by Jaffer Ali
Every once in a great while an
event or events occur that transforms the nature of a struggle. As
if by magic or Divine Intervention, a people decide collectively
that the chasm between freedom and death are the only alternatives
of their existence. They reach a point when they decide that the
years of humiliation, the years of waiting for deliverance from
outside parties, and the years of placing faith in their leadership
must be rejected once and for all. It is a point of no return. The
Palestinians have discovered this chasm.
I am a forty-four year old
Palestinian-American businessman and discovered the chasm after
watching a
thirteen-year-old boy in the Occupied Territories face an Israeli
tank with nothing more than a stone in hand. This boy had
discovered the chasm long before me. In that one brave act of
defiance, this boy became MY leader. After first seeing that image,
I cried. Every night as I go to sleep safely tucked away in my
suburban home in Mokena, Illinois, that image haunts me...and I cry.
Even as I type this with tears running down my cheek, the chasm
beckons.
Israel has lost this struggle,
only they have not yet fully discovered this. For years they have
been so militarily successful that the arrogance of power has
distorted their sensibilities. Menachem Begin clearly outlined
Israeli strategy when he said the following: "We have made the
Arabs lose faith and confidence in themselves. Now we must make them
lose the hope of pressuring us through the United
States."
The chasm is proving Israel's
well-worn strategy obsolete. Last month, a twelve-year-old
Palestinian boy in Amman, Jordan woke up at six in the morning and
left a note for his parents. The note said that he was leaving to
join the Uprising with his brothers and sisters in the Occupied
Territories. He could not wait for Arafat to deliver them from
apartheid, he could not wait for America to free his people. He
embarked upon a solitary journey, fifty miles to a place he had
never been. After walking for eighteen hours, exhausted and lost, he
fell asleep in a field only to be found by Bedouins. They took back
him back to his family. This boy became MY leader.
Muhammad Dura was a
twelve-year-old boy shot in his father's arms by Israeli Occupation
Forces. We are told he was at the wrong place at the wrong time. His
place and time in the struggle are timeless, captured on film for a
world wishing to turn a blind eye. His place in the struggle
cemented forever. This boy became MY leader.
The human heart knows no
bounds... once it is opened. Through the brutality of Occupation,
through the humiliation of Occupation, through the injustice of
Occupation, our people have rekindled a dignity that laid dormant
for hundreds of years. Through our pain has come a rebirth. This
rebirth transcends religion and ideology. It transcends economics
and public relations.
The brutality of Israeli
Occupation has an air of desperation. Israelis are clinging to a
dead corpse, not quite realizing that a rebirth is under way and
cannot be aborted. Try as they may, Israeli gunmen cannot extinguish
the Phoenix rising from the rubble and ashes they have so artfully
created. For every child they shoot, another picks up a stone to
lead our people. And I will follow from this point until the day I
die.
(Mr. Jaffer Ali is a
Palestinian-American businessman who writes on business
Ethics, management theory
and political topics.)