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In memory of Rachel Corrie.
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In
early May of this year, I was in Seattle lecturing for a few days.
While there, I had dinner one night with Rachel Corrie's parents
and sister, who I think are here. In fact, I saw them. Where are
they? Could you stand up, please?
And
I'm going to speak impressionistically, Craig, because I felt you
were still reeling from the shock of your daughter's murder on March
16 in Gaza by an Israeli bulldozer. Mr Corrie told me that he himself
had driven bulldozers, although the one that killed his daughter
deliberately, because she was trying valiantly to protect a Palestinian
home in Rafah from demolition, was not an ordinary Caterpillar bulldozer,
but a 60-ton behemoth specially designed by Caterpillar. There's
a project right there to demonstrate and prevent as many
of these special house demolishing Caterpillars from ever getting
there a mass action that as Americans we can do. They're
specially designed to destroy homes. They have no other purpose.
And it's a far bigger machine than anything he had ever seen or
driven.
Two
things struck me about my brief visit with the Corries. One was
the story they told me about their return to the US after their
daughter's funeral. They had immediately sought out their US senators,
Patty Murray and Mary Cantwell, who are both Democrats, told them
their story, and received the expected expressions of shock, outrage,
anger, and promises of investigation. After both senators returned
to Washington, the Corries, at least when I saw them in May, never
heard from them again, and the promised investigation hasn't yet
materialised, although there is talk about it. And there is talk
that the senators are working behind the scenes to do something.
[Editor's note: As far as we know, nothing has happened.]
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We've
heard so much recently about the "road map" and the prospects
for peace that we seem to have overlooked the most basic fact
of all, which is that Palestinians have refused to capitulate
or surrender, even under the collective punishment meted out
to them by the combined might of Israel and the United States. |
As
expected, the Israeli lobby had explained the realities to them,
and both senators simply begged off. An American citizen was willfully
murdered by the soldiers of a client state of the United States,
using a United States-built instrument of death, a terrorist instrument,
without so much as an official peep or even the routine investigation
that has been promised her family. But the second and far more important
aspect of the Rachel Corrie story for me was the young woman's action
itself. Heroic and dignified at the same time.
She
grew up in Olympia, a city 50 miles south of Seattle, and she had
joined the international solidarity movement, gone to Gaza to stand
with suffering human beings with whom she had never had any contact
before. Her letters back to her family are truly remarkable documents
of her ordinary humanity that makes for very difficult and moving
reading. Especially when she describes the kindness and concern
shown her by all the Palestinians she encounters who clearly welcome
her as one of their own because she lives with them exactly as they
do, sharing their lives and worries, as well as the horrors of the
Israeli occupation and its terrible effects on even the smallest
child. She understands the fate of the refugees and what she calls
the Israeli government's insidious attempt at a kind of genocide
by making it almost impossible for this particular group of individuals
to survive, those are her words. So moving is her solidarity that
it inspires an Israeli reservist called Danny, who has refused service
in the Israeli army, to write her and tell her, and I quote from
the letters, "you are doing a good thing. I thank you for it."
What
shines through all the letters she wrote home, and which were subsequently
published in the London Guardian, is the amazing resistance put
up by the Palestinian people themselves, average human beings put
in the most terrible position of suffering and despair, but continuing
to survive and stay on just the same. We've heard so much recently
about the "road map" and the prospects for peace that we seem to
have overlooked the most basic fact of all, which is that Palestinians
have refused to capitulate or surrender, even under the collective
punishment meted out to them by the combined might of Israel and
the United States. It is that fact, that extraordinary fact of Palestinian
resistance, which is the reason for the existence of a "road map"
and all the numerous so-called peace plans before them, not at all
because the United States and Israel and the international community
have been convinced for humanitarian reasons that the killing and
the violence must stop.
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This
propaganda campaign has made even Arabs believe the lies about
them that, of course, are being put out by people who wish them
no good, but who want to portray them as sort of retarded, you
know, primitives, who are basically trivial and sort of out
of it in general. Under the worst possible circumstances, Palestinian
society has neither been defeated, nor has it crumbled completely
and, this is, of course, Sharon's predicament. Kids still go
to school. Doctors and nurses still take care of their patients.
Men and women go to work. Organisations have their meetings,
and people continue to live. |
If
we miss that truth about the power of Palestinian resistance, despite
all its failings and all its mistakes, and God knows there have
been many, we miss everything. Palestinians have always been a problem
for the Zionist project, and many solutions have perennially been
proposed that minimise rather than solve the problem. The official
Israeli policy, no matter what whether Ariel Sharon uses
the word occupation or not, or whether or not he dismantles a rusty,
unused tower or two, has always been not to accept the reality of
the Palestinian people as equals, nor even to admit that their rights
were scandalously violated all along by Israel. Whereas a few courageous
Israelis over the years have tried to deal with its other concealed
history, most Israelis and what seems like the majority of Americans,
of American Jews, have made every effort to deny, avoid, or negate
the Palestinian reality. That is why there is no peace.
Moreover,
the "road map," as I told the Secretary [of State Colin Powell],
the "road map" says nothing about justice or about the historical
punishment meted out to the Palestinian people for too many decades
to count. What Rachel Corrie's work in Gaza recognised, however,
was precisely the gravity and the density of the living history
of the Palestinian people at the national community and not merely
a collection of deprived refugees. That is what she was in solidarity
with. And I want to remind you that that kind of solidarity is no
longer confined to a small number of intrepid souls here and there,
but is recognised the world over.
Five
years ago, Rachel Corrie would not have gone to Palestine. She wouldn't
have perhaps heard about it. Now the situation has changed. In the
past six months, I have lectured on four continents to many, many
thousands of people. What brings them together is Palestine and
the struggle of the Palestinian people, which is now a byword for
emancipation and enlightenment, regardless of all the vilification
heaped on them by their enemies.
Whatever
the fact, whenever the facts are made known, there is immediate
recognition and an expression of the most profound solidarity with
the justice of the Palestinian cause and the valiant struggles by
the Palestinian people on its behalf. It's an extraordinary thing
that Palestine this year was a central issue, both during the anti-globalisation
meetings in Porto Alegre, Brazil, as well as during the Davos meetings,
at both ends of the worldwide political spectrum.
Just
because our fellow citizens in this country are fed an atrociously
biased diet of ignorance and misrepresentation by the media, when
the occupation is never referred to in lurid descriptions of suicide
attacks, the apartheid wall which is 25 feet high, five feet thick,
and 350 kilometres long that Israel is building is never shown on
CNN and the networks, or is so much as referred to in passing throughout
the lifeless prose of the road map. And the crimes of war, the gratuitous
destruction and humiliation, the maimings, the house demolitions,
agricultural destruction and death imposed on Palestinian civilians
are never shown for the daily, completely routine ordeal that they
are.
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On
the contrary, Samuel Huntington is dead wrong on every point
he makes. No culture or civilisation exists by itself. None
is made up of things like individuality and enlightenment that
are completely exclusive to it, and none exists without the
basic human attributes of community, love, value for life, and
all the others. Even Arabs have those things in their culture.
To suggest otherwise, as he does, is the purist, invidious racism
of the same stripe, as people who used to argue that Africans
have naturally inferior brains or that Asians are really born
for servitude, or that Europeans are a naturally superior race.
This is a sort of parody of Hitlerian science directed uniquely
today against Arabs and Muslims. |
One
shouldn't be surprised that Americans in the main have a very low
opinion of Arabs and the Palestinians. After all, please remember
that all the main organs of the main establishment, of the established
media from left liberal all the way over to fringe right are unanimously
anti-Arab, anti-Muslim, and anti-Palestinian. Look at the media
during the buildup to the illegal and unjust war against Iraq. And
look at how little coverage there was of the immense damage against
Iraqi society done by the 12-year sanctions. And look how relatively
fewer journalistic accounts there were of the immense worldwide
outpouring of opinion against the war. Hardly a single journalist,
except Helen Thomas, who's an Arab-American, has taken the administration
to task for the outrageous lies and confected facts that were spun
out about Iraq as an imminent military threat to the United States
before the war, just as now the same government propagandist who
cynically invented facts about weapons of mass destruction are now
more or less forgotten or shrugged off as irrelevant.
They're
let off the hook by media heavies in discussing the inexcusable
situation for the people of Iraq that the United States has now
single-handedly and irresponsibly created there. However else one
blames Saddam Hussein as a vicious tyrant that he was, he had provided
the people of Iraq with the best infrastructure of services like
water, electricity, health, and education of any Arab country. None
of this is any longer in place. It's no wonder then that with the
extraordinary fear of seeming anti-semitic by criticising Israel
for its daily crimes of war against innocent, unarmed Palestinian
civilians, or criticising the US government and being called anti-American
for its illegal war and its dreadfully run military occupation,
that the vicious media and government campaign against Arab society,
culture, history, and mentality, to say nothing of the campaign
against Arab Americans and Muslim Americans in this country, has
been led by neanderthal publicists and "orientalists" like Daniel
Pipes and Bernard Lewis.
This
has brought too many of us into believing that Arabs really are
an underdeveloped, incompetent, and doomed people, and that with
all the failures in democracy and development, Arabs are alone in
this world for being retarded, being behind the times, unmodernised,
and deeply reactionary. Here is where dignity and critical historical
thinking must be mobilised to see what is what, and to disentangle
truth from propaganda. No one would deny that most Arab countries
today are ruled by unpopular regimes and that vast numbers of poorly
disadvantaged young Arabs are ruled by are exposed to the
ruthless forms of fundamentalist religion. Yet it is simply a lie
to say, as The New York Times in its editorials and in its news
reporting regularly say, that Arab societies are "totally controlled"
and that there's no freedom of opinion, no civil institutions, no
functioning social movement for and by the people.
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They
have seen the atrocities of 9/11, a sign that the Arab and Islamic
world are somehow more diseased and more dysfunctional than
any other, and that terrorism is a sign of a wider distortion
than has occurred in any other culture. We can leave to one
side the slightly inconvenient fact that between them Europe
and the United States account for 80 per cent of the violent
deaths of the 20th century. I mean, that's just a little unimportant
fact. The Islamic world in those conflicts hardly provided a
fraction of that damage. |
Press
laws notwithstanding, you can go to downtown Amman today and buy
a Communist party newspaper there, as well as an Islamist one. Egypt
and Lebanon are full of papers that suggest much more debate and
discussion than these societies are given credit for. The satellite
channels are bursting with diverse opinions in a dizzying variety.
Civil
institutions are, on many levels, having to do with social services,
human rights, syndicates, women's rights, and research institutes,
very lively all over the Arab world. In Palestine alone, there are
over 1,000 NGOs, and it is this vitality and this kind of activity
that has kept society going despite every American and Israeli effort
made to vilify, stop, or mutilate it on a daily basis. And, if you
compare, as I think salutary to do, the American media and its reporting,
especially the leading newspapers like The Post or The New York
Times on the op-ed page, or FOX or CNN, you compare those with the
Arab satellite channels or the newspapers that one can read, you
know, published in London, published in Beirut, published in Cairo,
etc., I mean, who are we kidding? The range of opinion is much greater
in the Arab world than it is here.
This
propaganda campaign has made even Arabs believe the lies about them
that, of course, are being put out by people who wish them no good,
but who want to portray them as sort of retarded, you know, primitives,
who are basically trivial and sort of out of it in general. Under
the worst possible circumstances, Palestinian society has neither
been defeated, nor has it crumbled completely and, this is, of course,
Sharon's predicament. Kids still go to school. Doctors and nurses
still take care of their patients. Men and women go to work. Organisations
have their meetings, and people continue to live. Which seems to
be an offence to Sharon and the other extremists who simply want
Palestinians either in prison or driven away altogether. The military
solution that they've tried hasn't worked at all and never will
work. Why is that so hard for Israelis and Americans to see?
So
I want to suggest that it's our role to help them to understand
this not by suicide bombers, but by rational arguments, mass civil
disobedience by organised protests here and everywhere. The point
I'm trying to make is that we have to see the Arab world generally,
and Palestine in particular, in more comparative and critical ways
than silly books like Bernard Lewis' What Went Wrong.
And
Paul Wolfowitz's ignorant statements about bringing democracy
he should bring democracy to the Pentagon. How about that? His arguments
about bringing democracy to the Arab and Islamic world can even
begin to suggest whatever else is true about the Arabs, there
is an active dynamic at work because, as real people, they live
in a real society and not in some, you know, day dream or wet dream
invented by Paul Wolfowitz and Richard Perle. With all sorts of
currents and counter-currents in it that can't easily be caricatured
as just one seething mass of violent fanaticism.
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But
the Palestinian kids are very gifted, that there is a marvellously
accomplished young Palestinian pianist who's now playing at
the best halls all over the world. That there's another one
who's only 13 or 14 years old who's considered to be a child
prodigy, all of them having connections with this conservatory.
That's never mentioned. It's all suicide bombers and fundamentalists.
So surely those things need to be assessed. |
The
Palestinian struggle for justice is especially something with which
one expresses solidarity rather than endless criticism and dismissive,
frustrating discouragement, and crippling divisiveness. Remember,
the solidarity shown towards Palestine here and everywhere in Latin
America, Africa, Europe, Asia, and Australia. And remember also
that there is a cause to which many people have committed themselves,
difficulties and terrible obstacles notwithstanding. Why? Because
it is a just cause, a noble ideal, a moral quest for equality and
human rights. I want now to speak about dignity which, of course,
has a special place in every culture known to historians, anthropologists,
sociologists and humanists.
I shall
begin by saying that it is a radically wrong orientalist, and even,
indeed, racist proposition to accept the fact or notion or the theory
that unlike Europeans and Americans, Arabs and we're told
this all the time in the media Arabs have no sense of individuality,
they have no regard for individual life, no values that express
love and intimacy and understanding that are supposed to be the
exclusive property of culture like those of Europe and America that
had the Renaissance, the reformation, and enlightenment.
Among
many others, it is the vulgar Thomas Friedman who has been peddling
this absolute rubbish which has, alas, been picked up not by many
other Americans, and this is the sad part of it, but by equally
ignorant and self-deceiving Arab intellectuals. I don't need to
mention any names here. They have seen the atrocities of 9/11, a
sign that the Arab and Islamic world are somehow more diseased and
more dysfunctional than any other, and that terrorism is a sign
of a wider distortion than has occurred in any other culture. We
can leave to one side the slightly inconvenient fact that between
them Europe and the United States account for 80 per cent of the
violent deaths of the 20th century. I mean, that's just a little
unimportant fact. The Islamic world in those conflicts hardly provided
a fraction of that damage.
And
behind all of that specious, unscientific nonsense about wrong and
right civilisation, there is the grotesque shadow of the great false
prophet, Samuel Huntington, who has led a lot of people to believe
that the world can be divided into distinct civilisations battling
against each other forever. On the contrary, Huntington is dead
wrong on every point he makes. No culture or civilisation exists
by itself. None is made up of things like individuality and enlightenment
that are completely exclusive to it, and none exists without the
basic human attributes of community, love, value for life, and all
the others. Even Arabs have those things in their culture. To suggest
otherwise, as he does, is the purist, invidious racism of the same
stripe, as people who used to argue that Africans have naturally
inferior brains or that Asians are really born for servitude, or
that Europeans are a naturally superior race. This is a sort of
parody of Hitlerian science directed uniquely today against Arabs
and Muslims.
And
we must be very firm, of not even going through the motions of arguing
against it. It is the purest drivel. On the other hand, there's
the much more credible and serious stipulation that like every other
instance of humanity, Arab and Muslim life has an inherent value
and dignity which are expressed by Arabs and Muslims in their unique
cultural style, and those expressions need not resemble or be a
copy of one approved model certified by Richard Perle, suitable
for everyone.
The
whole point about human diversity is that it is, in the end, a form
of deep coexistence between very different forms of individuality
and experience that can't all be reduced to one superior form that
we should all follow. And that's behind this absolutely ridiculous,
this hubristic, arrogant idea that somehow America has gone to Iraq
to liberate the Iraqis and show them the true way. I mean, who gave
them that authority? What came over President Bush to I mean,
who can barely get himself on to a golf course? This is the serious
argument foisted on us by pundits all over the mainstream media
who beware the lack of development and knowledge in the Arab world,
and has been picked up by the United Nations in that Arab human
development report, which is full of the most immature and puerile
generalisations about how many books are translated. For example,
they say 300 books have been translated in the Arab world only.
Well, how many books have been translated from other languages into
America? Only 300?
And
this is the most powerful, richest, most developed culture in the
world. If you ask how many books from Arabic have been translated
into English, I'll tell you what the figure is in this country
it's 13 books in the last four years. That shows how advanced America
is, right? And these are the figures that this report bandies about
so that more Arabs feel, we're terrible, we're really behind everybody,
and we really have to take it on the chin and blame ourselves as
some guy on television said, "It's a wakeup call for the Arab world."
As if the Arab world has been asleep waiting for this guy to wake
it up. My God.
All
one has to do, if one has the sense, is to look at the huge variety
of literature, of cinema, of theatre, of painting, of music and
popular culture produced by and for Arabs from Morocco to the Gulf.
Surely that needs to be assessed. And let me, in this connection,
mention something that I'm sure most of you don't even know about.
Under the worst possible conditions, you know, on the West Bank,
Ramallah is a city under siege most of the time. There are curfews.
People can't get from one town to another, one part of a town to
another. There's always the fear of getting picked up by the Israelis
and detained. There are 5,000 prisoners now held without being charged
by Israelis. In spite of all this, and the bombings and the house
demolitions, etc., there is now a flourishing Palestinian music
conservatory where hundreds of eager kids come for piano lessons
and violin lessons and clarinet lessons and cello lessons, under
fire, to teachers who give of their time and of their gifts freely.
And now this has spread all over the West Bank, not just in Ramallah,
but there is a branch in Jerusalem, there's one in Bethlehem, and
so on and so forth.
Now,
I have some papers here. I'm not good at selling things but, here's
a recording made by a group from the conservatory of Arabic music,
a CD. Here is an account of it, and here're some leaflets which
will be available at the back of the hall for you to look at, and
I recommend it. It's a very worthwhile, humane project to support.
It's precisely this kind of thing that never gets mentioned. They
just talk about suicide bombers, right? But the Palestinian kids
are very gifted, that there is a marvellously accomplished young
Palestinian pianist who's now playing at the best halls all over
the world. That there's another one who's only 13 or 14 years old
who's considered to be a child prodigy, all of them having connections
with this conservatory. That's never mentioned. It's all suicide
bombers and fundamentalists. So surely those things need to be assessed
as indications of whether or not Arabs are developed, and not just
how on any given day statistical tables of industrial production
either indicate an appropriate level of development or they show
failure.
The
more important point I want to make, though, is that there's a very
wide discrepancy which we all feel today between our culture and
society on the one hand, and the small group of people who now rule
these societies. Rarely in history has such mediocrity and such
an absence of creativity and independent thought been so concentrated
in so tiny and unrepresented a group, unrepresentative of a group
as the various kings, generals, sultans and presidents, all of them
overweight, who preside today over the Arabs. The worst thing about
them the worst thing about them as a group, almost without
exception, is that they represent only the lowest, the most uninteresting
common denominator of their people. This is not just a matter of
democracy or no democracy. It is that they seem radically to underestimate
themselves and their people, in ways that close them off, that make
them intolerant and fearful of change, frightened of opening up
their society to their people, terrified most of all that they might
anger "big brother," that is the United States.
Instead
of seeing that their citizens are the potential wealth of their
nation, they regard them all as guilty conspirators, vying for the
ruler's power. This is the real failure, how during the terrible
war against the Iraqi people, not a single Arab leader had the self-dignity
and confidence to say something about the pillaging and military
occupation of one of the most important Arab countries. Fine. Fine,
it was an excellent thing that Saddam Hussein's appalling regime
is no more. Who could fight with that? Who could disagree? But who
appointed the US to be the Arab mentor, to be almost, the nanny?
Who asked the United States to take over the Arab world, allegedly
on behalf of its citizens and bring it something called democracy,
especially at a time when, in our own country in America, the school
system, the health system, and the whole economy are degenerating
into the worst level since the 1929 depression?
Why
was the collective Arab voice not raised against the US's flagrantly
illegal intervention? Where the French objected, but the Arabs said
nothing, which did so much harm and inflicted so much humiliation
upon the entire Arab nation. This is truly a colossal failure in
nerve, in dignity, in self-solidarity. With all the Bush administration's
talk about guidance from the almighty we heard some of it
last night doesn't one Arab leader have the courage to say
as a great people we are guided by our own lights and traditions
and religions? But nothing. Not a peep.
As
the poor citizens of Iraq live through the most terrible ordeal
and the rest of the region quakes in its collective boots, each
one petrified that its country may be next. And as for what's happening
to Palestinians, Egypt still has commercial and, of course, diplomatic
relationships with Israel, as do Jordan and Morocco, all to safeguard
their rulers' continuing US patronage. How indecent. How indecent
and indecorous the embrace of George Bush, the man whose country
whose war destroyed an Arab country gratuitously by the combined
how indecent it was that the combined leadership of the major
Arab countries last week embraced him so warmly. Was there no one
there who had the guts to remind George W what he had done, to humiliate
and bring more suffering to the Arab people than anyone before him,
and must he always be greeted with hugs and smiles and kisses and
low bows? Where is the domestic, the diplomatic and political and
economic support necessary to sustain an anti-occupation movement
on the West Bank and Gaza?
Instead,
all one hears is that foreign ministers preach to the Palestinians
to mind their way, avoid violence, and keep at the peace negotiations,
even though it has been so obvious that Sharon's interest in peace
is just about zero. There has been no there has been, I mean,
this is unimaginable
unimaginable that there has been no concerted
Arab response to the separation wall or to the assassinations or
to the collective punishment.
Only
a bunch of tired cliches repeating the well-worn formulas authorised
by the state department. Perhaps the one thing that strikes me as
the low point in Arab ability to grasp the dignity of our own and
our Palestinian cause is expressed, I'm very sorry to say, by the
current state of the Palestinian authority. Abu Mazzen, a number
two colourless figure with no political support among his own people
was picked for the job by Israel and the United States precisely
because he has no backbone and no constituency. He's not an orator,
or a great organiser. He doesn't know any languages except Arabic,
about which I'm not so sure, and nor is he anything more than a
dutiful aide to Yasser Arafat. And because I'm afraid they see in
him a man who will do Israel's bidding, how could even Abu Mazzen
stand there to pronounce words written for him like a ventriloquist's
puppet by some state department functionary? Instead of saying I'm
not going to read from your speech, I'm going to read my speech.
He didn't even have the dignity to say that. And he reads a speech
in which he commendably speaks about Jewish suffering, but then
amazingly says next to nothing about his own people suffering at
the hands of Israel.
How
could he accept so undignified and manipulated a role for himself,
and how could he forget his representation of a people that has
been fighting heroically for over a century, just because the US
and Israel have told him that he must? And when Israel simply says
that there will be a Palestinian state without any contrition for
the horrendous amount of damage it has done, the uncountable war
crimes, the sheer, sadistic, systematic humiliation of every single
Palestinian man, woman, and child, I must confess to a complete
lack of understanding as to why a leader or representative of that
long-suffering people doesn't so much as take note of it, to say
there's this. You know, we don't want you to account for it, we
just want you to take notice of it. I am filled with incomprehension.
Has he entirely lost his sense of dignity? Has he forgotten that
since he's not just an individual, but also the bearer of his people's
fate especially at a crucial moment?
Is
there anyone who is here, who is not bitterly disappointed in his
total failure to rise to the occasion and stand with dignity, the
dignity of his people's experience and cause, and testify to it
with pride and without compromise, without ambiguity, without the
half-embarrassed, half-apologetic tone that Palestinian leaders
take when they are begging for a little kindness from some totally
unworthy white father? But that has been the behavior, but that
has been the behavior of Palestinian leaders since Oslo, and alas,
even since Haj Amin, a combination of misplaced, juvenile defiance
and plaintive supplication. Why on earth do they always think it
is absolutely necessary to read scripts written for them insultingly
by their enemies?
The
basic dignity of our life as Arabs in Palestine, throughout the
Arab world and here in America, is that we are our own people with
a heritage, a history, a tradition and, above all, a language. It
needn't be Arabic, it could be English, but it's our language, as
Palestinians that is more than adequate to the task of representing
our real aspirations, since those aspirations derive from the experience
of dispossession and suffering that has been imposed on each Palestinian
since 1948. Not one of our political spokespersons the same
is true of the Arabs ever speaks with self-respect and dignity
of what we are, what we want, what we have done, and where we want
to go.
Slowly,
however, and I conclude here, the situation is changing, and the
old regime made up of the Abu Mazzens of this world is passing and
will gradually be replaced by a new set of emerging leaders all
over the Arab world. Leaders who are more self-confident and who
have a better idea of themselves than the old leaders did. The most
promising is made up, I think, of a new Palestinian organisation
whose members are called the National Political Initiative in Palestine.
They are grassroots activists whose main activity is not pushing
papers on a desk, nor juggling bank accounts, nor looking for journalists
to pay attention to them, but who come from the ranks of the professionals,
the working classes, and young intellectuals and activists, teachers,
doctors, lawyers, working people who have kept society going while
also fending off daily Israeli attacks.
Second,
these are people these are people committed to the kind of
democracy and popular participation undreamt of by the Palestinian
authority whose idea of democracy is stability and security for
itself.
Lastly,
they offer social services to the unemployed, health to the uninsured
and the poor, proper secular generation to a new generation who
must be taught the realities of a modern world, not just the extraordinary
worth of the old world. For such programmes, the National Political
Initiative stipulates that getting rid of the occupation is the
only way forward, and that in order to do that, a representative
national unified leadership be elected freely to replace the cronies,
and the ineffectiveness that have plagued Palestinian leaders for
the past century.
Only
if we respect ourselves as Arabs and Americans finally, and understand
the true dignity and justice of our struggles, only then can we
appreciate why, almost despite ourselves, so many people all over
the world, including Rachel Corrie and the two young people wounded
with her from ISM, Tom Hurndel and Brian Avery, have felt it possible
to express their solidarity with us. I leave you with one last irony.
Isn't
this astonishing that all the signs of popular solidarity that Palestine
and the Arabs receive occur with no comparable sign of solidarity
and dignity for ourselves, that others admire and respect us more
than we do ourselves? Isn't it time we caught up with ourselves,
with our own status, and made certain that our representatives here
and elsewhere realise there's a first step. That they are fighting
for a just and noble cause, and that they have nothing to apologise
for or anything to be embarrassed about. On the contrary, they should
be proud.
We
should all be proud of what our people have done and proud also
to represent them. Thank you very much.
Note: The above is also posted at www.democracynow.org/transcripts/edwardsaid.shtml
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