From the Los Angeles Times
West chooses Fatah, but Palestinians
don't
They prefer Hamas, which represents an
alternative to Fatah's acceptance of the Israeli occupation.
By Saree Makdisi
SAREE MAKDISI, a professor of English and comparative literature at
UCLA, writes often about the Middle East.
June 20, 2007
IN THE WEST, there's a huge sense of relief. The Hamas-led government
that has been causing everyone so much trouble has been isolated in
Gaza, and a new government has been appointed in the West Bank by the
"moderate," peace-loving Palestinian Authority president, Mahmoud
Abbas.
So
why then do Palestinians not share in the relief? Well, for one thing,
the old government had been democratically elected; now it has been
dismissed out of hand by presidential fiat. There's also the fact that
the new prime minister appointed by Abbas — Salam Fayyad — has the
support of the West, but his election list won only 2% of the votes in
the same election that swept Hamas to victory. Fayyad and Abbas have
the support of Israel, but it is no secret that they lack the backing
of their own people.
There is a reason the people threw out
Abbas' Fatah party in last year's election. Palestinians see the
leading Fatah politicians as unimaginative, self-serving and corrupt,
satisfied with the emoluments of power.
Worse yet,
Palestinians came to realize that the so-called peace process
championed by Abbas (and by Yasser Arafat before him) had led to the
permanent institutionalization — rather than the termination — of
Israel's 4-decade-old military occupation of their land. Why should
they feel otherwise? There are today twice as many settlers in the
occupied territories as there were when Yitzhak Rabin and Arafat first
shook hands in the White House Rose Garden. Israel has divided the West
Bank into besieged cantons, worked diligently to increase the number of
Jewish settlers in East Jerusalem (while stripping Palestinian
Jerusalemites of their residency rights in the city) and turned Gaza
into a virtual prison.
People voted for Hamas last year not
because they approved of the party's sloganeering, not because they
wanted to live in an Islamic state, not because they support attacks on
Israeli civilians, but because Hamas was untainted by Fatah's
complacency and corruption, untainted by its willingness to continue
pandering to Israel. Fatah leaders were viewed as mere policemen of the
perpetual occupation, and the Palestinian Authority had willingly taken
on the role of administering the population on behalf of the Israelis.
Hamas offered an alternative.
Here in the U.S., Hamas is
routinely demonized, known primarily for its attacks on civilians.
Depictions of Hamas portray its "rejectionism" as an end in itself
rather than as a refusal to go along with a political process that has
proved catastrophic for Palestinians on the ground.
Has Hamas
done unspeakable things? Yes, but so has Fatah, and so too has Israel
(on a much larger scale). There are no saints in the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Palestinians, frankly, see a lot
of hypocrisy in the West's anti-Hamas stance. Since last year's
election, for example, the West has denied aid to the Hamas government,
arguing, among other things, that Hamas refuses to recognize Israel.
But that's absurd; after all, Israel does not recognize Palestine
either. Hamas is accused of not abiding by previous agreements. But
Israel's suspension of tax revenue transfers to the Palestinian
Authority, and its refusal to implement a Gaza-West Bank road link
agreement brokered by the U.S. in November 2005, are practical,
rather than merely rhetorical, violations of previous agreements,
causing infinitely more damage to ordinary people. Hamas is accused of
mixing religion and politics, but no one has explained why its version
of that mixture is any worse than Israel's — or why a Jewish state is
acceptable but a Muslim one is not.
I am a secular humanist, and
I personally find religiously identified political movements — and
states — unappealing, to say the least.
But let's be honest.
Hamas did not run into Western opposition because of its Islamic
ideology but because of its opposition to (and resistance to) the
Israeli occupation.
A genuine peace based on the two-state
solution would require an end to the Israeli occupation and the
creation of a territorially contiguous, truly independent Palestinian
state.
But that is not happening. Fatah seems to have given up,
its leaders preferring to rest comfortably with the power they already
have. Ironically, it is Hamas that is taking the stands that would be
prerequisites for a true two-state peace plan: refusing to go along
with the permanent breakup of Palestine and not accepting the sacrifice
of control over borders, airspace, water, taxes and even the population
registry to Israel.
Embracing the "moderation" of Abbas allows
the Palestinian Authority to resume servicing the occupation on
Israel's behalf, for now. In the long run, though, the two-state
solution is finished because Fatah is either unable or unwilling to
stop the ongoing dismemberment of the territory once intended for a
Palestinian state.
The only realistic choice remaining will be
the one between a single democratic, secular state offering equal
rights for both Israelis and Palestinians — or permanent apartheid.
Copyright 2007 Los Angeles Times