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The Nakba: then and now
IMEU, May 15, 2006
Institute for Middle East Understanding (IMEU)
http://www.imeu.net/news/article001375.shtml
To
interview any of the commentators contact the IMEU at 510-451-2600 or
info@imeu.net
On the 58th anniversary of the Nakba, or the "Catastrophe," prominent
Palestinians share their thoughts on the day that more than 700,000
Palestinians became refugees. The IMEU asked the panel, ranging from
business leaders to comedians, what comes to mind on the 58th
anniversary of the Nakba and why Americans should care today.
Khaldoun Baghdadi
When you reflect on the 58th anniversary of the Nakba,
what comes to mind?
I think of my mom walking into a refugee camp as a young girl. I think of
the door my grandfather installed on our home in Safad, which he locked
for the last time that day. I think of that clean, white house with the
blue door, and wonder what it would be like for my kids to play in the
courtyard. I think of my dad as a teenager working for the British army
collecting bodies. I move from confusion to sadness to anger that the
world allowed this to happen, and permits it to continue.
Why should Americans care about the Nakba, 58 years later?
No American would tolerate being expelled from their home, and then be
told they are a “demographic threat.” Americans need to know that a
massive group of people were forcefully stripped of their homes and land
on the basis of being Christian and Muslim. None of them have the right to
return. No civilized nation would tolerate that.
Sam Bahour
When you reflect on the 58th anniversary of the Nakba,
what comes to mind?
This year’s anniversary of the Nakba generates a myriad of emotions. The
international community has turned a blind eye while so many Palestinian
refugees, generation after generation, continue to be born into despair.
During the last 6 years, we have relived another Nakba that has been
applied in the most modern and sophisticated ways of oppression known to
mankind, but this time no one fled. The Palestinians have been screaming
at the top of their voice, if they are not heard now, a new generation
will know nothing but life under the same illegal Israeli occupation as
the previous one. Allowing Palestinians to be locked up (and down) and
treated as animals can only result in more innocent lives being lost, on
both sides of the Green Line.
Why should Americans care about the Nakba, 58 years later?
Sadly, the average American has been programmed to accept Israeli spin,
verbatim. Even worse, American politicians have been programmed to blindly
be led by Israel’s powerful lobby in the US, AIPAC, many times in clear
contradiction to US interests in the Middle East. 58 years of instability
in one of the world’s most strategic regions can be directly associated to
the US’s application of double standards in defense of Israel’s
dispossession of Palestinians and Israel’s continued illegal military
occupation.
The Nakba is not a memorial for the dead. It is a remembrance of the
living, of a proud and steadfast people yearning to return home and begin
the bitter and difficult process of repatriation. Every US citizen who
would like to see a stabilized Middle East—one that does not breed
violence, but vehemently breeds tolerance, should use this Nakba Day
remembrance to make their voice heard and call for Israel to let the
refugees return home. This is the only real painful “concession” that
Israel must learn to accept, not necessarily because it wants to, but
because its creation stipulated it doing so.
George Bisharat
When you reflect on the 58th anniversary of the Nakba,
what comes to mind?
I think first of my grandfather’s home in Jerusalem that was expropriated
by the Israelis in 1948, and for which compensation has never been paid.
But more than that, I think about the hundreds of thousands of other
Palestinians who were forcibly expelled by Israeli troops or fled in fear,
and who have not been as fortunate as me to find a secure and prosperous
life in the United States. These more than five million Palestinians live
almost within a stones throw of their homes and their homeland, and their
right to return has been consistently recognized by the international
community, yet nothing has ever been done to effectuate that right.
Why should Americans care about the Nakba, 58 years later?
The Nakba, or the destruction of Palestinian society in 1948, is at the
heart of the Israel-Palestine conflict. While our government has often
stated support for Palestinian rights, as a matter of practice and
increasingly over time, the United States has supported Israel in its
drive to control most or all of historic Palestine. This support by the
United States, which takes military, economic, and diplomatic forms, has
caused enmity against the United States throughout the world. This anger
at our role is particularly acute in the Middle East, which is an area of
vital interest to the United States and the world. So fellow Americans
need to understand how damaging to our international standing and our
national interests our role in this conflict has been.
Diana Buttu
When you reflect on the 58th anniversary of the Nakba,
what comes to mind?
As a child of a Nakba survivor, I am haunted by the image of thousands of
Palestinians fleeing to safety and I am left wondering what the
Palestinians were living through that would make them flee their homes for
safety. As a resident of Gaza, the daily Israeli shelling and frequent
bombing raids have terrorized me. And, while I have often thought of
leaving, I remain, as do most Palestinians. In the height of these bombing
campaigns, I often think back to the Nakba and convince myself that I can
live through it.
A dear Jewish friend of mine once told me that her mother was haunted by
the faces of the people who idly watched her get on a truck that shipped
her off to a concentration camp. I, too, am often left wondering what the
watchers-by were thinking in 1948. More hauntingly, however, I am left
wondering whether Israelis ever think that their state, which is supposed
to be a haven for Jews, caused the dispossession of so many Palestinians.
Have they not become the people who idly watched the Palestinians get on
trucks?
Why should Americans care about the Nakba, 58 years later?
The unconditional support provided to Israel, in the face of Israel’s
continued dispossession of the Palestinians, is the source of much of the
discontent towards the United States in the Middle East. Arabs see the
double standards in U.S. foreign policy: while the U.S. advocates (and
even fights for) the return of Bosnian and East Timorese refugees,
Palestinian rights are extinguished by the U.S.; while the U.S. claims
that it supports civil rights, the U.S. also supports a state that
advocates superior rights for a certain class of people; while the U.S. is
opposed to the taking of property without compensation, it supports regime
after regime in Israel who make no secret of the fact that they have
stolen property in the past and will continue to do so in the future. This
unresolved issue will continue to serve as problem for Israel and the U.S.
for another 58 years unless a just resolution is achieved.
Lena Khalaf Tuffaha
When you reflect on the 58th anniversary of the Nakba,
what comes to mind?
I think about the growing problem that my children are going to have to
deal with. Refugees have grown in number and their problems have deepened
and worsened. Their problems are going to be made worse by the passage of
time. I think the longer the international community, the Israelis and
Palestinians wait to do justice for the refugees, the more likely my
children, the Palestinians of tomorrow, will have to deal with this crisis
because we haven’t been able to do it ourselves.
Why should Americans care about the Nakba, 58 years later?
We should care about the Nakba because a great injustice was committed
against a defenseless population. I think it’s an injustice that should
and can be righted. That would help to dramatically increase respect for
America throughout the Arab world - if America for once stood up for the
people that were really victimized. We care deeply about justice, so it’s
an issue that Americans can understand and relate to.
Saree Makdisi
When you reflect on the 58th anniversary of the Nakba,
what comes to mind?
How remarkable it is that the most obvious injustice can be perpetuated
for so long—and not even recognized for the injustice that it is; and how
absurd it is that so much of the media misrepresentation of
Palestine/Israel hinges on blaming the victims of what even Israel’s own
apologists frankly acknowledge was an act of ethnic cleansing.
Why should Americans care about the Nakba, 58 years later?
The dispossession and injustice experienced by the Palestinian people,
beginning in 1948, is the foundation of most of the instability in the
Middle East. America was once a much beloved country, a symbol to many
Arabs in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries of freedom and
justice; America’s blind and unconditional support for Israel since the
late 1960s has done nothing but hurt the image of the US in the Arab
world.
Maysoon Zayid
When you reflect on the 58th anniversary of the Nakba,
what comes to mind?
What instantly comes to mind is the fact that the people who became
refugees in 1948 are still refugees now; that the situation 58 years later
has still not been solved. Did these people who left their homes thinking
they would go back in a few days have any idea that generations later
their great grandchildren would be living in camps? There is still no
solution and more and more children are being born in the camps.
Why should Americans care about the Nakba, 58 years later?
The U.S. had a hand in the partitioning of historic Palestine, and the
result has been unrest in the Middle East for 58 years. Since the U.S. was
pivotal in creating this whole situation, Americans should be concerned
about it. At the same time, there are many more things that Americans need
to care about - such as the wall in the West Bank and the ramifications of
its construction. With what occurred during the Nakba and having seen what
a horrible result that was, Americans should think twice about supporting
current Israeli policy, such as the construction of the wall.

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The
Nakba: then and now,
IMEU (May 15, 2006)
The
great catastrophe ,
The
Guardian (May 13, 2006)
Remembering
the future,
George E. Bisharat (May 12, 2006)
Talk
radio gives Palestinians a voice,
The
Christian Science Monitor (May 12, 2006)
Hamas:
Isolate or engage?,
Nadia Hijab and Shmuel Rosner (May 11, 2006)
Palestinians
to get interim aid,
BBC
(May 10, 2006)
Rite
of return to a Palestinian home ,
George E. Bisharat (May 8, 2006)
Government
non grata,
Erica Silverman, Al-Ahram Weekly (May 7, 2006)
Opening
the debate on Israel,
Norman Solomon, Baltimore Sun (May 7, 2006)
Days
of thunder,
Gideon Levy, Haaretz (May 6, 2006)
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