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      The Violence Debate:  
	Teaching the Oppressed How to Fight Oppression
	 
	By Ramzy Baroud  
	Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, October 25, 2010 
	   An American activist once gave me a book she wrote detailing her 
	experiences in Palestine. The largely visual volume documented her journey 
	of the occupied West Bank, rife with barbered wires, checkpoints, soldiers 
	and tanks. It also highlighted how Palestinians resisted the occupation 
	peacefully, in contrast to the prevalent media depictions linking 
	Palestinian resistance to violence.    More recently, I received a 
	book glorifying non-violent resistance, and which referred to 
	self-proclaimed Palestinian fighters who renounced violence as “converts”. 
	The book elaborated on several wondrous examples of how these “conversions” 
	came about. Apparently a key factor was the discovery that not all Israelis 
	supported the military occupation. The fighters realized that an environment 
	that allowed both Israelis and Palestinians to work together would be best 
	for Palestinians seeking other, more effective means of liberation.   
	An American priest also explained to me how non-violent resistance is 
	happening on an impressive scale. He showed me brochures he had obtained 
	during a visit to a Bethlehem organization which teaches youth the perils of 
	violence and the wisdom of non-violence. The organization and its founders 
	run seminars and workshops and invite speakers from Europe and the United 
	States to share their knowledge on the subject with the (mostly refugee) 
	students.   Every so often, an article, video or book surfaces with a 
	similar message: Palestinians are being taught non-violence; Palestinians 
	are responding positively to the teachings of non-violence.    As for 
	progressive and Leftist media and audiences, stories praising non-violence 
	are electrifying, for they ignite a sense of hope that a less violent way is 
	possible, that the teachings of Gandhi are not only relevant to India, in a 
	specific time and space, but throughout the world, anytime.    These 
	depictions repeatedly invite the question: where is the Palestinian Gandhi? 
	Then, they invite the answer: a Palestinian Gandhi already exists, in 
	numerous West Bank villages bordering the Israeli Apartheid Wall, which 
	peacefully confront carnivorous Israeli bulldozers as they eat up 
	Palestinian land.    In a statement marking a recent visit 
	announcement by the group of Elders to the Middle East,  India's Ela 
	Bhatt, a ‘Gandhian advocate of non-violence’, explained her role in The 
	Elders’ latest mission: “I will be pleased to return to the Middle East to 
	show the Elders’ support for all those engaged in creative, non-violent 
	resistance to the occupation – both Israelis and Palestinians.”    For 
	some, the emphasis on non-violent resistance is a successful media strategy. 
	You will certainly far more likely to get Charlie Rose’s attention by 
	discussing how Palestinians and Israelis organize joint sit-ins than by 
	talking about the armed resistance of some militant groups ferociously 
	fighting the Israeli army.    For others, ideological and spiritual 
	convictions are the driving forces behind their involvement in the 
	non-violence campaign, which is reportedly raging in the West Bank. These 
	realizations seem to be largely lead by Western advocates.   On the 
	Palestinian side, the non-violent brand is also useful. It has provided an 
	outlet for many who were engaged in armed resistance, especially during the 
	Second Palestinian Intifada. Some fighters, affiliated with the Fatah 
	movement, for example, have become involved in art and theater, after 
	hauling automatic rifles and topping Israel’s most wanted list for years. 
	  Politically, the term is used by the West Bank government as a platform 
	that would allow for the continued use of the word moqawama, Arabic for 
	resistance, but without committing to a costly armed struggle, which would 
	certainly not go down well if adopted by the non-elected government deemed 
	‘moderate’ by both Israel and the United States.    Whether in subtle 
	or overt ways, armed resistance in Palestine is always condemned. Mahmoud 
	Abbas’ Fatah government repeatedly referred to it as ‘futile’. Some insist 
	it is a counterproductive strategy. Others find it morally indefensible. 
	  The problem with the non-violence bandwagon is that it is grossly 
	misrepresentative of the reality on the ground. It also takes the focus away 
	from the violence imparted by the Israeli occupation – in its routine and 
	lethal use in the West Bank, and the untold savagery in Gaza - and places it 
	solely on the shoulders of the Palestinians.    As for the gross 
	misrepresentation of reality, Palestinians have used mass non-violent 
	resistance for generations - as early as the long strike of 1936. 
	Non-violent resistance has been and continues to be the bread and butter of 
	Palestinian moqawama, from the time of British colonialism to the Israeli 
	occupation. At the same time, some Palestinians fought violently as well, 
	compelled by a great sense of urgency and the extreme violence applied 
	against them by their oppressors. It is similar to the way many Indians 
	fought violently, even during the time that Mahatma Gandhi’s ideas were in 
	full bloom.    Those who reduce and simplify India’s history of 
	anti-colonial struggle are doing the same to Palestinians.    
	Misreading history often leads to an erroneous assessment of the present, 
	and thus a flawed prescription for the future. For some, Palestinians cannot 
	possibly get it right, whether they respond to oppression non-violently, 
	violently, with political defiance or with utter submissiveness. The onus 
	will always be on them to come up with solution, and do so creatively and in 
	ways that suit our Western sensibilities and our often selective 
	interpretations of Gandhi’s teachings.     Violence and 
	non-violence are mostly collective decisions that are shaped and driven by 
	specific political and socio-economic conditions and contexts. 
	Unfortunately, the violence of the occupier has a tremendous role in 
	creating and manipulating these conditions. It is unsurprising that the 
	Second Palestinian Uprising was much more violent than the first, and that 
	violent resistance in Palestine gained a huge boost after the victory scored 
	by the Lebanese resistance in 2000, and again in 2006.    These 
	factors must be contemplated seriously and with humility, and their 
	complexity should be taken into account before any judgments are made. No 
	oppressed nation should be faced with the demands that Palestinians 
	constantly face. There may well be a thousand Palestinian Gandhis. There may 
	be none. Frankly, it shouldn’t matter. Only the unique experience of the 
	Palestinian people and their genuine struggle for freedom could yield what 
	Palestinians as a collective deem appropriate for their own. This is what 
	happened with the people of India, France, Algeria and South Africa, and 
	many others nations that sought and eventually attained their freedom.    
	- Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) 
	is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: 
	Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London), now available on Amazon.com. 
       
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