https://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/article/c/inspirational-life-tawfiq-zayyad-poet-activist-and-politician

Inspirational life of Tawfiq Zayyad, poet, activist and politician
JOHN GREEN recommends a new biography of the Palestinian communist

Sunday 28th Feb 2021


Tawfiq Zayyad
The Optimist: A Social Biography of Tawfiq Zayyad
by Tamir Sorek
(Stanford University Press, £20.99)

THIS is an unusual biography of Tawfiq Zayyad, not least because it is about a 
Palestinian communist and is written by a US-based, Jewish-Israeli social 
scientist.

The renowned Palestinian poet and activist was a leading member of the Israeli 
Communist Party for over four decades and was elected mayor of Nazareth before 
becoming a member of the Israeli Knesset, serving for 18 years. He died in 1994 
at the age of 85.

The book's author Tamir Sorek openly questions his right as an Israeli Jew and 
non-communist to write such a biography. But his admiration and respect for 
Zayyad, even though he never met him, is unquestionable and he was given full 
access to Zayyad’s family and comrades and exhaustively mined many archival 
sources.

This sympathetic and informative biography is a welcome celebration of his 
memory as well as a valuable contribution to our understanding of Palestinian 
history.

As a political activist and poet, Zayyad helped his generation to play a key 
role in shaping Palestine’s national identity. Poetry became a major avenue of 
political expression and mobilisation and no other poet of his time became so 
intensively involved in politics or developed such a long and successful 
political career as Zayyad.

As a teenager, he already threw himself into the anti-colonialist struggle and, 
once he began working, saw the need for trade unions and to understand class 
struggle, which drew him irresistibly to Marxism. National identification among 
Palestinians like Zayyad only came about through this struggle. During the 
1960s, he gained considerable public prestige for his unapologetic style, 
courage in confronting the authorities and fierce nationalist poetry.

The times Zayyad lived through are akin to a first-hand history of Palestine, 
from earlier colonial times through the British mandate to the establishment 
and expansion of the Israeli state. In response to the Balfour Declaration, at 
the first Palestinian-Arab Congress in Jerusalem in 1919 a letter of protest 
was formulated condemning the zionist movement but proclaiming solidarity with 
the Jews of Palestine.

The Palestine Communist Party, formed in the 1920s, began as a worker-based 
group among Jewish immigrants. In 1921, it was declared an illegal party and 
the British occupiers waged a relentless propaganda campaign against communism 
using major Palestinian newspapers.

By mid-1931, only 50 or so of its estimated 300 members were Arab but this 
proportion grew with time and the party had its first Arab secretary by 1934. 
The turning point was the great revolt against the British mandate in 1936, 
demanding Arab independence and an end to Jewish immigration and land purchase. 
The party’s role in this struggle brought it increased credibility and 
popularity.

During the British occupation, Nazareth, where Zayyad lived and was active, had 
a strong working class. Most Nazarenes were employed in war-related industries 
and many went to Haifa to work in the city’s oil refineries, railway workshops 
and other industries.

As a youngster, Zayyad could not afford to buy books, but a progressive 
bookseller in the town gave him free access to his shelves and the young man 
devoured everything he could lay his hands on.

Within the Communist Party at that time, Zayyad was one of the very few who was 
genuinely working class, most members being from the educated and relatively 
affluent strata. He would became a leading member of the Arab Workers Congress 
in Nazareth.

In 1947, the United Nations’ approval of plans for a Jewish and a Palestinian 
state, which were supported by the Soviet Union, threw the Arabs into disarray.

In the war of resistance (Nakba) that erupted following the UN decision, over 
750,000 Palestinians were uprooted and hundreds of villages depopulated as 
Israeli forces cleared large areas of the territory, including land beyond that 
allocated to them by the UN. A fifth of Nazareth’s population became refugees.

In his battles on behalf of his fellow Palestinians, Zayyad was arrested on 
several occasions, beaten, tortured and imprisoned. From his arrest in Arraba 
in 1954 until he became a member of the Knesset in 1974, the military 
government and police frequently restricted his freedom. They also carried out 
a determined campaign to prevent a communist being elected mayor of Nazareth in 
1954.

Following the war, Nazareth had become home to the largest concentration of 
Arab Palestinians within the armistice line and a major site for political 
activism, so it wa regarded by the Israeli authorities as a security threat and 
kept under close surveillance. Many thousands of Arabs who were forced to flee 
their homes and seek refuge outside the territory designated as Israel had no 
Israeli ID and so were refused the right of return.

The collapse of Palestinian society and economy in the aftermath of the Nakba 
had enormous repercussions. From then on, the Palestinian Arabs and the 
Communist Party were obliged to tread a narrow path of activity between the 
boundaries of legitimacy and legality, as well as between their revolutionary 
ideology and the mundane but urgent needs of their constituency.

After the Nakba, the only organisation that could legally mobilise political 
resistance was the Communist Party. Because it recognised Israel as the 
national homeland of the Jewish-Israeli people, it was tolerated and would 
become, as Sorek says, “the major engine for mobilising resistance and its fuel 
was poetry.”

Zayyad saw his poetry as integral to the struggle. He objected to the idea of 
poetry being a mirror to reflect life because, as he put it, “a mirror does not 
create a single job.” He saw it more as a weapon. His poetry has travelled far 
beyond Palestine and a number of his poems have been set to music and sung by 
leading Arab performers.

Uncompromising in his protest against injustice towards the Palestinian people, 
Zayyad was always committed to a universal vision of Arab-Jewish fraternity. He 
was an exceptional leader and this biography provides not only a compelling 
portrait of the man himself but also an informed narrative of Palestinians in 
Israel.

What I Deny and What I Do Not Deny

I do not deny any right
Whatever it would be
Of your Jews, Israel
Because among them
I have comrades in arms
I would walk with them
Until the last step
To obtain our common bright future.
I do not deny the right of the other peoples
To be in a state of their own
To build it as they wish
They could divide it into more than one state
Make it heaven or hell
Paint it any colour they wish
Make it a dough, and to bake it into a loaf and eat it
If they so wish.

Tawfiq Zayyad


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