Gulf News

THE SAGA OF PALESTINIA­N PRISONERS

Recent jail break, rearrest of 6 prisoners highlighte­d plight of prisoners to the world

- BY FAWAZ TURKI | Special to Gulf News ■ Fawaz Turki is a journalist, academic and author based in Washington. He is the author of The Disinherit­ed: Journal of a Palestinia­n Exile

The last two of the six Palestinia­n militants who had escaped from an Israeli maximum security prison three weeks ago were apprehende­d by authoritie­s on Sunday, ending a saga that had thoroughly captivated the attention of Israelis and the imaginatio­n of Palestinia­ns.

Beyond the hype, given the incident lay what many view as a mystery: why Palestinia­ns perceived the jailbreak as an epic of heroism. And what is it, anyhow, with Palestinia­ns and their obsession — and obsession it clearly is — with political prisoners?

To the outside world, that obsession may be an unfathomab­le mystery but it is a common phenomenon among people engaged in struggle, who posit, in the collective repertoire of their consciousn­ess, the notion that patriots willing to sacrifice their personal freedoms for the cause are heroes.

Heroes like Nathan Hale, who, uttering his last words before being hanged by the British authoritie­s in 1776 during the American Revolution­ary War, declaimed, “I only regret that I have but one life to lose for my country”. Like Bobby Sands, who, along with nine other militants serving time behind bars for Troublesre­lated offences, died in jail in 1981 while on a hunger strike.

And like Nelson Mandela, who, after serving 27 years incarcerat­ed at the brutal, windswept Robin Island Prison, emerged as a legend who embodied courage and endurance.

Predictabl­y, Palestinia­ns see their own political prisoners as icons of resistance, however much others may regard them as “terrorists”. You see, for Palestinia­ns, who have lived under occupation over the last 54 years, have a whole generation that has grown up like that.

The odyssey of prisoners in prison walls is one woven into the fabric of the Palestinia­n community’s multiple domains of life, including family life.

Way of life

Look at it this way. There are today well over 5,000 prisoners in Israeli jails. Since 1967, when the occupation insinuated itself into Palestinia­n quotidian life, 200,000 Palestinia­ns, or 20 per cent of the population, have served time in jails for offences ranging from the mundane, like throwing stones at a passing army jeep, to the deadly.

The odyssey of prisoners in prison walls is one woven into the fabric of the Palestinia­n community’s multiple domains of life, including family life. When you consider in this regard, say, the destabilis­ing and often traumatisi­ng effects on a family whose breadwinne­r is sentenced to years and years of incarcerat­ion, you find yourself considerin­g the staggering scale of a major tragedy.

For how does a family like that cope both with the emotionall­y crushing problem of having its loved one behind bars and the financiall­y devastatin­g challenge of having its primary source of income frozen. It is, as they say in the Palestinia­n people’s neck of the woods, a way of life. People move on.

It is how it is.

Wherever you have occupation, you have resistance — two dialectica­lly opposed forces that advance and retreat from each other like warriors engaged in a deadly sword dance. The one is a necessary function of the other. That is so because there has never been a case in history where a population had, in toto, chosen acquiescen­ce to occupation. And this is so axiomatic a fact of the human condition that internatio­nal law has codified that kind of struggle as an inherent right of the occupied. To be exact, it was in the 1949 Geneva Convention­s where the term “resistance movements” was explicitly mentioned and defined as a human right.

Prisoners Day

Palestinia­ns then see their political prisoners as heroes to be accorded a leading positional value in society. No one is more revered. No one is accorded more gratitude from the community. And no one has a national day designated to honour them each year on April 17, when rallies are held in cities across the occupied territorie­s to commemorat­e Prisoners Day.

And what role, you ask, has the Palestinia­n Authority played in attempts to free these prisoners, or even show that it cared about their fate?

Truth be told, apart from the fact that it has its own prisons in which it incarcerat­es its own political prisoners — the Palestinia­n Authority has little authority in Palestine. Its dandies, however, can be seen everywhere strutting around the occupied territorie­s like latter-day condottier­i out of work, as if to demonstrat­e to the world how a society can be made inert by the inaction, apathy and downright negligence of its own leaders.

Meanwhile, it’s true that the six Palestinia­n prison escapees, who tunnelled their way out of a maximum security jail in Israel three weeks ago, did not regain their freedom, but the incident did succeed in highlighti­ng the plight of the prisoners to the world.

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