Toronto Star

Palestinia­n story is heartbreak­ing

- LINDA MCQUAIG LINDA MCQUAIG IS AN AUTHOR, JOURNALIST AND A FREELANCE CONTRIBUTI­NG COLUMNIST FOR THE STAR.

The horrific events in Gaza are presented in our media outlets under the bland and misleading heading “the Israeli-Hamas” war.

The term “war” implies there are two combatants facing off with high-powered weaponry. But that characteri­zation fails to capture the incredibly lopsided nature of this “war.”

One side, Israel, is heavily armed and has the backing and billions of dollars in military support from the most powerful country on Earth, the United States.

Israel is trying to destroy Hamas. But it has failed to locate the Hamas militants and the captives they seized in their murderous rampage into Israel on Oct. 7.

Instead, the full impact of Israel’s relentless military campaign has fallen on a defenceles­s population — more than two million Palestinia­ns, trapped within the walled compound of Gaza, with no possible refuge. For six months, Israel has bombed them, their homes, their schools and hospitals, killing 32,000 and reducing their society to rubble. It has cut off access to food and medicine.

This extreme power imbalance has long been the case in the territory known as Palestine, where the stories of two peoples are deeply intertwine­d, but we’ve only really paid attention to one of those stories.

We in the West are very familiar with the heartbreak­ing story of Jewish refugees fleeing hideous persecutio­n in Europe, including pogroms and the Nazi Holocaust and their resettleme­nt in a Jewish homeland in Palestine — a story powerfully imprinted on the western imaginatio­n in the iconic 1960 Hollywood film “Exodus,” staring Paul Newman.

We’ve been less aware — to the point of ignoring — the story of the hundreds of thousands of Arabspeaki­ng people who lived on the land that was to become the Jewish homeland.

The very existence of that original Arab community has frequently been denied, amid suggestion­s that Israel was establishe­d on barren land — a suggestion repeated recently by B.C. cabinet minister Selina Robinson when she said Israel was founded on a “crappy piece of land.”

In fact, there was a “vibrant Arab society” there, according to Columbia University professor Rashid Khalidi, author of “The Hundred Years War on Palestine.”

As Gaza is besieged, we should finally pay some attention to the Palestinia­n narrative, which is also heartbreak­ing. Consider it a longoverdu­e land acknowledg­ment.

In even a thumbnail sketch, it’s a story of immense suffering, going back to the First World War when the collapse of the Ottoman Empire left the territory under British military control. The British quickly proclaimed the Balfour Declaratio­n, which stated their support for the creation of a Jewish homeland in Palestine, as advocated by European Jewish activists known as Zionists.

The Balfour Declaratio­n also made clear that there would be no homeland for the Arab-speaking people who had lived in Palestine for centuries and who made up 94 per cent of the population (while Jews made up six per cent), notes Khalidi.

For decades, the British encouraged European Jews to immigrate to Palestine and to organize politicall­y and culturally. The British denied such organizati­onal rights to the Palestinia­ns, who were discrimina­ted against and brutally repressed when they rebelled.

After the Second World War, the Palestinia­ns found themselves further disempower­ed when their fate was largely determined by the U.S. — an even more fervent supporter of a Jewish homeland in Palestine — and the new global superpower.

When the United Nations voted to partition Palestine in 1947, the Zionist forces prevailed over the Palestinia­n population, destroying hundreds of Palestinia­n villages, killing thousands of Palestinia­ns and expelling more than 700,000 from their land in what Palestinia­ns call the “Nakba,” or catastroph­e.

Today, millions of Palestinia­ns still live in refugee camps in neighbouri­ng countries, while in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, Palestinia­ns are surrounded by hundreds of thousands of Jewish settlers, some of whom have acted as vigilantes.

The Palestinia­n story — which started with a “vibrant” society — continues today with the heartbreak­ing events in Gaza, where children are starving to death.

 ?? AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? As Gaza is besieged, we should finally pay some attention to the Palestinia­n narrative, Linda McQuaig writes. Consider it a long-overdue land acknowledg­ment.
AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES As Gaza is besieged, we should finally pay some attention to the Palestinia­n narrative, Linda McQuaig writes. Consider it a long-overdue land acknowledg­ment.
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