ـ |
ـ |
|
|
|||||||||||||||
النكبة
الفلسطينية الحقيقية بقلم:
كاميرون براون & أساف رومرسكي منتدى
الشرق الأوسط - 29/5/2007 بحسب قول الفلسطينيين فان
النكبة الحقيقية لا تتمثل في
إخراجهم من فلسطين بل في انعدام
الوحدة و التقاتل الذي يحصل
فيما بينهم The
Real Palestinian 'Catastrophe' by
Cameron S. Brown and Asaf Romirowsky Philadelphia
Daily News May
29, 2007 On
May 15, the Palestinians commemorated the 59th
anniversary of al-Naqba ("the Catastrophe"), a
day of "mourning" the establishment of the
modern state of In
a sense, al-Naqba is the quintessential event that
separates the Palestinians' historical experience from
that of other Arab Muslim groups and forges their unique
national identity. It
is worth noting that the Palestinians use the same day Which
brings us to the question: What exactly is the real
"catastrophe"? Given that this year's al-Naqba
commemoration has been overshadowed by the anarchy and
infighting in Perhaps.
But it looking at a different aspect of this year's
Naqba events might give us a better hint of what the
real Palestinian problem is. In
the early morning of May 15, Hamas used mortars,
missiles and machine guns to attack a Presidential Guard
contingent belonging to Fatah that was stationed near
the Karni border crossing with When
the shooting was over, 10 Fatah members were dead, with
a similar number wounded. Suddenly
aware that their unprovoked massacre may have gone too
far, Hamas claimed it was Then,
in a truly perverse twist, Hamas launched more than 20
rockets at the Israeli town of Given
the overwhelming evidence and eyewitness accounts of
those who were there, it was clear to most Palestinians
that Hamas had committed the massacre. Still, when
trying to explain the cause of the current infighting,
several Palestinians, including Musa Abu Marzouk, deputy
head of Hamas' political bureau, insisted that This
is the real Palestinian Naqba, the disaster at the root
of Palestinian suffering since even before 1948. Instead
of taking responsibility for their role in shaping their
destiny, on virtually every occasion, the Palestinians
have twisted their worldview to put the blame solely on There
is no self-awareness, not to mention self-criticism. No
sense of accountability. Since
the Six-Day War of 1967, this tendency has only become
worse. All too often, Palestinians claim that living
under Israeli occupation has "driven" them to
terrorism, as if they had no choice but to walk into a
café and blow up people sitting there. Such
an approach not only ignores the pre-1967 (and indeed
pre-1948) Palestinian terrorism. (It also fails to
recognize that history has numerous examples of
non-violent movements that were much more effective at
achieving their aims.) But
the most unfortunate part of the Palestinians' fate is
that they have had so many supporters around the world
(including significant segments of the Israeli public)
that they were by no means destined for the poverty and
misery they find themselves in today. They certainly
weren't destined to remain stateless almost 60 years
after the United Nations passed the partition plan. The
lesson is that only when Palestinians, leadership and
public alike, start to consider how their own actions
have been the primary cause for the sorry state they're
in will there be a chance for it to improve. And
once that true soul-searching finally takes place, and
they begin to take responsibility for their collective
destiny, the Palestinian people will be able to help
themselves far more than all the other nations of the
world have ever been able to. Cameron
S. Brown is deputy director of the Global Research in
International Affairs Center in Herzliya, http://www.meforum.org/article/1695 ----------------- نشرنا
لهذه المقالات لا يعني أنها
تعبر عن وجهة نظر المركز كلياً
أو جزئياً
|
ـ |
ـ |
من حق الزائر الكريم أن ينقل وأن ينشر كل ما يعجبه من موقعنا . معزواً إلينا ، أو غير معزو .ـ |