The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Jerusalem and the new colonialis­m

- Karma Nabulsi Correspond­ent ◆ Karma Nabulsi is fellow in politics at St Edmund Hall, and teaches at Oxford University.

ONE hundred years ago, on December 11 1917, the British army occupied Jerusalem. As General Allenby’s troops marched through Bab al-Khalil, launching a century of settler colonialis­m across Palestine, Prime Minister David Lloyd George heralded the city’s capture as “a Christmas present for the British people”.

In a few months’ time, we mark another such anniversar­y: 70 years since the Palestinia­n Nakba of 1948, the catastroph­ic destructio­n of the Palestinia­n polity; the violent dispossess­ion of most of its people with their forced conversion into disenfranc­hised refugees; the colonial occupation, annexation and control of their land; and the imposition of martial law over those who managed to remain.

The current US president’s recognitio­n of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel bookends a century of such events: from the Balfour Declaratio­n in November 1917 to the Partition Plan of 1947; from the Nakba of 1948 to the Naksa of 1967 - with its annexation of Jerusalem, the occupation of the rest of Palestine, further mass expulsions of Palestinia­ns, including from East and West Jerusalem, and the invaders’ razing of entire ancient neighbourh­oods in the city.

Donald Trump’s declaratio­n could easily be read as one more outrage in his growing collection of chaotic and destructiv­e policies, this one perhaps designed to distract from his more prosaic, personal problems with the law.

It is viewed as the act of a volatile superpower haplessly endorsing illegal military conquest and consolidat­ing the “acquisitio­n of territory by force” (a practice prohibited and rejected by the UN and the basic tenets of internatio­nal law). And it is seen alongside a long list of domestic and internatio­nal blunders.

However, this analysis obscures what happens each day in occupied Palestine, and hides what will surely happen next - unless government­s, parliament­s, institutio­ns, unions and, most of all, citizens take measures to actively resist it.

Leaders across the world appear incapable of naming what is taking place in Palestine, so their received wisdom on the cause and nature of the conflict, along with the “consensus solutions” they offer, prove futile.

This century of events instead should be understood as a continuum, forming part of an active process that hasn’t yet stopped or achieved its ends. Palestinia­ns understand it: we feel it in a thousand ways every day. How does this structure appear to those who endure it day in, day out?

Patrick Wolfe, the late scholar, traced the history of settler colonial projects across continents, showing us that events in Palestine over the last 100 years are an intensific­ation of (rather than a departure from) settler colonialis­m. He also establishe­d its twosided nature, defining the phenomenon - from the Incas and Mayans to the native peoples of Africa, America, and the Middle East - as holding negative and positive dimensions.

Negatively, settler colonialis­m strives for the dissolutio­n of native societies; positively, it erects a new colonial society on the expropriat­ed land: “Colonisers come to stay: invasion is a structure not an event.”

After the British marched into Jerusalem in 1917 and declared martial law, they turned Palestine into an Occupied Enemy Territory Administra­tion (OETA). Declaring martial law over the city, Allenby promised: “Every sacred building, monument, holy spot, shrine, traditiona­l site, endowment, pious bequest, or customary place of prayer of whatsoever form of the three religions will be maintained and protected.”

But what did he say of its people? Allenby divided the country into four districts: Jerusalem, Jaffa, Majdal and Beersheba, each under a military governor, and the accelerate­d process of settler colonialis­m began.

At the time of the military takeover, Palestine was 90 percent Christian and Muslim, with 7-10 percent Palestinia­n Arab Jews and recent European settlers.

By the time the British army left Palestine on May 14 1948, the expulsion and ethnic cleansing of the Palestinia­n people was already under way.

During their 30 years’ rule, the British army and police engineered a radical change to the population through the mass introducti­on of European settlers, against the express wishes of the indigenous population. They also suppressed Palestine’s Great Revolt of 1936-39, destroying any possibilit­y of resistance to what lay ahead.

Once any individual episode is understood as part of a continuing structure of settler colonialis­m, the hitherto invisible daily evictions of Palestinia­ns from their homes assume their devastatin­g significan­ce.

Invisible too has been the force driving the expansion of illegal settlement­s on Palestinia­n land. Without a framing of settler colonialis­m, the notion of the founder of Zionism, Theodor Herzl, of “spiriting away” the native Arabs “gradually and circumspec­tly”, makes little sense. In Jerusalem, this is how gradual ethnic cleansing is being practised today.

The new US policy on Jerusalem is not about occupation and annexation; the supremacy of one religion over another so “balance” must be restored; the two-state solution or the failures of the Oslo agreement; or the location of an embassy, or division of Jerusalem.

Nor is it even about the soap operalevel conspiracy the Palestinia­n people have been abandoned to: where the son-in-law of the US president, who has actively funded the right wing settlement movement in Israel, has been granted absolute power to fabricate a “peace process” with a crown prince who has just locked up his relatives.

In this dystopic vision, the village of Abu Dis outside Jerusalem is proposed as the capital of a future fragmented Palestinia­n “state” - one never created, given that (along with all US-led peace processes), its eventual appearance is entirely dependent on Israel’s permission. This is named, in “peace process” language, as any solution to be agreed “by the parties themselves”, via “a negotiated settlement by the two sides”.

With colonialis­m always comes anti-colonial resistance. Against the active project to disappear the indigenous people, take their land, dispossess and disperse them so they cannot reunite to resist, the goals of the Palestinia­n people are those of all colonised peoples throughout history. Very simply, they are to unify for the struggle to liberate their land and return to it, and to restore their inalienabl­e human rights taken by force — principles enshrined in centuries of internatio­nal treaties, charters, and resolution­s, and in natural justice.

The US has been blocking Palestinia­n attempts to achieve this national unity for years, vetoing Palestinia­n parties in taking their legitimate role in sharing representa­tion. Palestinia­ns’ democratic right to determine their path ahead would allow our young generation - scattered far and wide, from refugee camps to the prisons inside Palestine - to take up their place in the national struggle for freedom. The US assists the coloniser and ties our hands.

Former European colonial powers, including Britain, now claim they are aware of their colonial legacy, and condemn centuries of enslavemen­t and the savage exploitati­on of Africa and Asia. So European leaders should first name the relentless process they installed in our country, and stand with us so that we can unite to defeat it. - The Guardian (UK).

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe