Gulf News

“Nakba has taught Palestinia­ns that strength of a community reveals itself in times of distress.”

Dispersal in exile and suffering under occupation have helped Palestinia­ns sustain their identity and sharpen their resolve for survival

- Fawaz Turki

Unarmed Gazan protesters gather peacefully at makeshift encampment­s by the wire- fence separating their tormented strip of land from Israel. They evocativel­y call their trek to the border March for the Return. They number in the tens of thousands, and they are in a festive mood. Ordinary, everyday Palestinia­n men, women, children. Young and old. The elderly in wheelchair­s. Toddlers in strollers.

The idea for the march was first floated by social media activists several months before and only later adopted — some will say, latched on to — by Hamas. But no need here to fret over who sired it. It smacked of people- power and hit a chord with Gazans. After all, tomarch for the return speaks to many in Gaza, out of whose population of just under two million, 1.3 million are refugees, or the descendant­s of refugees, fromcities, towns and villages in ancestral Palestine.

And these folks begin to throw stones at the fence, most hurled from 150 to 200 yards ( imagine a par 3, if you’re a golfer) with only a few reaching their target. No matter. Stone throwing is a symbolic act for Palestinia­ns, going back to the days of the 1987 uprising against the occupation, an uprising that captivated the imaginatio­n of people around he world, who in turn naturalise­d its Arab name, Intifada, into their own languages.

It was a Friday, the last day but one of March, which coincided with Day of the Land— for Palestinia­ns a solemn occasion that commemorat­es the events of 1976 when the Israeli government’s announceme­nt of a plan to expropriat­e and colonise thousands of dunams of Palestinia­n land triggered protests that resulted in the killing of six unarmed Palestinia­ns and the wounding of a hundred others.

And here are these Palestinia­ns at the Gaza- Israel border, whose stone- throwing hurt no Israelis. Hurling stones was not, after all, meant to hurt but to say. Yet, before the day was out, well over a dozen Palestinia­ns were shot dead by soldiers and hundreds of others were injured. Why, you wonder, did the Israelis unleash such lethal fury against a crowd of unarmed Palestinia­ns?

Simply this: They were unarmed and they were Palestinia­n. Nothing scares Israel — and sends a shiver downits spine— more than unarmed Palestinia­ns reminding it of who they are, where they came from and why their sense of peoplehood remains anchored in Palestine. Hey, Palestinia­ns as a nation were meant to have atrophied and disappeare­d fromthewor­ld stage soon after their dismissal in the Balfour Declaratio­n a century before as “the non- Jewish communitie­s in Palestine” and the “Arab refugees” they were called after their patrimony was dismembere­d seven decades ago. Yes, indeed, a war waged by Palestinia­ns where they throw stones at their occupiers, and coin poignant bywords imbued with historical pathos, is more deadly to Israeli leaders than one waged through use of blood and fire

Recall how conservati­ve Jews in Israel and in the Euro- American world reacted when, in July 2001, the late Edward Saeed, the renowned Palestinia­n academic and the West’s most respected Arab intellectu­al, himself decided to become a stonethrow­er, headed down south of Lebanon and hurled his own symbolic projectile­s at the fence that Israel had erected after it ended its 18 years of occupation of the region.

Showing resilience

True, Palestinia­ns have lived troubled lives — for some, as Gazans will tell you, non- lives — but if the ethos of the Nakba has taught them anything, it is this that the strength of a community reveals itself in times of distress, when men and women find that a capacity to show resilience, teleologic­ally acquired during national struggle, becomes woven into the fabric of their identity. Somehow you find ways to survive and heal, to regenerate and re- vision. you become empowered, as it were, by the spite of your enemy.

Dispersal in exile and suffering under occupation should have, over the last seven decades, caused the Palestinia­ns to become unglued, but in fact these two different calamities have served, in tandem, to sustain their identity and sharpen their genius for survival.

We mourn the deaths of the 18 Palestinia­ns who were killed at the border last Friday as they protested within a stone’s throw from their ancestral homeland. They died as martyrs. And when a man dies, his life ends, but when amartyr dies, his life begins. Their memory will continue to animate new modes of expression in our lives.

So keep the faith, I say, keep the faith, when you join the March for the Return again this coming Friday, perhaps finding time to sing the song that my generation of Palestinia­ns, who grew up in the refugee camps in Beirut in the late 1950s, sang, a song whose refrain is: ‘ Who am I, who are ye? I am the returnee, I am the returnee.’

■ Fawaz Turki is a journalist, lecturer and author based inWashingt­on. He is the author of The Disinherit­ed: Journal of a Palestinia­n Exile. For full article, log on to:

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 ?? Niño Jose Heredia/ © Gulf News ??
Niño Jose Heredia/ © Gulf News

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