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When Falsehoods Triumph:
Why A Winning Palestinian Narrative is Hard to
Find
By Ramzy Baroud
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, November 18, 2013
Salman Abu Sitta
Editor's Note:
Ramzy Baroud will be conducting a speaking tour in France, Switzerland,
Belgium and Luxemburg starting Dec 2. For more information click
here. In an initially pointless exercise that lasted nearly an
hour, I flipped between two Palestinian television channels, Al Aqsa TV of
Hamas in Gaza and Palestine TV of Fatah in the West Bank. While both
purported to represent Palestine and the Palestinians, each seemed to
represent some other place and some other people. It was all very
disappointing. Hamas' world is fixated on their hate of Fatah and
other factional personal business. Fatah TV is stuck between several worlds
of archaic language of phony revolutions, factional rivalry and unmatched
self-adoration. The two narratives are growingly alien and will unlikely
ever move beyond their immediate sense of self-gratification and utter
absurdity. It is no wonder why Palestinians are still struggling to
tell the world such a simple, straightforward and truthful story. Perhaps it
is now out of desperation that they expect Israel's New Historians,
internationals who make occasional visits to Palestine or an unexceptionally
fair western journalist to tell it. But what about the Palestinian
themselves? This is rare because factionalism in Palestine and among
Palestinians in the Diaspora is also destroying the very idea of
having a common narrative through which they can tell one cohesive story,
untainted by the tribal political mentality which is devouring Palestinian
identity the same way Israeli bulldozers are devouring whatever remains of
their land. Even if such a narrative were to finally exist, it would
likely be an uphill battle, for Israel's official narrative, albeit a
forgery, is rooted in history. On May 16, 2013, Shay Hazkani, described in a
detailed Haaretz article the intricate and purposeful process through which
Israel's first Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion rewrote history.
"Catastrophic thinking: Did Ben-Gurion try to rewrite history?" was largely
based on a single file (number GL-18/17028) in the State Archives that
seemed to have escaped censorship. The rest of the files were whisked away
after Israel's New Historians - Benny Morris, Avi Shlaim, Tom Segev, Ilan
Pappe and others - got their hands on numerous documents that violently
negated Israel's official story of its birth. "Archived Israeli
documents that reported the expulsion of Palestinians, massacres or rapes
perpetrated by Israeli soldiers, along with other events considered
embarrassing by the establishment, were reclassified as 'top secret',"
Hazkani wrote in the Israeli paper. But GL-18/17028 somehow survived the
official onslaught on history. The lone document spoke of the
"evolution of the Israeli version of the Palestinian Nakba of 1948." That
evolution took place under the auspices of Ben-Gurion himself between the
years 1960-1964, where he assigned one scholar after another to basically
fabricate history, which they surely did. Zionist leaders were at least
astute enough to understand the power of collective memory, and its possible
impact on international public opinion. So they tailored their own versions
of history very early on as to counter future generation of Palestinians.
Salman Abu Sitta is one of Palestine's foremost historians. The man has
done more to preserve and document Palestinian historical records than any
other historian alive. In an interview with Lebanon's Al-Akhbar newspaper on
August 5, 2012, Abu Sitta was, of course, fully aware of the Israeli
attempts at restyling history. "The Israeli maps of the 1950s were nothing
more than the British survey of Palestine maps overwritten in Hebrew," he
said. "From 1960 onwards, the survey of Israel department started to issue
maps devoid of all these original Palestinian names, and replaced with
Hebrew ones." The reference to 1960 retrospectively corroborates
Hazkani's story based on the enduring file GL-18/17028. Six and a
half decades later that fight continues, between Israel's attempts to erase
the history of Palestine, while Palestinians, through independent efforts
(no thanks to the warring factions) try to preserve their own. "The war runs
along several fronts, not only militarily, but it is also a battle over the
minds of people...We are not trying to obliterate any other history - we are
trying to say that we will not allow you (Israel) to erase ours," Abu Sitta
explained. Yet Israel's effort at abolishing Palestinian history
never ceased, starting with the destruction of hundreds of Palestinian
villages and expelling their populations in 1947-48, to rewriting maps, to
changing names of towns and streets, to manufacturing alternate histories,
to more recently, outlawing Palestinian memory. Yes, precisely that.
In March 2011, the Israeli Knesset (parliament) passed what is known as the
"Nakba bill". It financially penalizes any organization or institution that
perceives and commemorates Israel's founding as a day of mourning for
Palestinians. The law, officially known as "Budget Principles Law (Amendment
39) - Reducing Budgetary Support for Activities Contrary to the Principles
of the State," was as a continuation of Ben-Gurion's project of physically
erasing Palestinians, severing their rapport with their own land, and
presenting a construct of history to the rest of the world - a history that
was deliberately misconstrued by few individuals following official
instructions. Alas, a largely invented history that is so focused
and well-funded seems to trump genuine history that is mostly distorted by
the incompetence of its owners. True, there are other Abu Sitta type
historians, who see Palestinians through the transparency of the collective,
not the distorted prisms of individuals or factions. Their voices however
are muffled and trounced by overwhelming odds - the Hamas vs. Fatah vs. the
rest, the division of the national identity based on geography, politics and
funds, among other factors. The current generation of Palestinians
is yet to have a fully comprehensive, well-funded, long-term national
Palestinian project that spans limited group interests and geography; one
that is manned by qualified, well-trained Palestinian historians,
spokespersons and scholars, so that a broad and unswerving Palestinian
narrative can be presented throughout the world. All such efforts remain the
responsibility of single individuals and small organizations with limited
means, thus with narrowed outreach. But without such a unifying platform, it
will be immensely difficult for the Palestinian narrative to reach the
critical mass needed to overpower the fictitious Israeli version of
Palestinian history which continues to define mainstream thinking in many
parts of the world, especially in the West. The work of Israel's New
Historians has been immensely valuable, although one cannot compare the
compassion of such historians as Pappe, with the harshness of Morris. The
hundreds of other accounts offered by outsiders are also important, for they
help in creating frames of references to which their specific audiences
around the world can relate. But without a unified Palestinian narrative,
massive in its magnitude, striking in its consistency, and all-inclusive in
its presentation, the Israeli story, as fallacious as it is, will continue
to define the mainstream understanding of history for years to come.
- Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net)
is a media consultant, an internationally-syndicated columnist and the
editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is:
My Father was A Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press).
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