<http://rain.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=8c08f97b142bb05db019d489b&id=
7873f5003c&e=b0842707b4>
http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/opinion/the-sanctity-of-the-soaring-qas
sam-1.351249

 

 Amira Hass: The sanctity of the soaring Qassam 


Perhaps Hamas thinks the Palestinians in Gaza were ready for another
high-tech Israeli onslaught, for another IDF video game in which children
playing on a roof are identified as lookouts and sentenced to death. 

 

Haaretz          Thu, March 24, 2011 

The Hamas authorities once again forgot that the neighbor/occupier to its
east is crazy. Fact: Over Shabbat, Hamas' military wing fired more than 50
mortar shells at Israel. Or perhaps it didn't forget: Perhaps it merely
thought the Palestinian people in Gaza were ready for another high-tech
Israeli onslaught, for another Israel Defense Forces video game in which
children playing on a roof are identified as lookouts and sentenced to
death. 

 

In this testosterone-rich competition, there will always be more checkmarks
on the Israeli side. But Israel is clever enough to act like the threatened
party and to hide its deadly performances. Who cares that the "appropriate
Zionist response" to 50 mortar shells, which sowed fear but did not kill,
was the killing of two 16-year-olds? Imad Faraj Allah and Qassam Abu Uteiwi,
from the Nuseirat refugee camp, were the people killed by Israel's
retaliatory bombing later that evening - not "two terrorists," as our media
obediently said, parroting the commanders' dictation.

 

Those 50 mortars were the "appropriate Hamas response" to the death of two
members of its military wing, Iz al-Din al-Qassam, in an Israeli airstrike.
That teaches us that armed men are worth more than boys: The response to the
teenagers' death was a lone Qassam rocket. 

 

Nor did the dialogue of testosterone end there. Tuesday morning, we learned
of another Israeli assault that wounded some 20 Palestinians, including
children. Due to lack of space, we won't detail what came in between or what
came before. But what will come next is frightening. 

 

In the binary thinking of those who oppose the Israeli occupation
(Palestinians, Israelis and foreigners ), public criticism of the tactics
used in the struggle of an occupied and dispossessed people is taboo. It is
as if criticism would create symmetry between the attacker and the attacked.
To a large extent, this taboo has been broken with regard to the Palestinian
Authority: Many opponents of the occupation have no qualms about portraying
the PA as a collaborator, or at least as the captive of its senior
officials' private interests. But when it comes to Hamas' use of arms,
silence falls. As if there were sanctity in the Qassam soaring high into the
sky, only to fall amid the clamor of Israeli propaganda. 

 

The Goldstone report - so widely reviled by Israelis, but endorsed by the
Palestinians - actually did force Palestinian human rights organizations to
accept the application of the term "crime" to Palestinian rocket launches at
Israel's civilian population, both before and during Operation Cast Lead in
Gaza in 2009. In other words, it forced them to distinguish between the
Palestinians' right to defend themselves (albeit unsuccessfully ) by force
of arms against Israeli military assaults and their lack of right to put on
an act of being an army, one that targets civilians, and thus provide Israel
with more ammunition for its victim show. But this distinction is not in use
for whatever doesn't appear in Goldstone's report. 

 

Though they didn't denounce those 50 mortars, Palestinians who are not Hamas
supporters did give them a political interpretation. This wasn't "the
attacked party's right to respond" (or, more accurately, the fly's right to
play Ping-Pong with the elephant ), but a clear message to young
Palestinians, reinforced by the brutal suppression of their demonstrations:
You aren't in Cairo or Tunis, so stop pestering us with theories about a
smart popular struggle in our emirate. 

 

But the neighbor/occupier to the east is crazy. It's wrong to provide it
with pretexts that would enable it to once again put Gaza's children and old
people through an ordeal like Cast Lead, or even one half as bad. 

 

So for all those who demonstrated in support of the Gazans when they were
trapped under Israeli fire, all those planners of past and future flotillas,
this is your moment to raise your voices and say clearly: The Qassams merely
feed Israel's madness. It is not the Qassams that will ensure the
Palestinians, both in and out of Gaza, a life of dignity. It is not the
Qassams that will topple the Israeli walls around the world's largest prison
camp.

 

 

* *

http://mondoweiss.net/2011/03/i-wish-you-egypt-an-open-letter-to-people-of-c
onscience-in-the-west.html

 


I Wish You Egypt: An open letter to people of conscience in the West


by Omar Barghouti 

Mondoweiss blog:  March 23, 2011

I wish you Egypt!

I wish you empowerment to resist; to fight for social and economic justice;
to win your real freedom and equal rights.

I wish you the will and skill to break out of your carefully concealed
prison walls. See, in our part of the world, prison walls and thick
inviolable doors are all too overt, obvious, over-bearing, choking; this is
why we remain restive, rebellious, agitated, and always in preparation for
our day of freedom, of light, when we gather a critical mass of people power
enough to cross all the hitherto categorical red lines. We can then smash
the thick, cold ugly, rusty chains that have incarcerated our minds and
bodies for all our lives like the overpowering stench of a rotting corpse in
our claustrophobic prison cell.

Your prison cells, however, are quite different. The walls are well hidden
lest they evoke your will to resist. There is no door to your prison cell --
you may roam about "freely," never recognizing the much larger prison you
are still confined to.

I wish you Egypt so you can decolonize your minds, for only then can you
envision real liberty, real justice, real equality, and real dignity.

I wish you Egypt so you can tear apart the sheet with the multiple-choice
question, "what do you want?", for all the answers you are given are dead
wrong. Your only choice there seems to be between evil and a lesser one.

I wish you Egypt so you can, like the Tunisians, the Egyptians, the Libyans,
the Bahrainis, the Yemenis, and certainly the Palestinians, shout "No! We do
not want to select the least wrong answer. We want another choice altogether
that is not on your damned list." Given the choice between slavery and
death, we unequivocally opt for freedom and dignified life -- no slavery,
and no death.

I wish you Egypt so you can collectively, democratically, and responsibly
re-build your societies; to reset the rules so as to serve the people, not
savage capital and its banking arm; to end racism and all sorts of
discrimination; to look after and be in harmony with the environment; to cut
wars and war crimes, not jobs, benefits and public services; to invest in
education and healthcare, not in fossil fuel and weapons research; to
overthrow the repressive, tyrannical rule of multinationals; and to get the
hell out of Afghanistan, Iraq, and everywhere else where under the guise of
"spreading democracy" your self-righteous crusades have spread social and
cultural disintegration, abject poverty and utter hopelessness.

I wish you Egypt so you can fulfill your countries' legal and moral
obligations to help rebuild the ravished, de-developed economies and
societies of your former -- or current -- colonies, so that their young men
can find their own homelands viable, livable and lovable again, instead of
risking death -- or worse -- on the high seas to reach your mirage-washed
shores, giving up loved ones and a place they once called home. You see,
they're "here" because you were there... and we all know what you did there!

I wish you Egypt so you can rekindle the spirit of the South African
anti-apartheid struggle by holding Israel accountable to international law
and universal principles of human rights, by adopting
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/omar-barghouti/why-is-bds-a-moral-duty-t_b_81
6990.html>  boycott, divestment and sanctions, called for by an overwhelming
majority in Palestinian <http://bdsmovement.net/?q=node/52>  civil society.
There is no more effective, non-violent way to end Israel's occupation,
racial discrimination and decades-old denial of the UN-sanctioned right of
Palestinian refugees to return.

Our oppression and yours are deeply interrelated and intertwined -- it is
never a zero-sum game! Our joint struggle for universal rights and freedoms
is not merely a self gratifying slogan that we raise; rather, it is a fight
for true emancipation and self determination, an idea whose time has
vociferously arrived.

After Egypt, it is our time. It is time for Palestinian freedom and justice.
It is time for all the people of this world, particularly the most exploited
and downtrodden, to reassert our common humanity and reclaim control over
our common destiny.

I wish you Egypt!

Omar Barghouti is a Palestinian human rights activist, former resident of
Egypt, and author of
<http://www.haymarketbooks.org/pb/Boycott-Divestment-Sanctions>  Boycott,
Divestment and Sanctions (BDS): The Global Struggle for Palestinian Rights
(Haymarket Books, 2011)

 

 

 



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
LAAMN: Los Angeles Alternative Media Network
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unsubscribe: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subscribe: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Digest: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Help: <mailto:[email protected]?subject=laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Post: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive1: <http://www.egroups.com/messages/laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive2: <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    [email protected] 
    [email protected]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [email protected]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Reply via email to