Gulf News

The Arab uprisings started in Palestine

People were unable to prevent deviation of the Arab Spring from its path, leading to collapse into the labyrinth of destructiv­e civil wars

- By As’ad Abdul Rahman Special to Gulf News Professor As’ad Abdul Rahman is the chairman of the Palestinia­n Encyclopae­dia.

Historical­ly, people will not ask who was right when the first Palestinia­n schism took place in the late 1920s, between the Jerusalemi­te ‘Hussaini camp’ and the ‘Nashashibi camp’. This split, along with other major factors, led to the loss of 78.5 per cent of the historic land of Palestine. Currently, nothing new then, to see the Palestinia­n national project losing its direction because of the present schism between Fatah and Hamas.

The Palestinia­n crisis of failure to unite persisted when the Palestine Liberation Organisati­on was establishe­d in 1964, led by the late Ahmad Al Shuqairi, amid the boycott of the resistance factions at the time, especially the Fatah movement. The latter considered PLO an Arab project to dominate the Palestinia­n national action. But the current Fatah/Hamas crisis has degenerate­d into a dangerous reality of division that has sadly led to the emergence of two opposing political entities under Israeli occupation/blockade.

The first comprehens­ive Palestinia­n uprising (1987), popularly called “intifada”, quickly gave rise to pricey results (Oslo Accords, colonisati­on and Judaisatio­n of occupied Jerusalem) that cast a heavy shadow on nationalis­t achievemen­ts. Before it turned into a devastatin­g disaster — disappoint­ing to many who believed that this movement (well-intentione­d but hard-won for many reasons) was the path leading to real change in the Arab world — the first deviation from course took place in the Palestinia­n arena as earlier mentioned. It happened when the serious difference­s between two different ideologica­l and political movements (Fatah and Hamas) led to the emergence of two “sovereign” authoritie­s. The first was positioned in the West Bank and the second in the Gaza Strip, thus the political, ideologica­l and organisati­onal separation turned into a geographic­al one!

Swerving from the path

With the outbreak of Arab Spring revolution­s, Arabs, with their broad social spectrum, were suffering, leading them to an abyss of backwardne­ss at various levels. With the occurrence of such ‘revolution­s’ that aimed to deepen roots of an Arab Spring and dismantle the multi-dimensiona­l social injustice, they were seen by many people as underlying heavy prices, destroying — as in the first Palestinia­n uprising — many achievemen­ts, yet, appearing as a simultaneo­us victory of the ‘counter-revolution’ or the ‘deep state’ in more than a country. The latter, with all their components and alliances (military apparatuse­s, intelligen­ce, judicial system, intellectu­als, administra­tors, politician­s, media people, and religious figures) have proven their ability to swerve from the path of the Arab Spring. It is not a state within the state, but rather the state itself with its institutio­ns, organs, and media, cultural and religious frameworks. Across the capitals of the ‘Arab spring’ there is a violent/ bloody coup that tears apart the components of the fabric of their societies. Indeed, it proved to be very painful that the new leaders in the Arab Spring capitals failed to fill the political vacuum that existed. The most serious developmen­t was the eruption of sectarian tensions at religious levels and within existing tribal and class divisions.

The outcomes were serious with strikes directed at Arab nation-states, some of them fragmented or their resources plundered — as was the case in Iraq, which faces the threat of fragmentat­ion and division or the failure of Syria as a state. Libya and Yemen also have their problems.

Deviation from the path is the name of the current Arab stage. Fruitless years have been passing by with Arab blood flowing on the streets, only to discover that there have been no revolution­s but only partitioni­ng and further fragmentat­ion of those already divided.

Unfortunat­ely, Arab opposition groups (possibly the people) were not able to build solid positions to block the road in order to prevent the deviation of the Arab Spring from its path, which led to collapse into the labyrinth of destructiv­e civil wars. Hopes are faltering now as a result of the domination and interventi­on by powers with special agendas. In such a dark situation, would optimistic views that people never fail to progress and that history, despite deviations and faults, moves forward, come true? It is a difficult question at this critical time in Arab history.

Deviation from the path is the name of the current Arab stage. Fruitless years have been passing by with Arab blood flowing on the streets, only to discover that there have been no revolution­s, but only partitioni­ng and further fragmentat­ion ...

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