The Meaning of October 7 (consortiumnews.com)

The Hamas incursion was less Israel’s 9/11 and more a Palestinian Tet 
Offensive, says John Wight. No ugly oppression has ever given rise to a pretty 
resistance. 


“When I search for Man in the technique and the style of Europe, I see only a 
succession of negations of man, and an avalanche of murders.” 

— Frantz Fanon

Israel’s murderous assault on the people of Gaza — over this past year — with 
the material, diplomatic and political support of the collective West —  has 
been tantamount to witnessing a rabid dog ripping the flesh from the bones of 
what many had allowed themselves to believe was a world worth living in. At 
this point, it is not.

Israel’s ongoing exercise in mad slaughter is of a piece with the rage 
unleashed by the slaveowner in response to recalcitrant slaves daring to break 
out of the plantation. And it is here where we understand  the real “crime” of 
the Palestinians of Gaza – refusal to remain in the place accorded them by 
their colonizer and oppressor. That is, on their metaphoric knees, defeated and 
broken in mind, body and spirit.

This is the true significance of Oct. 7 2023. It proved to the Israelis and 
their Western backers that despite their condition as a people confined to a 
latter-day reservation, that despite the racist disregard for their humanity, 
the Palestinians remain defiant. It also revealed a level of planning and 
ingenuity that no colonized people is ever supposed to be able to achieve.

Nobody understood or articulated the psychology of the oppressed better than 
legendary anti-colonialist militant and thinker, Frantz Fanon: “Violence,” he 
once wrote,


“frees the native from his inferiority complex and from his despair and 
inaction; it makes him fearless and restores his self-respect.”


Fanon may have died in 1961, but his analysis of Western colonialism, its 
brutality and the dehumanizing impact it has on its victims — forging 
psychological chains of oppression and self-hatred which can only be broken via 
a “murderous and decisive struggle” against the colonizer — remains apposite 
over five decades since  it appeared in his classic work, The Wretched of the 
Earth.

Fanon wrote the book in the midst of the epic struggle for national liberation 
that was taking place between the Algerian people and their French colonial 
masters, pitting the might of a first world European power against a poorly 
armed, but popularly supported anti-colonial insurgency. It was a fierce and 
bitter conflict which raged over eight long years, between 1954 and 1962.

Ultimately, the Algerian people’s quest for national liberation proved stronger 
than France’s ability to retain a North African colony it had possessed since 
the 1830s. By the time the conflict ended, marked by French President Charles 
De Gaulle’s pronouncement that the Algerian people had the right to determine 
their own future, 1.5 million had perished, of whom the vast majority were 
Algerian.

Oct. 7 was less Israel’s 9/11 and more a Palestinian Tet Offensive. It was a 
scream from the bowels of structural oppression, a reassertion of the 
self-respect Fanon recognized in the violence of a colonized and oppressed 
people. It was, in sum, the killing rage of those who refuse to accept the 
status of an unpeople.


| 
| 
| 
|  |  |

 |

 |
| 
|  | 
Tet Offensive | Facts, Casualties, Videos, & Significance | Britannica

Tet Offensive, attacks staged by North Vietnamese forces beginning in the early 
hours of January 31, 1968, durin...
 |

 |

 |





In the spirit of Geronimo, Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse. In the spirit of the 
Mau Mau, the spirit of Irish revolutionary leader James Connolly of Easter 
Rising 1916 fame. In the spirit of Bobby Sands and the other Irish Hunger 
Strikers who gave their lives for freedom in 1981. In the spirit of every 
anti-colonial resistance movement and struggle there has ever been, the 
Palestinians of Gaza on Oct.7, 2023, dared to say ”No!”

The resulting wave of total violence unleashed upon the Palestinian people 
since is not that of a just cause. It is precisely the opposite. As with the 
French in Algeria, the Americans in Vietnam, and the British in Ireland, this 
Zionist settler-colonial project has failed on its own terms. It can only be 
sustained by extreme violence and slaughter, such is its unsustainability on 
the basis of its supremacist idea.

The simple and unvarnished truth is you cannot keep 2.2 million people confined 
to a latter-day Indian reservation for 17 years, control their access to 
electricity, clean drinking water, and all the necessities of life, while also 
denying them freedom of movement, dignity, hope and a future. No, you can’t do 
all that and expect next-to-no resistance. 

This is the context in which Operation Al-Aqsa Flood, launched by Palestinians 
in Gaza one year ago today, must be understood. No ugly oppression has ever 
given rise to a pretty resistance. History leaves no doubt of it.

The pretext for this audacious Palestinian operation was the repeated violation 
of the Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem — Islam’s third holiest site, during Ramadan 
in 2023. It was also predicated on the unrelenting refusal to accept the 
normalization of their condition as a colonized and dispossessed people across 
the Arab and Muslim world. 

Gaza today lies in ruins. Over 40,000 have been killed so far in Israel’s orgy 
of revenge. There will be those, understandably, who will question the 
rationale behind Oct. 7, given the extent of the suffering that has been 
visited on the people of Gaza in its wake. But there is a marked difference 
between chronological and historical time. And with the latter in mind, it is 
still too soon to tell if it was worth it.

But thinking about this particular question on a deeper level, this would 
impose the norms of the uncolonized onto the colonized. In truth, the real 
question we should be asking ourselves one year on is this: What choice did 
they have? When the choice is between living on your knees or dying on your 
feet, is there really any choice involved at all?
John Wight, author of Gaza Weeps, 2021  


-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Groups.io Links: You receive all messages sent to this group.
View/Reply Online (#32787): https://groups.io/g/marxmail/message/32787
Mute This Topic: https://groups.io/mt/108900113/21656
-=-=-
POSTING RULES & NOTES
#1 YOU MUST clip all extraneous text when replying to a message.
#2 This mail-list, like most, is publicly & permanently archived.
#3 Subscribe and post under an alias if #2 is a concern.
#4 Do not exceed five posts a day.
-=-=-
Group Owner: [email protected]
Unsubscribe: https://groups.io/g/marxmail/leave/13617172/21656/1316126222/xyzzy 
[[email protected]]
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-


Reply via email to