartheid is being committed in the West Bank.’
“’Between the Jordan River & the Mediterranean Sea, it is Israel that is permanently depriving millions of Palestinians of their civil & political rights. This is Israeli apartheid,’ he stressed.
“In concluding his article, Ben-Yair described the situation on the ground in Palestine as ‘a moral abomination.’”

Hasbara Language Forecast:

We are going to learn that Israel can’t let the Palestinian refugees back because that would be tantamount to the Jews committing suicide! Suicide, I tell you!

This is delusional.
Taking a seemingly intractable problem and making it even more so benefits the Palestinians how?

The logic here is a bit problematic. Something can be impossible without any alternative existing. The Palestinians can of course cling on to their impossible dream, but that just makes them delusional. New narrative, old narrative, new old narrative, it makes no difference. The Palestinians have zero capacity to realize their goal.

The article is a bit silly though. The problem during the negotiations was that the Palestinians were/are still clinging on to their dream of destroying Israel. The Palestinian side never actually told its people that there will be no ‘return’. On the Palestinian side the negotiations were sold as being part of a phased approach to the same dream, which is why when it came time to agree to a permanent settlement the Palestinians couldn’t do it. They had built up too many expectations amongst their population and couldn’t go back to them with the very limited achievements they could achieve.

What has happened now is that due to an absence of any practical approaches that the Palestinians can pursue, their intellectuals have gone back to elaborating their ideal outcome absent the pesky real-world constraints and facts that inhibit such imagination when considering practical options. Rather than being some kind of optimistic and uplifting phenomenon, this is actually a symptom of desperation.

As for the ‘Unity Intifada’ which consisted of some rockets from Gaza and a few riots in Israel. I am always impressed by the capacity of the Palestinians to vastly blow out of proportion their achievements. It is truly a remarkable ability. Like the now forgotten ‘Great March of Return’, it accomplished nothing. Like the ‘Great Escape’ it moved the needle not one bit. Shortly after the end of the ‘Unity Intifada’ an Israeli Arab party joined an Israeli coalition government. The West Bank stayed pretty quiet all throughout. And Gaza went back to being an isolated forgotten den of misery. In other words it had zero impact on the situation.