Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Palestinians forge new strategies of resistance
Palestinians forge new strategies of resistance
Oct 29, 2025 9:24 AM

  A one-state solution in Palestine/Israel is a subject being increasingly discussed and debated. One way in which the conversation has emerged is through an analysis of the current situation as a de facto one state, a regime which privileges Jews above Palestinians (the latter being granted or denied different rights according to geography and legal status).

  This challenges the orthodoxy that makes a clean distinction between Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories. In doing so, it not only provides a framework for interpreting various policies, but also counters the fragmentation of Palestinians over the decades into "Israeli Arabs", "West Bank" or "Gaza" Palestinians, Jerusalemites - and of course, refugees.

  But apart from this discursive "reintegration", as the apartheid regime has been consolidated irrespective of the "Green Line", a new generation of Palestinian activists is breaking down old divisions imposed by Israel and forging new connections and strategies of resistance.

  Lana Khaskia is an activist from Haifa. Last October, she worked alongside other comrades to organize a hunger strike in support of Palestinian prisoners. The action went under the name "Hungry for Freedom", a slogan Lana says covers "many demands that can be summarized in one demand: ending Zionist colonialism in all of historic Palestine".

  That broad definition of "freedom" was matched by "one of the most important achievements" of the action, namely, “making links with many Palestinian groups both inside and outside Palestine". Lana recalls how they got a phone call from activists in Gaza that "became a sort of demonstration, with each side shouting slogans to the other - about ending the siege on Gaza and for a return to Haifa".

  More recently, the hunger strike of Khader Adnan sparked a similar burst of coordinated activity among Palestinians. Blogger Jalal Abukhater described to me how "West Bank-based Palestinians would have their main demonstration at Ofer Prison. Gaza Palestinians would gather in Al-Jundi Square in Gaza City and 48 Palestinians would demonstrate in front of Ziv Hospital in Safad, where Khader Adnan was held".

  That sort of coordination, Jalal notes, has been "made easier through the use of social media" and enabled Palestinians to be "united in their action despite occupation's policy of geographical separation". Online communication technology, famously (and excessively) credited for its role as an activists' tool in the Arab uprisings, is having an impact in Palestine, breaching walls and checkpoints that divide and separate.

  Abir Kopty is another Palestinian blogger and activist who is taking advantage of the way in which social media can facilitate coordinated actions. "Communicating online", Abir says, "is enabling our voices to be heard directly without agents who claim to represent us. And when we have this space to represent ourselves, we become very creative in our ways of taking action."

  These remarks point to how the changes go deeper than Facebook and Twitter - there is a shift in the mindset amongst a new generation that is, in Abir's words, "less tied to the traditional modes of thinking and acting based on the fragmentation and division of the Palestinian people".

  This increased organization and coordination between Palestinian youth has defied not just physical walls but also, in the words of Budour Hassan, a fourth-year law student at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, "a psychological wall constructed by the apartheid system and fortified by prejudices and stereotypes". Prior to her participation in protests in West Bank villages, Budour relates, she had "barely been in touch with any West Bank Palestinians".

  For now, these flourishing connections are still restricted to youth activists. But Ameer Makhoul, writing from his Israeli jail cell, highlighted how a campaign like the one for Khader Adnan "illustrated how the components of popular struggle can be brought together". After all, as Janan Abdu, an activist and researcher (and Ameer's wife), put it to me, "the connection and cooperation between Palestinians are natural, as one people that was separated by the Nakba and military regime".

  As the peace process stalls and stagnates, it is easy to look at events in Palestine/Israel and see only unimpeded Israeli colonization, coupled with a lack of legitimate, empowering leadership to marshal Palestinian efforts at resistance. This gloomy picture is accurate - but it misses out the signs of hope that are emerging at a grassroots level.

  PHOTO CAPTION

  A stone-throwing Palestinian demonstrator hides behind a wall as Israeli security officers stand guard during clashes at a weekly protest against a nearby Jewish settlement, in the West Bank village of Nabi Saleh, near Ramallah March 9, 2012.

  By Ben White

  Source: Aljazeera.com

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
Final figures of Israeli attacks on Gaza, 1434 killed
  Confirmed figures reveal the true extent of the destruction inflicted upon the Gaza Strip by Israel’s offensive: 1,434 dead, including 960 civilians, 239 police officers, and 235 fighters.   The Israeli offensive launched on the Gaza Strip between 27 December 2008 and 18 January 2009 resulted in extensive death, injury and...
Pakistan's long march to stability
  Massive shipping containers are being hoisted into place to prevent a popular procession that is travelling from all over Pakistan to Islamabad, the capital, in support of Iftikhar Mohammed Chaudhry, the sacked chief justice.   These corrugated steel structures, often used in the high seas, are now part of a number...
The hidden agenda – disintegrating Pakistan
  When common people use to say that, “America’s hidden agenda is to counter the nuclear program of Pakistan and take it under their control,” it was termed as the height of fanaticism & slogans of religious fanatics.   Since when US secretary of state Hillary Clinton has said, “Pakistan’s government had...
UN blames Israel for Gaza attacks
  A United Nations inquiry into the war in Gaza has found that Israel was to blame for at least seven direct attacks on UN operations - including schools and medical centers.   The UN report, commissioned by Ban Ki-moon, the UN secretary-general, said the Israeli military intentionally fired at UN facilities...
'Witness for Jesus' in Afghanistan
  US soldiers have been encouraged to spread the message of their Christian faith among Afghanistan's predominantly Muslim population, video footage obtained by Al Jazeera appears to show.   Military chaplains stationed in the US air base at Bagram were also filmed with bibles printed in the country's main Pashto and Dari...
Israeli airstrikes continue to haunt Gaza children
  Steve Matthews, an aid worker with World Vision Canada, has been to some of the world's most violent and troubled regions, including Darfur, Afghanistan, and Iraq.   But even after years in the field, Matthews still has difficulty comprehending the devastating affects of war on children. In February, he returned from...
'Fallujah never leaves my mind'
   By Laith Mushtaq (a cameraman for Al Jazeera)   Laith Mushtaq was one of only two non-embedded cameramen working throughout the April 2004 'battle for Fallujah' in which 600 civilians died.   Five years on, he recounts the events he witnessed and filmed.   "What you saw on your TV sets at...
Poor face economic 'calamity'
  The global economic crisis is becoming a "human and development calamity" and is threatening to derail international efforts to reduce poverty, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank have said.   The two financial institutions urged rich countries to step up aid to developing nations, as they completed their spring...
'Conspiracies against Sudan'
  The arrest warrant issued by the International Criminal Court (ICC) against Omar al-Bashir, the president of Sudan, could tear the country apart, Middle East experts have warned.   In 2006, Khartoum and the Darfur rebel groups began negotiating a resolution – the Darfur Peace Agreement (DPA) - to end the conflict....
Israeli police conduct 'ID card raids' inside Israel, arrest 208 Palestinians
  Over the weekend, Israeli border police conducted a number of raids on living quarters and workplaces inside Israel, checking ID cards and looking for Palestinians from the West Bank who were in "Israel" without a permit. 208 Palestinians were arrested in the raids, and sent back to the West Bank....
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved