by Jaffer Ali
Amidst the polemics that rage on
and off line, sometimes it is helpful to take a step back to
understand the human dimension of the Palestinian/Israeli conflict.
If you please, indulge the following reminisces for I believe that
they reveal why Israel must necessarily abandon Occupation.
My father was born in the small
West Bank village of Beitunia in 1930. His family owned an orange
grove in Lydia and after 1948 neither he, nor his siblings ever saw
the grove again. He came to the US for good in 1949. He was a
"man's man" with shoulders that appeared Atlas-like to me
while growing up.
When he was alive, I only saw my
father cry three times in my life. The first time transformed me
forever. I was eleven years old and the year was 1968. My father
received a package in the mail. Apparently he had donated some money
and he received a book. I do not remember what kind of book, but
inside when he opened it, I will never forget what I saw. It was a
small Palestinian flag.
My father took it out and with
his head bowed...he wept. I distinctly remember a sense of
bewilderment. I had never seen this hulk of a man cry before. I
quizzically asked, "Yaba, what's wrong?" But he never told
me. His was a generation that found these emotional outbursts
confusing and embarrassing. But somehow I "instinctively"
knew what had happened. And something happened to me. That day I
became a Palestinian.
It was the next year in school
that I had my first speech class. Most of the boys gave speeches on
football and baseball and the girls on dolls and make up. My speech
was on the disastrous consequences of the Balfour declaration.
Fast forwarding to the year 2000,
history has somehow come full circle. This time, I am the father.
One evening my wife, three boys and I decided to break the Ramadan
fast at a restaurant. The waitress came over to ask what beverage we
wanted. I answered for the table, "Bring three Cokes for the
boys and two glasses of water."
My ten-year-old looked at me with
surprise and said, "Yaba, should we be drinking Coca Cola? We
should order something else because Coke is helping the
Israelis." With this statement, my ten-year old became a
Palestinian. Now, if you think that our home is a den of
indoctrination, you would be dead wrong. He overheard me speaking
about a Middle Eastern boycott of American goods, which included
Coke. I believe my son "instinctively" knew that we should
not lend ourselves to helping Israel brutalize our brothers and
sisters, even indirectly.
These two incidents, separated by
more than thirty years, reveal something fundamental, almost
metaphysical. What connects ALL Palestinians in the world is a
shared psychic experience. And this experience solidifies a
Palestinian identity, no matter where one lives. Diaspora has not
eradicated this identity. Time has not eradicated it. Neither
prosperity nor privation has eradicated it. Being a Palestinian
transcends geography and time. It is an eternal thought that lies
dormant, waiting for a chance to express itself.
In the refugee camps of Jordan,
Syria and Lebanon every Palestinian dreams of freedom and living in
dignity without despair. In the villages of the West Bank and Gaza
every Palestinian dreams of a life without identity cards, without
Israeli snipers shooting the eyes out of children in dubious self
defense. Every Palestinian living in countries from Australia to the
US is connected to every other Palestinian. We will not go away.
Israel has falsely assumed that
time was on its side. Their belief was that successive generations
of Palestinians would assimilate into neighboring Arab countries.
Israel believed that creating conditions of deprivation would cause
a mass exodus without a longing to return. They have forgotten their
own history. Israeli brutality has solidified Palestinian identity
and demands its expression.
My father died almost twenty
years ago and before he became ill, he looked me in the eye and
said, "Son, I may not live to see Palestine, but Insha'Allah
you will." While it is true that Palestinians clutch the past
to preserve our identity, we are ready to embrace the future. My
father's hope still rings in my ears.
(Mr. Jaffer Ali is a
Palestinian-American businessman who writes on business
Ethics, management theory
and political topics.)