EMAIL SIGN UP!
Most Popular This Week
- Corporate Win: Supreme Court Says Monsanto Has 'Control Over Product of Life'
- Cornel West: Obama 'Is a War Criminal'
- Patent Filing Claims Solar Energy ‘Breakthrough’
- Disaster Capitalism Strikes as Hedge Funds Circle Near-Bankrupt Municipalities Like Vultures
- Ignoring Bee Crisis, EPA Greenlights New 'Highly Toxic' Pesticide
Popular content
Today's Top News
Civil Society and Palestine: The Growing Power of the Ordinary
The global boycott movement (BDS) and other related campaigns were aimed at exposing Israeli transgressions against the Palestinian people and galvanizing international solidarity. What is so uplifting to see now is how their achievements have far surpassed these initial aims. The campaigns have animated, accentuated and actually legitimized Palestinian civil society - a notion that long stood outside the official paradigm acceptable to Israel, and which had very little space within the restrictive realm of the Palestinian Authority (PA).
Palestinians rally on the streets of Gaza City on Tuesday, March 15. (Al-Jazeera)
Now civil society has been incorporated into the overall political equation as a leading factor in the Palestinian struggle for rights and freedom. The society is also increasingly filling the vacuum created by the PA’s localization of the Palestinian struggle, and Israel’s constant attempt at downgrading any genuine alternative to the PA’s leadership.
The articulation of the rise of Palestinian civil society came loud and clear on July 09, 2005, when 171 Palestinian civil society organizations representing Palestinians living in the occupied territories, Israel, and the Diaspora called “upon international civil society organizations and people of conscience all over the world to impose broad boycotts and implement divestment initiatives against Israel similar to those applied to South Africa in the apartheid era.”
They further stated: “We appeal to you to pressure your respective states to impose embargoes and sanctions against Israel. We also invite conscientious Israelis to support this call, for the sake of justice and genuine peace.”
The statement won the approval of most Palestinians, and it inspired numerous representatives of civil society from around the world. Several tangible actions were taken, and the call for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions finally became a real strategy. In Israel too, a growing number of Israeli Jewish and Arab activists became committed to undermining the long held notion that the conflict was exclusively racial, ethnic or religious.
Cleary the Israeli definitions of old are no longer appealing to an increasingly determined international civil society. In the last few years, for instance, we have seen the Gaza Freedom March, the heroism aboard the Mavi Marmara, and the tireless efforts of enumerable organizations and individuals working to bring Israeli war criminals to trial and to end the Gaza siege.
The involvement of international civil society in aiding Palestine is actually as old as the conflict itself. However, it was not until the Second Intifada, or uprising, in 2000 that the involvement of international civil society became somewhat ‘institutionalized’ through clearly marked channels. The International Solidarity Movement (ISM) was a particularly meaningful example. The ISM seemed like a model of the International Brigades that went to defeat Fascism during the Spanish Civil War (1936-39). The ISM used a non-violent method of resistance, and its recruits of civil society activists were the very activists whose video footage, blogs, photographs, public presentations and even books helped to change international public opinion and challenge mainstream representations of the conflict that were so shamefully biased towards Israel.
The Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), despite past shortcomings, served as a unifying platform, centralizing Palestinians efforts and defying Israel’s diligent attempts at dismissing the very existence of a Palestinian collective. Former Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir mirrored the attitude of many Zionist Israeli leaders when she stated: “There is no such thing as a Palestinian people...It is not as if we came and threw them out and took their country. They didn't exist.”
The significant role of the PLO, however, was overshadowed by that of the PA following Arafat’s signing of the Oslo accord in 1993. The PA had long served an extremely detrimental role in Palestine and the Palestinian people’s struggle. One of its worst long-term legacies was depriving the Palestinian people from the sense of national cohesion. Although it was Israel that largely supported and propped up this new non-representative Palestinian body, it was also this very party that decried that it had no peace partner, thus de-legitimizing its own creation.
With the elected Palestinian government, Hamas, under physical siege in Gaza, and an even greater political siege regionally and internationally, the issue of representation is all the more pressing. Representation is a prerequisite for unifying and guiding the Palestinian people through future phases of their struggle.
Still, it is heartening to note that such a political vacuum had its own benefits. It has revitalized civil society in Palestine, and, by extension, global civil society. This has helped to maintain a sense of centralization in Palestinian political discourse, one that is capable of juggling both national priorities and international solidarity.
The concept of civil society is often used as a meeting point between other forces, including a healthy and fully functional state. In the Palestinian scenario, however, with the occupation, siege and regular assassinations and imprisonments of political leaders, such a state is missing. This reality has skewed the traditional balance, resulting in a political void engineered by Israel to de-legitimize Palestinian demands and rights. It is most impressive, to say the least, that representatives of Palestinian civil society have managed to step up and fill the void.
This success would have never been possible without individuals from international civil society, including Rachel Corrie, the Turkish heroes aboard the Mavi Marmara, and the many Israeli activists and organizations who are currently being targeted by the rightwing government of Benjamin Netanyahu and Avigador Lieberman.
Israel has shown alarm over the growing importance of civil society by reacting on many fronts. In Palestine, it has imprisoned Palestinian non-violent resisters. In Israel, it has cracked down on funds received by Israeli human rights groups. And internationally, it has pushed forward a media campaign of defamation.
These Israeli efforts must be challenged on all fronts as well. Continuing to de-legitimize the illegal Israeli occupation can partly be achieved through supporting Palestinian civil society, including their call for boycott.
Israel’s actions have not been limited to de-legitimizing Palestinian rights and dismissing their existence. Israel has also worked hard to defragment any sense of political or national cohesion, through many creative means, separation walls notwithstanding. Yet, it is the Israeli occupation that is now being de-legitimized, its own government that is being isolated, and its own country’s reputation that is constantly compromised. The power of civil society has indeed surpassed that of military hardware, archaic and exclusivist historical discourses, propaganda and political coercion.
Indeed, Lieberman, the Israeli government and their supposedly powerful lobbies have every reason to be worried.
- Posted in
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...


13 Comments so far
Show AllStuff that can "defragment any sense of political or national cohesion" can make itself without much help, but if a nation state feels it needs to add to the messiness, then only a really big outcry from all over the world stands any chance of stopping it from doing so.
There really isn't that much "political or national cohesion" anywhere anyway.
As long as the U.S. continues to cover for Israel's illegal actions against the Palestinians - and, indeed, for anything and everything Israel does, period (such as refusing to sign the Non-Proliferation Treaty or even admit to their arsenal of nuclear weapons) - there will never be a free Palestinian people. You cannot take down Israel without also taking down its bodyguard, the U.S.
Or, simply wait a hundred years or so, when all the oil in the Middle East has been depleted, and the U.S. no longer gives a shit about it (which is the only reason the U.S. cares about Israel - its geographic proximity to all that oil), and then Israel will stand alone amongst a sea of Arab neighbors it has demeaned and treated like shit since its inception. Then, the problem will be taken care of by those neighbors quite quickly.
I don't think we have "a hundred years or more." As I said way too many times, I think we'll be lucky to make it as far as Mayan Death Day 12/21/12.
Meaning? Out of where? Why not just add Jews to the ovens we'll finish what our hero Adolf started?
This is the kind of comment that gripes my grunchicles. Nobody here has Hitler as a hero. It is possible to be critical of and even against what the nation-state of Israel is doing to the Arab Palestinians without that meaning that we're trying to reactivate the holocost. To some of us it does seem as if the Israelis (not the Jews, the Israelis -- not all Jews are Israelis or in favor of what is going on there) are doing to the Palestinians just what was done to them. It may not be that extreme, but it's on the edge of the same neighborhood.
It's not even remotely on the edge of the same neighborhood. Not in any way, shape or form, and to suggest it is indisputably anti-semitic. Among other things too numerous to mention, under the Nazis the number of Jews significantly declined. Under the Israelis, the number of Palestinians has significantly increased, as has their income, life expectancy, level of education, and every other measurable statistic. As far as "nobody here has Hitler as a hero", you may not but the majority of the anti-semites certainly do. "Betweenthelines" certainly does, that's what his name refers to. In any case, the overwhelming majority of people in the world consider critics of Israel to be Nazis in all but name, and will eventually prosecute them as such. Just you wait.
OK. I'll wait. I may even wait and see. Everyone bad in the world will get their appropriate comeuppance, no doubt, especially after civilization crashes and all tribal squabbles become moot. I don't think very many Hitler hero worshippers post on this site, but I could be wrong. I don't think I'm either racist as between the lines thinks or antisemetic, as you suggest. But maybe I am. I do try not to be.
Maybe I didn't understand your point. You're saying that the Palestinians are benefitting from their oppression and their objection is ingratitude motivated by hatred of all Jews which they share with anyone who is critical of Israel all of whom are criminal and will soon be prosecuted by the world. Ah. I get it now
Sometimes I get the feeling you're angry. Wonder if I'm right about that. I actually thought I was weighing in against the state of Israel, but I guess I'll have to read my own posts more carefully, try not to "shill" for or against anybody.
Something is wrong with my brain and it's confusing to me (I'm old now) to read through all the posts and figure out by the indenting who started saying what. Besides, I like replying even if it is to a post that wasn't directed at me. I think you were "pissed" before, or at least did a good simulation of being so. You have good reason.