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Birzeit Wins Again:
Students of the West Bank Unite
By
Ramzy Baroud Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, May
11, 2015
In November 1993, I was on a mission. At the age of 21, I wanted
to change the world, starting with Birzeit University, the second largest
Palestinian university in the West Bank, situated near Ramallah, in the
heart of the occupied territories. Back then I had made a name for
myself with my nationalist poetry and my first poetry collection was
published a year earlier in Gaza. It was called The Alphabets of Decision.
Each assortment of verses started with a letter in the Arabic alphabet,
going in order. “It was time for the poor and peasants of Palestine to
articulate their political agenda, rejecting the entire culture of political
defeat,” I wrote something to that effect in the introduction.
Birzeit was my platform and my audience quickly multiplied. My last
performance was in front of a crowd of thousands, who cheered, chanted and,
once I concluded my call for rebellion against Oslo’s “Gaza-Jericho First”
agreement, and the assured defeat it heralded, we marched outside the
campus, only to be greeted with Israeli army bullets and tear gas.
That was anything but a fatalistic act compelled by the fervor of youth. At
the time, local, Israeli and international media were eagerly awaiting the
student council election results in Birzeit. A leading hub for Palestinian
nationalism - to be compared to Najah University of Nablus - Birzeit was the
first litmus test for late PLO leader Yasser Arafat’s Oslo “peace process”.
The idea was this: if the Fatah (al-Shabiba) supporters won the elections,
it would be understood as a symbolic popular mandate that the Palestinian
people were in favor of what it turned out to be political folly and a
strategic calamity that has since then institutionalized the Israeli
occupation and Palestinian division. Palestinians are highly
politicized people, and utterly sensitive to any attempt at squandering or
bargaining their rights. Oslo was but the last of such attempts that span
the last seventy years of history - from the Rogers Plan, to the Village
Leagues, and more. The Birzeit student elections were our
opportunity to send an early message that Oslo was born dead and that any
“process” that negotiates the most basic human rights of Palestinians is
fully rejected. As Palestine’s rich were vying for the economic
dividends of peace, and diaspora elites that were affiliated with Arafat and
his Fatah party were ready to “return” and claim position and prestige, the
daughters and sons of refugees, peasants and laborers of Palestine stood
firm in Birzeit. Sure, the language here is loaded with socialist class
references, but truthfully that was what it was. We were the “masses” as we
gathered in Birzeit from every corner of the occupied territories, unified
by an eagerness to learn, but also compelled by nationalistic priorities.
A coalition was quickly formed between Islamic student groups and
the socialists. It was also a formidable alliance that brought Muslims and
Christians together, where a Palestinian identity took center stage,
sidelining Islamic and socialist references and ideologies. We were afraid
for our country and our people. To think that at that age we possessed the
foresight and political consciousness to predict the disaster of Oslo, while
many intelligent and experienced men and women genuinely celebrated and
anticipated “peace” should tell you much about the intellectual prowess of
Palestine’s youth. In November 1993, the Israeli army was on a
mission too. Nightly raids in the towns of Birzeit, Abu Qash, and other
villages where many students resided, targeted leaders of the anti-Oslo
movement. Some of us fled to the mountains to escape the army’s wrath. We
plotted ways to reach the university on Election Day via nearby hills.
Others stayed at the university for days. Others were not so lucky, as they
were arrested and jailed, while some were tortured. Many Gaza students were
deported back to the strip. Fatah supporters, although they didn’t
endorse the Israeli action, benefited from it. A favorable Birzeit vote was
the needed impetus to sell Oslo as a popular demand, to hail its architects
as national heroes, and to shut out the opposition - the debate altogether -
as irrelevant. Independent vote monitors finally emerged from what
I believe was the Engineering school, joined by representatives of the
factions that contested the elections. The leader of the group took the
stage and declared the results: al-Quds Awalan bloc (Jerusalem First) won.
That was us. And Jerusalem First was our answer to Arafat’s men’s
deferral of discussing the status of Jerusalem - along with other
fundamental issues, such as the rights of refugees, borders, etc - until the
“final status negotiations,” which were never actualized. There was
a pause of a single second that felt much longer, as if thousands of us, who
camped at the campus until late at night, wanted to eternalize and attempt
to fathom the meaning of that victory. A single second that was loaded with
meanings, with oppressive memories of those who died, of those in jail, of
those persisting in squalid refugee camps fashioning hope from desperation
and standing strong. A single second followed by an uproar, an incredible
euphoria which I am yet to witness ever since. ‘With our
bloods .. with our souls .. we will sacrifice for you Palestine,’ we chanted
in tandem, the echoes of our chats penetrating the darkness, reaching the
ears of Israeli soldiers who prepared for action. We roamed the university
in a rare moment of victory, and hope, feeling that the bond that ultimately
unified us was much stronger than all of the obstacles that stood between
us. It was Oslo’s first crisis. The victory was followed by a
massive crackdown, arrests, imprisonments and deportation. Like many others,
I was sent back to Gaza. It was the end of my academic career at Birzeit,
never to see the campus again, or to have coffee with my peers at the main
cafeteria ever again. Ameed, Ahmed, Abdulhadi, and all the rebels of the
past, remained in the past. Since then, the Israeli crackdowns on
Birzeit students became the joint responsibility of Palestinian Authority
(PA) goons as well. When the PA was established in 1994, terror in
Palestinian campuses became the norm. Joint Security Coordination between
the PA and the Israeli army made sure that rebellious Palestinians were
punished severely, and when necessary, eliminated altogether. After
the 2007 Hamas-Fatah split in Gaza, the crackdowns on Fatah’s enemies in
campuses became harsher than ever before and the margin for free expression
was limited to the point of suffocation. The PA became the new occupier, and
Israeli soldiers watched from a distance, only getting involved when PA
security required a helping hand. Yet when submissiveness was
assured, Birzeit rose once more in a display of people’s power similar to
that of November 1993. On 22 April, Fatah was once more defeated as
Hamas-affiliated supporters won a convincing majority by winning 22 seats.
The socialist group, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine,
harvested five more, leaving Fatah supporters with only 19 seats. The
students were speaking of a coalition, another symbolic gesture that the one
party role is not a Palestinian quality. While top Fatah leaders
are promising to study and investigate, examine the evidence and reform
their political agenda that led to the defeat, some are suggesting that
these will be the last student elections in the West Bank for a while. It is
understood that Fatah defeat is a reflection of a larger phenomenon that
speaks of the dissatisfaction with that Oslo culture that my generation
fought against, and ferociously so, some 22-years ago. The
pessimists are not wrong. Abbas remains in “power” since his election as the
head of the PA in 2005, with no further elections required. No legislative
elections have been held since Hamas won the majority of the vote in 2006
either, for similar outcomes are to be expected. Yet despite the
limited margins of freedom in Palestine - due to the Israeli occupation and
its PA contractors - Birzeit roared once more, reflecting a larger trend of
courage and fearlessness that began in Gaza, but is echoing in every corner
of the West Bank. And as a member of a past generation at Birzeit,
I would like to take my hat, or red kuffiyeh off, and tell the students of
Birzeit, Najah, al-Quds, Bethlehem and elsewhere: Please finish the job we
started. Democracy is your vehicle and the freedom of your people should
always be your ultimate goal. - Ramzy Baroud –
www.ramzybaroud.net - is an
internationally-syndicated columnist, a media consultant, an author of
several books and the founder of PalestineChronicle.com. He is currently
completing his PhD studies at the University of Exeter. His latest book is
My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story (Pluto Press, London).
***
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