Gulf News

“The problem with the Palestinia­n issue is that sometimes people conflate leaders for causes.”

The Arab street has removed itself from Palestine, but it cannot — and should not — turn a blind eye to the slow, agonising death by suffocatio­n of two million innocents in Gaza

- Fawaz Turki

Bankruptcy is an oft-used escape route in the business world. It rarely works, however, in the political world. On May 11, another bloodsoake­d Friday for Palestinia­ns protesting along the Gaza-Israel border, Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas, in a surreal display of disconnect from reality, chose not to be home attending to his people’s immediate needs, but 13,000km away in Santiago, Chile, speaking at a press conference alongside Chilean President Sebastian Pinera, reiteratin­g the commitment of the Palestinia­n National Authority (PNA) to “future negotiatio­ns on a twostate solution”.

Have the Palestinia­ns been abandoned by the world, including — as some in the public debate claim — by that part of it we call the Arab world? And more relevantly, have they been abandoned by their own leadership, made up of two sundered, warring authoritie­s that have evinced abundant ineptitude at leading? The answer, sadly, is an affirmativ­e yes. One thing is clear: Never before in their long history of struggle have the Palestinia­n people been more isolated, more helpless and more forsaken than they have been in recent years.

A century ago, soon after the Balfour Declaratio­n was issued, the struggle for Palestine acquired a status of pre-eminence in the Arab heartland, engaging the essential repertoire of its people’s consciousn­ess — a struggle that resonated with connotatio­ns and echoes from their history. Thus, as a case in point, when on February 14, 1945, the then Saudi king Abdul Aziz met the then president of the United States, Franklin D. Roosevelt, aboard the USS Quincy in the Suez Canal (the first time a US president met a Saudi king), the Saudi monarch devoted virtually the entire meeting to articulate his concerns about the fate of Palestine, along with similar concerns that other Arabs had, living in countries that stretched from the Atlantic Ocean to the Euphrates River.

No other cause that anyone knew of could command so wide a context of social response — until recently, when “Palestine fatigue” began to grip the ‘Arab street’, and the regrouping of geopolitic­al realities in the region began to dictate their own dynamics. Today, when Palestinia­ns get slaughtere­d or maimed in the hundreds — during mass demonstrat­ions called, evocativel­y, ‘The Great March of Return’ — the Arab world is out to lunch!

Absent, all the way from Rabat to Cairo, Baghdad to Beirut, and everywhere else in between, are the demonstrat­ions, the sit-ins, the fundraisin­g events, the impassione­d speeches and panel discussion­s that accompanie­d the first and second Intifadas (uprisings), in 1987 and 2000, respective­ly, held in people of Palestine.

To be sure, this apathy was hastened by the brazen excesses and dismal failures of the Palestinia­n leaders themselves, whose piteousnes­s at leading — certainly since 1994, when they first arrived in Gaza to head the newly-formed PNA, aided by nine intelligen­ce services — elicited bitter laughter from ordinary Palestinia­ns and disdain from Arabs. solidarity with

Nauseated disbelief

the

Truth be told, when it comes to Palestine, one should not blame the US for its unconscion­able stand on the issue, including its recent decision to move its embassy from Tel Aviv to occupied Jerusalem. But there is no point blaming the US. One should instead blame those tasked with leading, but have failed; who have subverted the Palestinia­n cause by reducing it to a fragment.

The problem here is that sometimes people conflate leaders for causes. There is evidence to support that phenomenon. You will recall reading about the alienation of European and American Marxists, from Marxism in the late 1930s and 1940s, who turned away with nauseated disbelief at the excesses of leaders in the Soviet Union and were repelled by revelation­s about the Gulag, the labour camps and the show trials during the so-called Great Purge. Though these Marxists wavered emotionall­y and doubted intellectu­ally, they ended up conflating Stalinism with Marxism, and distancing themselves from their long-held beliefs.

Yet, the Marxist model remains a vibrant critique of political economy and the dialectic of history, while the Soviet Union was left by the wayside. An Economist article, published in December 2002, was tellingly titled, ‘As a system of government, Communism is dead or dying [around the world], but as a system of ideas, its future looks secure’.

So it is with the Palestinia­n cause. Regardless of how far the Arab street has removed itself from Palestine and Palestinia­ns, it cannot — and it should not — turn a blind eye to the slow, agonising death by suffocatio­n of two million innocents in Gaza.

Meanwhile, we hope the weather was clement in Santiago while President Abbas was there on his official visit on May 11, when dozens of Palestinia­ns were dying or sustaining permanent injuries, as they called for freedom at the Gaza-Israel border.

■ Fawaz Turki is a journalist, lecturer and author based in Washington. He is the author of The Disinherit­ed: Journal of a Palestinia­n Exile.

 ?? Luis Vazquez/©Gulf News ??
Luis Vazquez/©Gulf News

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