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The
cause of Palestine consists of the restoration of the national rights of
the Palestinian people and enabling the Palestinians to exercise their
right of self-determination in their own territory. Theirs is the
territory illegally mandated to Great Britain by the League of Nations in
1920-21 and subsequently "partitioned" by the United Nations in 1947 to
establish a so-called "Jewish state" enclave for the Zionist movement.
Enabling the Palestinians to exercise their right of self-determination in
their own territory means implementing the Palestinians' right to return
to their lands and to be restored in the property/properties that were
taken from them in the course of acts of conquest by the Zionist movement,
and in clear cut violation of international law, during 1947-48 and again
in June 1967.
Many activists in this highly
just cause have been drawing comparisons between the regimen of bantustans
and separate laws imposed on the native population by the tiny apartheid
white-racist minority's regime in South Africa between 1948 and 1991 and
the "legal" regime by which the Zionists' regulatory authorities at all
levels -- up to the Knesset/legislature and the Cabinet/executive, as well
as throughout the armed forces -- have continued to secure their own
presence and dominance by extending their control over every possible
aspect of Palestinians' lives.
Although not identical, the colonialist and racist pedigrees and impacts
of each system of oppression are structurally comparable. However, whereas
the solution in South Africa always turned upon finding some new form
of state in which majority rule would prevail and white-racist privilege
be finally extirpated, the cause of Palestine entails eliminating the
Zionist junta's so-called "Jewish state" of European-American colonialist
privilege and restoring to the Palestinians what the Zionists stole. How
does disabling the racist provisions of the laws and regulations of the
State of Israel, and reforming the "Jewish-only" element to become fully
inclusive of the entire population, bring the Palestinians any closer to
restoring what the Zionists stole?
The questions of justice involved -- of compensation for damages
inflicted, including restitution of what was illegally taken, destroyed or
disabled -- are very different in the two cases. For all its serious and
undoubted evils and the numerous crimes against humanity committed in its
name, including physical slaughters, South African white-racist apartheid
was not premised on committing genocide. Zionism, on the other hand, has
been committed to dissolving the social, cultural, political and economic
integrity of the Palestinian people, i.e., genocide, from the outset, at
least as early as Theodor Herzl's injunction in his diaries that the
"transfer" of the Palestinian "penniless population" elsewhere be
conducted "discreetly and circumspectly." The fact that the present day
heirs of his outlook practice this genocidal policy in ongoing slow
motion, so to speak, over decades rather than in one fell swoop, and that
their assault on the Palestinians' identity as a people is not confined to
acts of physical extermination, does not make their practice any the less
genocidal.
Strategically speaking, all those compelled to fight for their
self-determination against imperialist oppression must rely on organizing
and waging the struggle of their own people first and foremost. Utilizing
contradictions among their enemies may become tactically highly
important at very specific moments of these struggles. At such moments,
the forces waging the internal struggle may indeed organize their own
external front of support. However, actually to orient one's strategy
according to what use can be made of such contradictions is a waste of
time that can even become fatal for people's movements in our day. The
world has already long been witness to what befell the momentum for
national liberation in South Africa after international finance capital
assembled a black-majority successor regime to white-racist apartheid
behind a façade fronted by Nelson Mandela after 1991. The path to this
betrayal was paved in the 1980s by the excessive focus on the role of
international boycotts and other activities external to South Africa and
-- most importantly -- beyond the control of the forces actually fighting
for national liberation (the most effective were precisely those few
actually organized by the fighting forces and their representatives).
Today, it is increasingly seen how many of those active in the cause of
Palestine who have been eliciting or repeating the comparison of Zionist
rule with white-racist apartheid rule are also advocating boycotts and
similar methods in the name of "strengthening the external front of
solidarity," etc. Professor Ilan Pappe, for example, who has been
supporting some forms of academic boycott of Israeli universities, has
bluntly declared that the reason to pursue the route of building such
external pressure is that the road of building such pressure "peacefully"
within Palestine itself has come to an end! If, however, the road of
building such pressure peacefully within Palestine itself has indeed come
to an end, why not just as reasonably conclude that the time has come to
ramp up the struggle for Palestinians' national liberation by better
utilizing illegal alongside all remaining legal opportunities to advance
this struggle? The issue is neither "peaceful" versus "violent" methods of
struggle, nor the form of struggle organized as external
support (divestment, boycotts, etc.), but purely and simply: what force
organizes?
The line of freelance organization of external "support" for the cause of
Palestine is liberal Zionism at its most diabolical: it is liberal Zionism
at work plotting to seize control of the Palestinian movement for national
liberation on one of its most vital points. Organization of external
"support" for the cause of Palestine is a matter for those actually waging
the struggle for national liberation within Palestine to tackle, to give
the direction and designate organizations and individuals to do it.
Interestingly, the comparison of Zionist oppression with white-racist
South African apartheid no longer passes muster with Archbishop Desmond
Tutu or other prominent leaders of the ANC-led struggle against apartheid.
The archbishop explicitly commented that what he was been able to witness
and learn about daily life under Zionist occupation in the West Bank alone
is already many times worse than anything he experienced during apartheid.
If such a determinedly non-revolutionary activist has already seen through
the falsehood of the analogy, the time would seem to have ripened to set
this analogy aside once and for all and remain clear-eyed about, as well
as vigilant against, the liberal Zionists' aim and presence in the cause
of Palestine.
Gary
Zatzman is co-editor of
Dossier on Palestine.
He can be reached at:
noidrocca@yahoo.com.
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