|
The Return of History and
Absence of Humanity Aref Assaf, PhD
American Arab Forum
www.aafusau.org
1/28/2008
To watch the thousands of Palestinian civilians overpowering
the man-made fence to enter into Egypt, one is at once in the
presence of a determined though injured human spirit seeking
survival and at the same time a reflective episode of a
historical past. The scenes from Rafah in the Gaza Strip last
week, when hundreds of thousands of Palestinians poured into
Egypt to restock on essential food and fuel supplies, once again
glaringly revealed the world's failure to address the issue of
human rights abuses of Palestinians.
Surely, it was not exactly the Red Sea parting to allow a
persecuted, enslaved people to flee to safety, but it was pretty
close as far as political symbolism goes. Palestinians this week
blew holes through the wall on the Egyptian-Palestinian border
that Israel built to pen in the Palestinians in Gaza, and
hundreds of thousands of Palestinians poured over the border
into Egypt. They went mainly to purchase the simple everyday
needs that had been denied them recently due to Israel's policy
of total isolation and strangulation of Gaza and its people.
The scale and symbolism of events in Gaza clarify some simple
truths about the Palestinian issue in its wider historical,
political, and geographic context - and perhaps also its moral
context, thanks to US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's
insensitive and obtuse call to "think creatively" about how to
deal with the Gaza situation.
It is ironic but not unexpected that 3,500 years after the
Hebrews fled their dismal life in Egypt and escaped eastward to
freedom across the miraculously stilled Red Sea; hundreds of
thousands of Palestinians should be fleeing from the modern-day
descendants of the Hebrews, who now play the role of oppressive
Pharaoh to the subjugated and dehumanized Palestinians in Gaza.
The reversed political geography is politically stunning, and
tragic for both sides.
The double irony, however, is that the indigenous Palestinians
in both cases pay the heaviest price. In antiquity, the Hebrews
who fled Egypt conquered and settled in Palestine, driving out
the native Canaanites and others who can be seen as the
ancestors of the Palestinians; just as the Hebrews can be seen
as the ancestors of Israelis and Jews today.
More significant are the continuing implications of Israel's
repeated attempts to force neighboring Arab states to assume
responsibility for policing the Palestinian refugees and
subduing the Palestinian nationalist resistance movement - both
spawned by Israel's creation and the parallel exile and
occupation of the Palestinians.
Two Arab leaders in particular will suffer politically from this
crisis - Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas. Israel and the United States have tried
unsuccessfully to use to control Gaza, thwart the rise of Hamas,
and protect Israel from Palestinian wrath, just as they used the
Jordanian and Lebanese governments to achieve similar goals.
Inherently, Mubarak and Abbas cannot play the role of Israel's
subcontracted jailer, strangler, and starver of the Palestinians
in Gaza, and expect to remain credible with their own people or
other Arabs. When an Arab leader is caught between acting as an
agent and surrogate for Israel and the US in treating the
Palestinians like animals, or showing support for the basic
humanitarian needs of Palestinians, they will lean toward
helping the Palestinians. They will also try desperately to
cling to the material aid and increasingly vacuous political
validation they get from the US and Israel. Mubarak and Abbas
swayed in the wind this week, buffeted by their own untenable
confusion about whether their primary role is to implement Arab,
Israeli, or American priorities.
The equally bewildered American position was reflected in Rice's
macabre call to deal "creatively" with the Gaza situation. Why
"creatively?" Is this a kindergarten finger-painting class? Why
not deal with Gaza on the basis of more compelling criteria,
such as legality, legitimacy, and humanity?
The American call for "creativity" in dealing with Gaza is an
ethical weapon of mass destruction. It will only aggravate the
widespread disdain, fear, and disgust that define much of the
world's attitude to American foreign policy. Rice's call for
creativity is a cheap attempt to get around the moral,
political, and legal consequences of Israel's many decades of
brutality in Gaza, and Washington's refusal to deal with the
reality of Hamas' election victory last year.
Israel and the US refuse to do the hard work of making
reasonable compromises that all the Arabs, including Hamas, have
already suggested: to engage with all the Palestinians and
negotiate, first, a long-term truce and, subsequently, a
permanent peace that is fair to all, that gives Israelis and
Palestinians alike a chance to live in peace and dignity. The
quest for "creativity" is a desperate bid to evade law,
morality, human decency, and constructive political compromise.
It is a moral abomination that demeans all Americans in whose
name it is spoken.
It is also one reason why the flow of thousands of desperate,
dehumanized people across the Sinai - fleeing subjugation and
brutality, and in search for their own humanity - has gone the
other way this week, 3,500 years after today's Israeli jailers
were history's jailed Hebrews. No surprises, here; just politics
and humanity, or absence thereof, taking their normal course.
The answer is not "creativity." It is mutual respect, abiding by
the law, and, above all, human decency.
|