MIFTAH
Friday, 19 April. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

In the end, they all say the right words. From President Mahmoud Abbas down to Hamas chief Khaled Meshaal and all the lesser ranking minions in between, they never forget to mention Palestinian national unity. It is the Holy Grail of Palestinian politics and all those who fail to embrace these words are immediately branded as unpatriotic, a sell out to the noble cause.

Still, there is something horribly wrong, even when the phrase "national unity" is espoused by our leaders as the ultimate goal. Not only are the calls for national unity half-baked these days, they usually come with a huge "but". The aftermath of the latest disaster that befell the Gaza Strip is ample evidence of just how much trouble we are really in.

While the split between Hamas and Fateh is nothing new, one would think the atrocities of Gaza and the obvious suffering of our people there would have, if nothing else, brought us together. Israel claimed its "war" was on Hamas, not the citizens of Gaza. But when the missiles fell and the phosphorus bombs rained down on the crowded Strip, all Palestinians were targets, not just members of the Islamic movement.

Since Israel's occupying army, our common enemy, made no discrimination amongst us, shouldn't we at least allow ourselves the same courtesy? One would think that rather than further split us apart, our common tragedy would pull us together, band us in our determination to fend off Israel's obvious intention to isolate us from each other and quell any voices of opposition.

In such a situation, the Palestinians, like any other people, look to their leaders for guidance. But instead of finding solace in their statements which should have guaranteed a united front against Israel's aggression, Palestinians were faced with verbal backstabbing and finger-pointing that only grew worse with time.

In Gaza, the deposed Hamas government has become so drunk with power that it truly believes it is capable of governing not only the Strip but the entire Palestinian people with its Islamic ideology and iron fist. For Hamas, the Gaza battle was a victory, regardless of the gruesome statistics. Almost 1,400 Palestinians were killed, 5,000 more injured, thousands of people left homeless and reconstruction requirements that will surely take years and nearly $2 billion to complete. And because it has claimed "victory" in Gaza, Hamas has therefore granted itself the right to put itself above all others, particularly the Palestinian Authority and its President Mahmoud Abbas.

On January 11, Hamas politburo chief Khaled Meshaal addressed the people from Damascus. Other than the usual rhetoric about the "heroic resistance" and the "Zionist enemy", Meshaal was sure to get in a word or two about Abbas. At first, his words gave a glimmer of hope that, perhaps, just maybe, he had risen above the bitter disputes. "I call on Mr. Mahmoud Abbas - who called for national unity in the face of Israel's attacks - to declare to the world that we must agree to a Palestinian partnership between the Palestinian Authority and Hamas in Gaza…"

It did not take long for the rhetoric to deteriorate into cutting accusations. "We [Hamas] supported national unity from day one -- but this needs honesty and credibility. We also call on Mahmoud Abbas to stop cooperating with the enemy and to stop negotiations with the Israelis. "

Just yesterday, on January 27, President Abbas gave a press conference in Ramallah. While the bulk of his speech was a call for Israel to be tried for war crimes, he could not help but throw a few left hooks at Meshaal. "Is it reasonable for a leader to drag down his people because of a 'prediction’?" Abbas asked, in reference to Meshaal saying he believed Israel's offensive would not last more than two or three days. "This is a crime for which he could be tried."

The examples are endless, but the dangerous ramifications of them are one and the same. Our leaders, no matter how well intentioned they claim to be, are leading us down a vicious spiral of division and despair. Today, the Gaza Strip is in desperate need of reconstruction. Hundreds of thousands of Gazans have been made homeless by Israel's 22-day bombing spree and are in dire need of shelter, food and basic supplies. The reported bickering between the West Bank government run by Abbas and the deposed Hamas authority in the Gaza Strip over the mechanisms for Gaza's rebuilding have only deepened the fissure. If nothing else, this should have been the opportunity for the Palestinians to unite.

In the meantime, unity talks, mediation, reconciliatory meetings and discussions continue here and in Cairo. Both Hamas and Fateh and all those who fall in the unfortunate in-between espouse the same thing - national unity. Even foreign leaders such as UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon are warning the Palestinians that unity is their only way forward. It is now up to the Palestinians themselves to decide whether they will take this advice or not.

It cannot be stressed enough how dangerous a continued lack of unity is to our cause and to our very existence. Gaza and the West Bank are already separated geographically, with a belligerent Israel sitting between them. Nevertheless, all along we have had unity of stance and heart working to our advantage. The Palestinians are one people, wherever they may be and no matter how many impediments the Israeli occupation might put before them.

Today that is not the case. Israel wants the Gaza Strip and the West Bank permanently separated so as to foil any aspirations of a contiguous and viable Palestinian state. This has never been a secret, especially to the Palestinians. What is so absurd is that our leaders have played right into Israel's hands by consolidating two separate authorities in the West Bank and Gaza. Israel no longer needs to separate us. We are doing it ourselves.

The only advice one can offer to a leadership that will hopefully one day listen to the desperate calls of its people is to realize that national unity cannot be an empty slogan to which they merely pay lip service. Our future state is already on the brink of extinction because of Israel's policies of isolation, separation and confiscation. We will surely regret it if the coffin was forever sealed by our own hands.

Joharah Baker is a Writer for the Media and Information Program at the Palestinian Initiative for the Promotion of Global Dialogue and Democracy (MIFTAH). She can be contacted at mip@miftah.org.

 
 
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