Uri Avnery
15.9.07
THE PALESTINIAN MANDELA
THE DIVISION of the Palestinian territories into a "Hamastan" in the Gaza Strip and a "Fatahland" in the
A disaster for the Palestinians, a disaster for peace, and therefore also
a disaster for Israelis.
The Israeli political and military leadership is happy about the split,
according to the doctrine "What's bad for
WILL THE Palestinians overcome this split?
It seems that the chances for that are getting smaller by the day. The gulf
between the two parties is getting wider and wider.
The Fatah people in the West Bank, headed by
President Mahmoud Abbas, condemn Hamas
as a gang of fanatics, who are imitating
The Hamas people accuse Abbas
of being a Palestinian Marshal Petain, who has made a deal with the occupier
and is sliding down the slippery slope of collaboration.
The propaganda of both sides is full of venom, and the mutual violence is
reaching new heights.
It looks like a cul-de-sac. Many Palestinians have despaired of finding a
way out. Others are searching for creative solutions. Afif
Safieh, the chief of the PLO mission in
But in private conversations in Ramallah, one
name pops up more and more often: Marwan Barghouti.
"He holds the key in his hand," they say there, "both for
the Fatah-Hamas and for the Israeli-Palestinian
conflicts."
SOME SEE Marwan as the Palestinian Nelson
Mandela.
In appearances, the two are very different, both physically and in
temperament. But they have much in common.
Both became national heroes behind prison bars. Both were convicted of terrorism.
Both supported violent struggle. Mandela supported the 1961 decision of the
National African Congress to start an armed struggle against the racist
government (but not against the white civilians). He remained in prison for 28
years and refused to buy his freedom by signing a statement denouncing "terrorism".
Marwan supported the armed struggle of Fatah's Tanzim organization and has
been sentenced to several life terms.
But both were in favor of peace and reconciliation, even before going to prison.
I saw Barghouti for the first time in 1997, when he joined
a Gush Shalom demonstration in Harbata, the village neighboring
Bil'in, against the building of the Modiin-Illit settlement that was just starting. Five years
later, during his trial, we demonstrated in the courthouse under the slogan
"Barghouti to the negotiating table, not to
prison!"
LAST WEEK we visited Marwan's family in Ramallah.
I had met Fadwa Barghouti for the first time at
Yasser Arafat's funeral. Her face was wet with tears.
We were crowded among the multitude of mourners, the din was ear-splitting and
we could not exchange more than a few words.
This time she was calm and composed. She laughed only when she heard that
Teddy Katz, a Gush activist who took part in the meeting, had sacrificed a
toenail for Marwan:
during our protest in court we were violently attacked by the guards and one of
them stamped his heavy boot on Teddy's sandaled foot.
Fadwa Barghouti is a lawyer by profession, a
mother of four (three sons, one daughter). The oldest, Kassem,
has already been in prison for half a year without trial. She is a dark-blond
woman ("All the family members, except Marwan,
are blond," she explained, adding with a rare smile: "Perhaps because
of the Crusaders.")
The Barghoutis are a large Hamula
(extended family), inhabiting six villages near Bir Zeit. Dr. Mustapha Barghouti, the
physician who is well-known for his human rights activities, is a distant
relative. Marwan and Fadwa - also a Barghouti by birth - were born in Kobar
village.
Marwan Barghouti's
family lives in a nice apartment in a co-dominion building. On my way there, I
noticed the widespread building activity in Ramallah
- it looks as if new buildings are going on every corner, including commercial
high-rises.
Near the door of the apartment, an embroidered sign says in English:
"Welcome to my home". The apartment itself is decorated with many images
of Marwan Barghouti,
including a large drawing inspired by the famous photo that shows him in court,
raising his handcuffed arms above his head like a victorious boxer. When the
security forces were searching for him, they took possession of the apartment for
three days and raised a large Israeli flag on the balcony.
Fadwa Barghouti is one of the few persons
allowed to visit him. Not as a lawyer, but only as "close family" - a
definition that includes parents, spouses, siblings and children under 16.
At present, there are about 11 thousand Palestinian prisoners in Israeli
jails. Assuming an average of five "close family" members, that makes
55 thousand potential visitors. Those, too, need a permit for each visit, and
many are rejected for "security reasons". Fadwa also needs a permit every time, which
allows her only to go directly to the prison and back, without stopping
anywhere in
THERE IS hardly anyone who is more popular with the Palestinian public than
Marwan Barghouti. In this, too,
he resembles Mandela while in prison.
It is difficult to explain the source of this authority. It does not emanate
from his high position in Fatah, since the movement
is disorganized and there is hardly any clear hierarchy. From the time when he
was a simple activist in his village, he rose in the organization by sheer force
of personality. It is that mysterious thing called charisma. He radiates a quiet
authority that does not depend on outward signs.
The war of vilification between Fatah and Hamas does not touch him. Hamas
takes care not to attack him. On the contrary, when they submitted a list of
prisoners in exchange for the captured soldier Gilad Shalit, Marwan Barghouti, in spite of his being a Fatah
leader, headed the list.
It was he who, together with the imprisoned leaders of the other
organizations, composed the famous "prisoners' document", which
called for national unity. All Palestinian factions accepted the document. Thus
the "
I TOOK advantage of my visit in Ramallah to
order to get an impression of the opinions of Barghouti's
adherents. They try not to be swept away by the climate of mutual hate that now
governs the leaderships of the two sides.
Some of them strenuously oppose the Hamas
actions in
In the last elections, my interlocutors explained, Hamas
hoped to gain 35-40% of the votes and thus gain legitimacy for their movement.
They were totally surprised when they got the majority. They did not know what
to do with it. They had no ready plans. It was a mistake on their part to set
up a government composed entirely of Hamas members,
instead of insisting on a unity government. They misjudged the international
and Israeli reaction.
Marwan's adherents do not shrink
back from self-criticism. In their opinion, Fatah is
not without blame for what happened in
I did not hear denials of the Hamas contention,
that Muhammad Dahlan, the former confidant and security
advisor of Mahmoud Abbas, conspired with the
Americans to carry out a military coup in the Gaza Strip. Dahlan,
the darling of the Americans (and the Israelis) believed, according to them,
that, if provided with arms and money, he could take over Gaza. That pushed Hamas to the decision to act first and carry out an armed
takeover themselves. Since the majority of the public supported Hamas and detested Dahlan, who
was accused of collaborating with the occupation, Hamas
easily won. Dahlan has now been sent into exile by Abbas.
Hamas' center of gravity is in
the Gaza Strip. That is the problem of Khaled Mashal, the Hamas leader who resides
in Damascus. Unlike his two deputies, he has no roots in Gaza. That's why he
needs money to reinforce his standing there. He gets it from Iran.
(I would have liked to give some impressions here of the Hamas point of view, but it is quite impossible to enter
the Gaza Strip, while our Hamas interlocutors in East
Jerusalem have all been sent to prison.)
HOW WILL the Palestinians get out of this bind? How can they reestablish
a national leadership that will be accepted by all parts of the people in the
West Bank and the Gaza Strip, able to lead the national struggle and make peace
with Israel, when peace becomes possible??
Bargouti's followers believe that at
the right time, when Israel comes to the conclusion that it needs peace, he
will be released from prison and play a central role in the reconciliation -
much as Mandela was released from prison in South Africa when the white
government came to the conclusion that the Apartheid regime could not be
sustained anymore. I have no doubt that In order to bring such a situation
about, the Israeli peace forces must start a big public campaign for Barghouti's release.
What will happen in the meantime?
There is hardly anyone on the Palestinian side who believes that Ehud Olmert will conclude a peace agreement and implement it. Hardly
anyone believes that anything will come out of the "international
meeting" that is supposed to take place in November. The Palestinians
believe that it is a bone thrown by President Bush to Condoleezza Rice, whose
standing has been dropping dramatically.
And if that has no results?
"There is no vacuum," one of the Fatah
leaders told me, "If the efforts of President Abbas
do not bear fruit, there will be another explosion, like the intifada after the failure of Camp David."
How is that possible, after the Fatah activists
have turned over their arms and foresworn violence? "A new generation will
arise," my interlocutor said, "As has happened before - one age-group
gets tired and its place is taken by the next one. If the occupation does not
come to an end and there is no peace, a peace that will enable the members of
this generation to turn to the universities, to family, work and business, a
new intifada will surely break out."
To achieve peace, the Palestinians need national unity, much as the Israelis
need a consensus for withdrawal. The man who symbolizes the hope for unity
among the Palestinians is sitting now in Hasharon
jail.