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      Thoughts on Germany and Palestine  
	  By Mazin Qumsiyeh 
	Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, December 8, 2010 
	     The conference in Stuttgart about Palestine was themed 
	  "Separated in the past, together in the future", was sold-out, and had 
	  some high powered speakers and lots of energy [1]. We listened, spoke, 
	  networked, bought each others’ books, ate, hugged, cried, and laughed.  
	  I mostly spent lots of time in thinking; maybe because waiting at airports 
	  or because such conferences give us opportunity to reflect or whatever.  
	  Thoughts are a mixed blessing.  In that labyrinth of neurons firing 
	  sometimes uncontrollably, we are transported to the past, to the present, 
	  to the future, whipsawed by images and stories and sounds and smells.  
	  The one minute I am thinking of my delay of three hours at the bridge to 
	  Jordan while Israeli Shin Bet agents scurry around trying to figure out 
	  what to do about me.  I reflect on my angered indignation verbalized 
	  twice to a young white clean-cut guy (maybe Russian?).  Did I 
	  challenge him too much or was it too little?     In visiting 
	  Germany one cannot help but reflect on history.  The thoughts are 
	  transported to periods before I was born, periods in history and facts I 
	  have read and verified and contrast it with myths that are taught daily to 
	  unsuspecting publics. Germany lives in the modern presence but the mist of 
	  a heavy and dark past moves all around sometimes getting thick and 
	  blurring visions.  Some people pump such smoke trying to convince 
	  Germans and themselves that this is that mist emanating from a relevant 
	  past.  We think and speak of how best to explain to Germans that 
	  guilt feelings are misdirected.  How do we explain the Nazi-Zionist 
	  collaborations and the horrors that happened because of a misunderstanding 
	  of what really happened nearly seven decades ago [2].  But most of 
	  all I reflect on both how good people can be and how much evil they can 
	  do.  After all, what makes an Ilan Pappe, brilliant professor, 
	  humanist who shed all his tribal borders and moved to touch his humanity?  
	  And what makes an Ehud Barak, a war criminal with blood of thousands on 
	  his hands?   Not in my name is the message that a brilliant Jewish 
	  German woman (Evelyn Hecht-Galinski) gave in her speech.  Her clarion 
	  voice echoed those of prophets speaking to decadent kings of the past 
	  articulating in passionate moral clarity what horror awaits if they stay 
	  their destructive course.  As human beings, we cannot choose to stand 
	  on the side line while a grave injustice is being committed.  We 
	  cannot stand by and watch as Western governments succumb to lobbies and 
	  send weapons and money that are used to commit horrific crimes.  As 
	  citizens of those countries we cannot be silent.  I listen to 
	  Evelyn’s words (translated from German to English) and to the tone of her 
	  strong voice and determined looks that penetrate to the hearts of a 
	  mesmerized audience.  I think this is what decency and courage look 
	  like.   I listen to Ilan Pappe brilliantly articulating in very 
	  simple and common language what the underpinning of this “issue” is about 
	  (that it is a simple colonialism and racism, nothing special other than 
	  the success of propaganda in drowning this fact with much mythologies, 
	  lies, and nonsense).  He explains how we are allowed to criticize 
	  specific Israeli policies like attacks on Gaza etc but we are not allowed 
	  to criticize the ideology (Zionism) behind these policies.  We must 
	  move from dealing with the symptoms rather to deal with the etiology. He 
	  mentioned how Zionists themselves for decades used terms like Hityakvut 
	  (to colonize) to describe their activities which amounted to creating a 
	  state by destroying a country (his book “the Ethnic Cleansing of 
	  Palestine” remains a classic).  But my mind wonders back to olive 
	  trees being uprooted in Al-Walaja.  My thoughts are wandering all 
	  over the map.  Feelings of moral outrage, mix with memories of 
	  childhood playing in hills that was not yet infected with colonies.  
	     I listen to my friend Dr. Haidar Eid describe life in Gaza and 
	  could only think about the absurdity that he is less than two-hour drive 
	  from where I am but that I could only get to meet him face to face for the 
	  first time thousands of kilometers away in Stuttgart, Germany of all 
	  places.   It is not fair that he is imprisoned in the concentration 
	  camp with 1.5 million prisoners whose only crime is that they are not 
	  Jewish and as such were ethnically cleansed and occupied. Haidar's years 
	  in South Africa gave him the ability to really understand similarities and 
	  differences of our "hafrada" (Hebrew for segregation) with "Apartheid" (Afrikaaner 
	  for segregation).  Ali Abunimah’s articulate description of where we 
	  are with the BDS movement and the media struggle in the US complements 
	  nicely our talks about life and struggle in Palestine.   Felicia 
	  Langer was there. She served for decades as an Israeli lawyer trying to 
	  defend Palestinian political prisoners in kangaroo courts of colonial 
	  apartheid.  I think that the image of her and me and Haidar on the 
	  stage is an image of what the future of an inclusive democratic state will 
	  be like.    I listen to my friend Lubna Masarwa who verbalized 
	  better than any of us the moral indignation that is right and urgent.  
	  She says “we are struggling as Palestinians, we are tired and we want you 
	  to do more..it is urgent and the world keeps letting Israel commit 
	  massacres and continue its ethnic cleansing practices..why...enough is 
	  enough..we are fed up..” My thoughts here bounce across in a room full of 
	  dark walls trying to think of why the disease of apathy is so hard to cure 
	  among humans.  Silence and indifference while injustice and war 
	  crimes are being committed is not just some distant historical episode but 
	  a brutal living reality.  Children in Auschwitz seven decades ago and 
	  children of Gaza and Sabra and Shatila today are after all still children.  
	  Their eyes and their suffering may be ignored by most of humanity but 
	  their truth will penetrate deeper than any fog of mythology.  It can 
	  no longer be said by anyone in the age of the internet that “we did not 
	  know.”    I talked about Popular Resistance in Palestine (the 
	  subject of my just published book) and explained in as simple a language I 
	  could what it means to live here and struggle here and love.  I 
	  explain that we are in this all together (humanity) and that this is not 
	  just a struggle by and for Palestinians.   Summarizing 130 years 
	  of resistance is not easy.  At the conference there is really little 
	  time, everyone wants to talk to us, to get a book signed, to exhange 
	  cards, to hug…     The organizers did a masterful job.  I 
	  stayed with a  wonderful Palestinian host (Anton).  Two of the 
	  key organizers also spoke about the plight of the Bedouin communities in 
	  the Negev.  Attia and Verena Rajab (and their young son who also 
	  volunteered) epitomize kindness and hard work but also of love that should 
	  be the model for all of us.     More can be said about this 
	  conference but ultimately, Lubna said it well “enough talk, time for 
	  action.” And all who attended this conference have rolled-up their sleeves 
	  and got to work.  Onward.   Notes:   [1] 
	  For conference information and resources, see
	  
	  http://senderfreiespalaestina.de/konferenz/index.html, and
	  www.publicsolidarity.de   
	  [2] Menachem Begin became prime Minister of Israel and many boulevards are 
	  named after him. This is a guy who admired fascists and Nazis and even 
	  modeled his group's uniforms and goose-steps after them. His groups sent a 
	  letter to Nazi Germany seeking alliance
	  
	  http://www.palestineremembered.com/Acre/Palestine-Remembered/Story799.html 
	   
	  Einstein and others wrote in the NY Times about Begin's group: "Among 
	  the most disturbing political phenomena of our time is the Emergence in 
	  the newly created state of Israel of the "Freedom Party" (Tnuat Haherut), 
	  a political party closely akin in its organization, methods, political 
	  philosophy and social appeal to the Nazi and Fascist parties. It was 
	  formed out of the membership and following of the former Irgun Zvai Leumi, 
	  a terrorist, right-wing, chauvinist organization in Palestine." (http://qumsiyeh.org/einsteinetalonbegin/ 
	  ) 
	  -See also "FDR, Ruth Gruber and me: Zionists stymie WWII rescue plan," 
	  by Ronald Bleier October 2006
	  
	  http://desip.igc.org/FDRGruberAndMe.html   
	  - There is also "Escaping Auschwitz: A Culture of Forgetting" by Ruth 
	  Linn, Cornell U. Press, 2004. It's about Rudolf Vrba and Alfred Wetzler 
	  who escaped from Auschwitz in 1944 and gave detailed information to the 
	  Jewish Council of Slovakia that could have saved a large proportion of the 
	  Hungarian Jews who had not yet been deported. But the Jewish Council 
	  suppressed the information in order to get a trainload of their own 
	  (Zionist) people out and aided in the death of 437,000 Hungarian Jews. A 
	  summary about Hungarian Jews is found in "Kasztner's List: Zionist 
	  collaboration in Hungary"
	  
	  http://www.fantompowa.net/Flame/kasztner_intro.htm   
	  -See also Bauer, Yehuda, Jews for sale?: Nazi-Jewish negotiations, 
	  1933-1945, New Haven, CT, Yale University Press, 1994.
	  
	  http://www.counterpunch.org/brenner05252005.html    
	  - I urge everyone to also read Lenni Brenner's book "51 Documents: 
	  History of Nazi-Zionist Collaboration".  
	  - There are also data in my book chapter 6
	  
	  http://www.qumsiyeh.org/chapter6/    
	   - Hajo G. Meyer, 83 yo survivor of the concentration camps wrote me a 
	  note once:  "Are you aware that besides the Ha'avarah agreement the 
	  terrorist and murderer Avraham Stern had written to the Nazis on January 
	  11th 1941 to fight with his Irgun forces together with the Nazis against 
	  the British! That is, I think, still stronger stuff." 
	  - And finally, the leadership of the Yishuv and the Zionist movement 
	  did sign a shameful deal with the Nazis "The Transfer Agreement" (see the 
	  book by Edwin Black with that title).   
	  
	  http://www.qumsiyeh.org/thoughtsongermanyandpalestine/ 
	    
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