*George Galloway MP : Open Letter on the Murder of Palestine*

Dear Brother and friend AbdelBari Atwan,
Editor of Al-Quds
London


An Open Letter on the Murder of Palestine, from George Galloway MP

It has been said that you, Sir, are the "last Arab". We both know that is
not true, there are still others, but millions of us know why it was said of
you.

You are a Knight of the Arabs that's for sure. Born in a Gazan refugee camp,
you are a Prince among men. I have known you for thirty years; back then you
still had some of the dust of the camp about you. Now you are an
ever-present commentator in the media, publish the Arab
world's only independent newspaper, and are highly respected by all who know
you.

Together we have fought in the land of Balfour and Sykes, of Anthony Eden
and Anthony Blair, many great political battles. Many tears and much blood
has flown over those years, and before, and it s not going to stop now.

I am moved to write having seen yet another of your heart-piercing
interviews on television. You leave the interrogator speechless when you
tell them that you were born there, and in the very camp we are all watching
being destroyed by fire and red-hot steel. How could you, this man of
letters, this sophisticated commentator, have come from...that?

Of course we know that it was....that...which made you, and that you will
never lose your burning sense of indignation, your cry, no, roar on behalf
of those you left behind.

But it was not your voice which moved me most tonight it's 5 in the morning
and I am still fitfully flicking across the channels not so much looking FOR
but away refugee the unrelenting, hypocritical, downright mendacity of most
of them.

It was the voice of Amal, a young mother who appeared late last night in a
package on Al-Jazeera English, interviewed in a school in the southern Gaza
Strip.

This young woman, a girl really, was with her baby one of 61 members of the
same family of refugees hiding out in this school in the hope that it would
not be attacked by the Israeli invaders. Her baby had not been changed in
three days, she was feeding her the last bottle ofmilk and in a dirty
bottle, there was no electricity and very little running water. What there
was, was being drunk and cooked with, washed in and washed with. And the
people in this school were the lucky ones.

Elsewhere in the Strip at that very moment, children like Amal's were being
carried, stiff and dead, from the hospitals by their fathers.

Women wailed, bled, died in Jabalia, the Beach Camp, Rafah, Gaza City. Young
boys recited the Shahada as they were carried into intensive care units
operating in near darkness, running out of medicines, even bandages, and
being staffed by doctors and nurses close to madness through despair.

International journalists - banned by the invaders from seeing for
themselves - nonetheless continue to accept the terms of reference imposed
by those who have banned them. Every bulletin incants the same falsehood:
that Israel is attacking "Hamas militant...targets" (by the way why are
Palestinian fighters always described as "militants"?

But how can a baby be Hamas? A Mosque? A school? An Ambulance? A family? A
whole apartment block? Or, as I heard you explain, the parliament building.

Oh what an irony is that destruction of the parliament building, housing
that rarity in the Arab world, a freely elected assembly. In a way I suppose
it s a variant on Bertolt Brecht, when he wrote of the old East Germany that
the Communist Party, if disappointed in the people, could always abolish
them and elect a new one.

I was never a supporter of Hamas myself. I spent the best years of my life
as a partisan of Abu Amar, how we miss the late president now more than
ever. And to his memory I remain loyal.

But Hamas are the freely elected government of the Palestinian people living
under occupation. Neither jailing or killing its MPs and supporters, nor
besieging the voters to punish them for their free choice, nor destroying
the parliament in which they can no longer sit will change that.

"The terrorist group Hamas" is the usual mantra in the western media
discourse. These commentators clearly can't remember back as far as the last
Palestinian elections. Which means of course they cannot possibly know that
Israel itself came into being on a wave of
terror.

>From the assassination of the United Nations' Special Envoy through the
hanging by wire of British soldiers, the bombing of the King David Hotel in
Jerusalem killing almost a hundred people, including British civil servants,
to the massacre of whole villages of Palestinians like Deir Yasin.

The first and last of these crimes of course were carried out by two
subsequent prime ministers of Israel.

And, of course, as Israel came into being your own country of Palestine
necessarily disappeared. They were after all mutually exclusive. Palestine
was wiped off the map. Its people scattered to the four winds as refugees
and, generation after generation, of squalor, pogrom, a people lost in the
wilderness. As your book has it, citizens of a country of words.

And of course, returning to the western coverage, there is no "targtting" in
any case. How could there be? If you bomb a seven story apartment building
to kill one man (and his four wives and several of his children) in what
sense is that "targeted"? You have in fact targeted every single person in
that block and given the density of Gaza, adjacent blocks too. That's
hundreds of people you have "targeted", in which case you have not targeted
at all.

Neither are the weapons capable of "targeting". When tanks and artillery
pieces fire shells into refugee camps, as is happening right now in Jabalia,
they are not targeting anyone specifically,
how could they?

A gun barrel barks and a heavy piece of metal and explosives hurtles forth
in a general direction. Anyone with the misfortune to be in its firing line
will end up limbless, eyeless in Gaza; or just plain dead.

How can a warship off the coast be said to be "targeting" anyone when their
cannons boom and their death and destruction are delivered onto the beach
and beyond? The F16's and the Apache helicopters show the gullible their
"video-footage" of targets. Over and over the same
video-nasty is played. But the vast majority of their bombing raids are
never filmed, or at least film is never released. How could it be?

The bombing of civilians began when the Italians attempted to suppress a
revolt in Libya in 1911. Its full horror came to Europe at Guernica in 1937,
when the Nazis backing Franco helped drown the elected Spanish republic in
blood. Picasso immortalised the moment and his painting now adorns the
United Nations building in New York. That's the building inhabited by empty
suits and raincoats where George W Bush can paralyse the entire
"international community" with his threat of veto, supported by Gordon
Brown.

But the reason the Al-Jazeera package which contained the interview with
Amal broke my heart is nothing to do with diplomacy or international
politics. Really it was just a simple question she repeatedly asked, in a
torrent of heartfelt words, spoken through the tears running
down her face and onto the baby she held.

"Where is everybody?" she kept asking.
"Where is the great Arab world they taught us about at school?"
"Why have they left us alone?"
"What have we done wrong to deserve to be left to face this alone. We have
nothing."

After the interview, my own children turned to me and asked what were the
answers to Amal's questions. I had no answer to their questions.

I could not explain why 300 million Arabs cannot affect this suffering;
cannot even land a box of tissues to dry Amal's tears, a clean bottle for
her baby to drink from, a clean nappy.

I couldn't say why the Arab armies, so huge and bristling with weapons,
could not even threaten to fire a single shot in defence of a Palestine
being murdered before their eyes.

I couldn't explain to my own children, never mind Amal's, why the oil and
the gas which turns the wheels of the countries arming, financing, and
protecting the murderers was still flowing.

Or why the casinos and the bordellos were full of the potentates of Arabia
while the Palestinians eat from the garbage heaps.

Why some Arabs are buying second rate English football clubs for hundreds of
millions while Amal's baby drinks from a dirty bottle, while hiding from the
bombs and praying just to see tomorrow.

I don't know the answer to these questions.

Why Rafah for example, a border with an Arab country, where the flag of the
great Egypt flies, is sealed shut for almost two years trapping a million
and a half Palestinian Arabs at the mercy of those who wish to murder them,
quietly if they can but in a blaze of publicity if they must.

As I say, despite more than 30 years with the Arabs, I cannot answer these
questions.

The cheap and easy line is that the puppet presidents and the corrupt kings
are to blame. But that's too easy isn't it.

The world has seen many tyrants. But when their tyranny becomes simply
intolerable, when their incompetence has become so tragically apparent that
even the blind can see it, when their systems have become so bankrupt that
their leaders cannot even risk meeting with eachother !! well, then normally
their people pour onto the streets, out of the factories, mills, fields and
barracks, and tear down their oppressor.

Or at least a patriotic officer steps forward and removes the national
embarrassment from thescene.

The peacock shah, Mobuto, Suharto, the Ceausescus are no more.

When will this happen for the Arabs, dear Abdelbari? You are one of the very
"last Arabs"; do you know the answer to Amal's essential question. "Where is
the great Arab world they taught us about in school...why have they left us
all alone?"

I remain, of course,
your comrade


George Galloway MP
House of Commons
London
-- 
Dr Benil Hafeeq K.P
Consultant Nephrologist
MIMS and IQRAA Hospital
Calicut







The shortest distance between a problem and a solution is the distance
between your knees and the floor. The one who kneels to the Almighty  can
stand up to anything.

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
Nor can Goodness and Evil be equal.  Repel (evil) with what is better; then the 
enmity between him and you will become as if it were your friend and intimate!
Visit: sultan.org

Subscribe: [email protected]
Post to group: [email protected]
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to