MIFTAH
Saturday, 18 May. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

The agenda is comprised of the substantive issues that, in themselves, formed the essence of the conflict; consequently, their resolution would signify the solution of the conflict itself and the launching of a new paradigm in relationships in the region.

Such a paradigm shift requires by necessity an active will not only to deal with the underlying causes of the conflict, but also to come to a recognition of their historical contexts and realities.

If a genuine historical reconciliation is the actual objective of these negotiations (rather than a temporary or partial truce), then a true reconciliation with history has become imperative.

For the greatest part of this century, the Palestinian historical narrative has been absent or distorted. The politics of denial and exclusion had prevailed even over the actual accounts of witnesses and victims.

A one-sided narrative had dominated the historical discourse, made up primarily of myths, legends, and outright fabrications enjoying wholesale adoption by the West and willful or blind perpetuation by Israel.

As a matter of convenience, on the one hand, or as grounds for claiming and justifying political advantage and transgressions on the other, such spurious versions of “history” have themselves become part of the conflict as well as the factors shaping and escalating its intensity.

They also contributed to Western perceptions of the Palestinians, hence finding their way to becoming part of the constructed peace process and the scope of the solution as envisaged by others.

More than anything else, mythical history has had a prescriptive impact on the way in which Palestinian inherent rights and realities were defined and thus found its way into the formulation of the substance and scope of the final settlement as envisaged by third parties.

Such built-in biases and distortions are inevitably detrimental to the objective of establishing a just peace with any claims to comprehensiveness and permanence.

Not only is an authentic version of history long overdue, but it has also become imperative that a recognition of guilt and an admission of culpability be clearly and publicly articulated by Israel.

While an apology will not actually solve the conflict, it will primarily prepare the grounds and generate the atmosphere necessary for the solution.

It is also incumbent upon Western countries that had contributed to the grave historical injustice inflicted upon the Palestinians to recognize and admit their own share of the blame and to set the historical record straight.

In the age of the information and technological revolution, knowledge is no longer a restricted commodity nor is ignorance an acceptable excuse.

In addition, the historical archives have become available for all those who seek the actual version of past events rather than the convenient and false “wisdom” of inherited misrepresentation and sops to the collective conscience.

The horror of the holocaust as the most repugnant expression of Western anti-Semitism cannot and must not be denied. Conversely, it must not be exploited to negate the real and tragic victimization of the Palestinian people. Both are facts of history whose lessons must encompass the collective human moral dimension. They are not mutually exclusive.

Assuaging guilt over one does not mean denial of guilt over the other.

It is indicative and significant that the pioneer voices that had first raised the issue of authentic Palestinian-Israeli history have been those of the “revisionist” or “new” Israeli historians.

Typically, the narrative of the victim had been dismissed as “unreliable” or biased or inconsistent with the prevailing counterfeit account, however expedient.

Only when courageous Israeli historians such as Benny Morris, Finkelstein, Ilan Pappe, Tom Segev, Lenni Brenner, and Shahak began to speak out in favor of debunking traditional myths and discarding expurgated versions of actual events did the real narrative begin to resonate among a reluctant world audience.

The oppressor’s monopoly on the “truth” began to broken, and the victim’s erstwhile “propaganda” began to gain credence.

In fact, the hitherto acceptable Israeli version is now being described as a “propagandistic” instrument to gain allegiance and support and to justify unacceptable atrocities that had been shrouded in the conqueror’s halos of heroism.

Along with the history, the discourse itself is undergoing a serious transformation.

“Ethnic cleansing” is no longer a taboo when used to describe the plight of the Palestinians forcibly evicted from their ancestral homes and lands in 1948, suffering from dispossession, dispersion, and exile.

“Massacres” against the civilian Palestinian population are being recognized as a horrific component of Israel’s creation (rather than the glorious “war of liberation.”)

Individual recollections by previously silent army generals are finally being recorded as the accounts of perpetrators of collective crimes rather than the legends of bravery that had adorned traditional history books.

Attempts by officials like Yossi Sarid to address “incidents” like the Kufr Kassem massacre as a fact of Israeli history and culpability within the domain of public discourse and education also contribute to the redress effort.

The image of the “self” in Israel is undergoing a healthy transformation, and along with it the inevitable (other side of the coin) image of the “other.”

While the emergent post Zionist argument questions the Jewish exclusivity of a contemporary Israel and its incompatibility with a genuine, pluralistic democracy, it also places into focus the terrible price paid by the Palestinians and the need for a process of historical redemption.

This has gained both relevance and urgency in view of the discussions under way on the refugee question in addition to the issue of compensation and reparations.

It is also significant as a backdrop for understanding the magnitude of the historical compromise inherent in the Palestinian acceptance of the two-state solution and the recognition of the state of Israel on most of the land of historical Palestine.

From this perspective also, the Palestinian insistence on the June 4, 1967 boundaries becomes even more understandable as a minimal requirement for a territorially viable state with a double concession on the 1947 partition and 1948 armistice boundaries.

Any Israeli extraterritoriality, particularly in the form of settlements, any attempt at maintaining control over water sources, and any other factors leading to the diminution of Palestinian sovereignty and territory would become clearly untenable.

It is therefore imperative that a full understanding of the historical dimension and a genuine process of rectification should become the guiding principles of final status negotiations as a tool of genuine reconciliation.

The candor and integrity of the New Historians are an important contribution to a just solution.

The Palestinians have long resisted the adoption of the fraudulent Israeli narrative. Perhaps now there can be a convergence of narratives that will lead to a common future with shared goals.

 
 
Read More...
 
 
By the Same Author
 
Footer
Contact us
Rimawi Bldg, 3rd floor
14 Emil Touma Street,
Al Massayef, Ramallah
Postalcode P6058131

Mailing address:
P.O.Box 69647
Jerusalem
 
 
Palestine
972-2-298 9490/1
972-2-298 9492
info@miftah.org

 
All Rights Reserved © Copyright,MIFTAH 2023
Subscribe to MIFTAH's mailing list
* indicates required