Features
Pushing for a Palestinian Tahrir
Feeling abandoned by their political leadership, Palestinian youth are pushing 
for change.
Sandy Tolan Last Modified: 05 Mar 2011 14:55 GMT

Palestinian youth have been inspired by uprisings in Arab countries 
[GALLO/GETTY]

On a cool January evening at the height of Tunisia's Jasmine Revolution, Najwan 
Berekdar and a few friends were sitting at a smoky café in Ramallah, puffing on 
water pipes and strategising. "We were talking about what's happening in 
Tunisia, and we decided, maybe this is the momentum - we should use it," 
Berekdar remembers weeks later from her office at Sharek, a youth-oriented 
Palestinian NGO. "We were, like, five people. We were sitting with our laptops 
and we said, 'Okay, let's make an event.' We wanted something to encourage 
people to go out."

Within days, masses of Egyptians began filling Tahrir Square, and 27-year-old 
Berekdar, her friends and like-minded Palestinian youths were even more 
inspired. "We wanted to send this message that it is time for us to do 
something. And obviously we can do it. Look at other people. If they managed to 
do it, we can do it."

The demonstrations these Palestinian youths helped organise were quickly 
banned, sometimes with clubs, by a Palestinian Authority (PA) with deep 
historic and political ties to the Tunisian and Egyptian dictatorships. But 
then other groups began forming their own demonstrations. And Berekdar and her 
friends, through email loops and a face-to-face "thinking group" of about 20 
academics and intellectuals, organised new protests. "We were suppressed by the 
PA a second time and a third time," she says. Soon Palestinian authorities 
began to investigate the group.

"One of our group members was called by the police, and by the intelligence, 
and by - I don't know, we have four security forces, I think," Berekdar says. 
(Actually, there are five.) "They stayed at his home until one in the morning." 
The mukhabarat assumed the young man was the ringleader, Berekdar recalls with 
amusement. They pressed him for details of the hierarchy of what is in fact a 
loose, ever-shifting coalition that only recently got a name: Hirak Shebab, or 
Youth Movement. It is an informal, mostly leaderless group - a concept the 
centralised PA does not seem to grasp. 

As Berekdar spoke, at 1:30 on a recent afternoon, an email came in from a 
friend. About the demonstration that day at 6:00: Should they do it at Manara 
Square in the centre of Ramallah or outside the Muqata, the PA headquarters? 
Berekdar was not sure. Scarcely four hours before the event, she seemed 
unhurried, and confident of Hirak Shebab's ability to get sufficient numbers to 
show up at the last minute.

Berekdar is trying to involve young people, both unaffiliated and from 
different Palestinian parties, including Hamas. She estimates that so far about 
2,000 people connect with the group's message pushing for democracy and 
fundamental change. "It's about changing the whole discourse of the 
Palestinians," she says. "It is time for us to start doing something. Because 
obviously the political leadership is not doing anything."

The 'pulse of Palestine'

In the revolutionary spirit spreading across the Middle East, Palestinian youth 
groups have become a small but important catalyst in a building wave of 
discontent with PA repression and complicity in a failed "peace process" backed 
by the US. The groups' actions are sparked not only by events in the region, 
but by the US veto of the UN Security Council's condemnation of Israeli 
settlements. A widening circle of Palestinian groups are calling for an end to 
negotiations with Israel, an end to the political division between the West 
Bank and Gaza and wholesale reform of the PA and the Palestine Liberation 
Organisation (PLO). Some advocate dissolving the PA completely.

"Fatah and Hamas have failed Palestinian society," says Nader Said, a 
Palestinian pollster and political analyst. Youth, he says, "represent the 
pulse and conscience of Palestine". In Gaza, Said says, young people "are the 
ones who have demonstrated in the middle of the shooting, covering their faces 
with paper bags," so that security forces would refrain from possibly shooting 
a brother or cousin. "They are the soul of the Palestinians," but by 
themselves, "they're not strong enough to carry the emancipation agenda."

Yet the message is resonating well beyond the youth groups. As Palestinians 
under a 43-year occupation watch their Arab neighbours fight for democracy, 
pressure increases on the PA to reform itself - or at least, to appear to do 
so. Faced with the threat of the US veto, the PA sought to burnish its 
resistance credentials by refusing to yield to American pressure to call off 
the Security Council vote. And Salam Fayyad, the prime minister, recently sent 
a message to Palestinian youth via Facebook, asking for input as he forms a new 
Palestinian cabinet. Within hours, he received hundreds of replies - some 
supportive, some sceptical.

"Now suddenly they're this nationalistic body that's clinging to Palestinian 
rights?" scoffed Diana Buttu, a Palestinian lawyer and former PA negotiator, in 
a recent interview. "They've put their finger to the wind, and realised that 
the wind has changed. Right now you don't want to be seen as the one nation 
that's clinging to the United States. So they had to do something."

But others say the pressure from emerging Arab democracies, and what one 
insider called the "betrayal" by the US, may force the PA to turn inward, and 
thus make the kind of core changes it has long resisted.

"We do not want an authority that is a buffer between the people and the 
occupation," says Qais Abu Leila, a member of the Palestinian Legislative 
Council and a founder of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine. 
"We need a Palestinian Authority that is part of the people and a continuation 
of the struggle against occupation." Abu Leila believes the shifting political 
landscape may force the PA to confront its increasingly undemocratic, 
authoritarian character.

"We are now facing the danger of the emergence of more or less police regimes" 
in Gaza and the West Bank. Under the PA, he says, "gradually the democratic 
checks and balances of government are fading away".

'A quiet colonisation'

Fundamental change within the PA, if it happened, would likely include a 
reassessment of its security cooperation with Israel. Some coordination of 
visas and safe passages, and movement of Palestinian police between West Bank 
towns, would continue, reformers say. More draconian measures seen as 
collaboration with Israel's occupation could be suspended. These include the 
extralegal arrest and detention of hundreds of Palestinians, and incidents of 
torture, documented by Palestinian human rights groups, in the name of fighting 
terrorism and preventing a Hamas takeover in the West Bank. Human Rights Watch 
recently called on the US and EU to suspend aid to the PA "pending concrete 
steps to end a culture of impunity for security service abuses, including 
torture".

But a Palestinian decision to suspend security cooperation would likely have 
huge financial consequences. In recent years the US has spent nearly half a 
billion dollars in training and "professionalising" key parts of a 
25,000-strong Palestinian security apparatus under three-star American general 
Keith Dayton. The money flow would likely reduce to a trickle if basic 
principles of the arrangement were suspended. Some analysts believe the PA 
could survive possible cuts in US funding, especially if the EU stepped into 
the breach. 

Others are sceptical. "The PA is a security subcontractor for Israel," says 
Buttu. Despite the pressure the PA is facing, she does not foresee any change. 
"The whole aim is to allow Israel to have a very quiet occupation, a very quiet 
colonisation."

"We alleviated the occupation from its responsibility," agrees Ali Jarbawi, a 
longtime critic of the authority who recently joined the government as the 
Palestinian minister of planning. "And they [Israelis] are living happily ever 
after when you go to Dizengoff Street and sip wine with the yuppies at these 
sidewalk cafés. As if the West Bank does not exist. As if Gaza does not exist. 
As if the Palestinians do not exist."

Jarbawi believes the two-year state-building plan the PA put in place in 2009, 
overseen by Fayyad, should be given a chance to work - but only until September 
2011. Jarbawi insists there must be a limit to official Palestinian patience. 
"You can't keep the negotiation track open forever, and keep the dependency on 
aid also open forever, so the world is paying for the continuation of the 
occupation. And at the same time they are building settlements on the ground, 
eating what's supposed to become our state."

Jerusalem: 'The next Tahrir?'

After September, Jarbawi says, the Palestinian strategy could include an end 
run around the US, through an appeal to the other members of the "Quartet" - 
the EU, Russia and the UN - to recognise a Palestinian state on the 1967 
borders. Already nine Latin American nations have stepped forward. "Brazil, 
through this letter, recognises the Palestinian state on the 1967 borders," 
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, the then Brazilian president, wrote to Mahmoud 
Abbas, the Palestinian president, in December.

Other options Jarbawi envisions include asking for an international presence in 
the West Bank, building a new, nonviolent intifada - "one million people 
walking down the streets, chanting for an end to occupation" - or even 
dissolving the very authority in which Jarbawi now works. "That has to remain a 
viable option," he says.

Abu Leila believes dissolving the PA is unrealistic. But he insists the 
pressure for reform has become too great to ignore. "There is an almost 
universal recognition that there must be radical change in Palestine, and that 
it must start with ending the division" with Gaza, he says, echoing comments by 
Berekdar and many others. He calls this step essential "in order to face the 
occupation and a hostile policy adopted by the US. The PA could organise the 
Palestinian society in a way that could fuel the struggle against the Israeli 
occupation. This is a meaningful option."

This may be starting to happen. In February, Tawfiq Tirawi, a member of the 
Central Committee of the PLO and until recently the PA security chief, called 
for "days of rage" protests against the American veto in the Security Council. 
"They consider themselves the masters of the world," said the man who until 
recently helped coordinate security arrangements with Israel and the US. "They 
[the Americans] call for democracy and freedom. They say that they want this 
for all nations of the world, but when it comes to the Palestinian people, it 
just evaporates. The interest of our people is the most important thing. We 
will say no to the Americans if it is not in the interest of our people."

Some Palestinians believe a nonviolent popular uprising is coming in Palestine 
- whether backed by the PA or not. "Resistance has always been a unifying 
force," says Hani Masri of Badael, the Ramallah think-tank. "The youth, they 
are telling the leadership, either you will be changing or you will be changed."

Masri and others are discussing mass mobilisations, including 50,000 to 100,000 
Palestinians marching peacefully to Qalandia, the checkpoint between Jerusalem 
and Ramallah that now resembles an international border crossing. Beyond that, 
he asks, "why can't we turn Jerusalem into the next Tahrir?"

Weekly protests in the Palestinian towns of Bili'in, Budrus and Nili'in have 
already received international attention as focal points of a nonviolent 
Palestinian resistance. But whether mass mobilisations will actually take place 
to confront the Israeli occupation is another matter.

High price of confrontation

"The big question today is whether the Palestinian society has the juice to 
create a real civil disobedience, refusing-the-occupation campaign," says 
Gershon Baskin, the co-director of the Jerusalem-based Israel-Palestine Center 
for Research and Information, and a strong advocate of the two-state solution.

"There are 24,000 Palestinians working in settlements. Two Rami Levi 
supermarkets opened up in the West Bank, and many of the shoppers are 
Palestinian. If you're going to wage a campaign to simply say we're not 
cooperating any more with the occupation, then what that means is you're not 
going to work in Israel any more, you're not going to work in the Israeli 
settlements ... You're going to have confrontation with the occupation. And 
that has a very high price."

Would Palestinians, so dependent on the foreign-funded jobs and services that 
Buttu calls "donor heroin," be willing to forego the sharp reduction in aid 
that would surely accompany a new strategy of confrontation?

"In the short term we would really pay a heavy price economically," Buttu 
agrees. "For one thing, you wouldn't see people sitting around in nice cafés 
like this," she says, smiling ironically while sitting in Ramallah's Café de la 
Paix. But confronting the occupation "would definitely unite people who are not 
united now".

"Something could spark it," Baskin says. "Who would have predicted Tunisia, 
Egypt, Libya? But I don't see Palestinian society having the energy today to do 
it. Israelis and Palestinians today feel much more comfortable pushing a 'like' 
button on their Facebook page than going out to the street."

That may or may not be true. As major checkpoints have come down recently, the 
occupation has loosened around Ramallah, Nablus and Jenin, and relative freedom 
within a small portion of the West Bank has created a sense of limited 
breathing room. For some Palestinians, quality of life has gone up. Some say 
the "donor heroin" has created a sense of comfort, even complacency, in the 
small enclave inside the West Bank.

"If you look at our social situation, people in Ramallah don't care, mostly 
speaking," says Dina Shilleh, a 27-year-old piano teacher who returned with her 
parents from Serbia during the heady early days of Oslo. "If they can go out, 
they have their car, they have their house, they can dress nicely, that's kind 
of what it's about. There's a lot that's been sedated. Because in the end you 
want to live. It's like, hey, how long do you want to keep fighting? My 
grandparents fought, my parents fought. Am I gonna do it? My kids? It would 
have to be something that would really spark the people to get out of this 
numbness."

And yet, when Hirak Shebab organised demonstrations at Manara Square recently, 
Dina answered the call. "We need a new leadership," she says, recalling her 
chants against the occupation and in favour of democracy.

"We need a new idea."

Sandy Tolan is an associate professor at the Annenberg School for Communication 
and Journalism at USC, and the author of The Lemon Tree: An Arab, a Jew, and 
the Heart of the Middle East.

The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily 
reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.



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