[News] “If we burn, you burn with us..." - The Mockingjay of Palestine
Anti-Imperialist News
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Thu Dec 4 12:15:27 EST 2014
December 04, 2014
http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/12/04/the-mockingjay-of-palestine/
*“If we burn, you burn with us..."*
The Mockingjay of Palestine
by RAMZY BAROUD
Raed Mu’anis was my best friend. The small scar on top of his left
eyebrow was my doing at the age of five. I urged him to quit hanging on
a rope where my mother was drying our laundry. He wouldn’t listen, so I
threw a rock at him.
I didn’t mean for the rock hit him, but it did. My father dragged to me
to his house kicking and screaming, while carrying a colourful rubber
ball and a doll for gifts. I was mostly embarrassed that I hurt my best
friend.
Several years later, Raed, now 15, was shot by Israeli soldiers as he
helped our neighbours dig a grave for a kindly man who was killed by
Israeli troops earlier in the day, while performing Eid prayers.
On that day, my father had taken us to extend holiday greetings to
relatives in a nearby refugee camp in Gaza when the “Eid Massacre” took
place in my home camp of Nuseirat. Every holiday there seemed to be a
massacre. Nuseirat, the rebellious camp of resilient refugees was chosen
on that particular Muslim holiday to be taught a lesson. Raed was one of
that day’s many victims.
A friend told me that Raed was bleeding profusely as he ramblingly
walked soon after the Israeli army chopper shot him. He arrived to my
house, which was adjacent to the graveyard, and desperately knocked at
the door yelling my mother’s name: “Auntie Zarefah, please open the door!”
But my mother was already dead. She was buried in the “martyrs’
graveyard,” where my grandparents, both refugees from historic
Palestine, were also laid to rest. The tiny grave of my oldest brother,
Anwar was also there. He died at the age of two because my father had no
money to treat him at a proper hospital. Raed is now buried only a few
feet away.
I could have never imagined myself drawing parallels between Nuseirat,
and its heroic people and a Hollywood movie; the struggle of my people
is too sacred to make such comparisons. But I couldn’t help it as I
watched the latest from the Hunger Games franchise, “Mockingjay.” A
feeling of anger initially overwhelmed me when I saw the districts
destroyed by the heartless rulers of the Capitol. As I watched the
movie, only Palestine, but particularly the Gaza resistance was on my mind.
The Capitol – with unmatched military technology and access to an
enormous media apparatus – was unstoppable in its brutality. Its rulers,
who claimed to have superiority over all the inhabitants of the dystopia
of Panem, had no moral boundaries whatsoever.
The Hunger Games, the story’s version of a reality television show, was
created as an annual event to celebrate the victory of Capitol over a
previous revolt by the districts. It also served as a reminder of what
the Capitol was capable of if anyone dared to rise up again in the
future. The show’s participants – mostly children who were chosen or
volunteered in a process called the “reaping” – came from every
district. The contestants had to kill one another for the amusement of
the Capitol, which drew its strength from the division and oppression of
others.
But the districts rebelled. They ought to. They resisted because there
can be no other response to systematic oppression but resistance.
District 13 was annihilated early on so that the rest of the districts
dare not entertain any ideas aside from the Capitol’s insistence that
resistance is futile. Panem’s ruthless president was adamant at
referring to those who defied the Capitol as “radicals,” and not
“rebels.” At times, the Capitol tried to turn the districts against one
another, inciting civil war.
The Gaza connection became too stark to miss when Katniss, one of the
early “tributes,” and the symbolic “Mockingjay” of the resistance
uttered these words soon after the Capitol bombers destroyed a hospital
full of unarmed men, women and children, killing everyone: “I want to
tell the people that if you think for one second the Capitol will treat
us fairly if there’s a cease-fire, you’re deluding yourself. Because you
know who they are and what they do.” The similarities in this drama were
eerily similar to the bombing and complete destruction of al-Wafa
hospital in Gaza in late July of this year, the only rehabilitation
centre in the strip for thousands of victims of Israeli atrocities.
Her message to the Capitol: “You can torture us and bomb us and burn our
districts to the ground, but do you see that? Fire is catching! And if
we burn, you burn with us!”
It is as if the author of the Hunger Games, Suzanne Collins
<http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Suzanne_Collins> knows so much about Gaza;
as if she had fashioned her stories to tell of a real fight between a
brutal Capitol, called Israel, and rebellious districts called
Palestine; it is as if Gaza is district 13; and that despite attempts at
repeated annihilation for the last 65 years, but particularly two
genocidal wars in 2008-9 and 2014, the resistance is still alive.
Does Collins know that Katniss, who didn’t choose such a fate, but had
to step up in defence of her people, is represented in thousands of men,
women, and yes, children of Gaza? Does she know that her stories were
already written and enacted by real people, who may never have heard of
her franchise and may never live to watch her movies? Does she know that
criminal leaders such as President Snow are not something of fantasy,
but they actually exist, here today in the persons of Benjamin Netanyahu
and countless other Israeli leaders who call for the absolute
annihilation of Gazans at a whim?
As for Gaza’s Hunger Games, the similarities are uncanny.
Just before Israel imposed sever economic sanctions on Gaza, to punish
Palestinians for the result of their democratic elections, top Israeli
government advisor, Dov Weisglass made a spine-chilling promise: “The
idea is to put the Palestinians on a diet, but not to make them die of
hunger.” (AFP, February 16, 2006). This was not a passing statement.
After much legal wrangling, an Israeli human rights group, Gisha,
managed to obtain documents
<http://www.medialens.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=588:qput-the-palestinians-on-a-dietq&catid=1:alerts&Itemid=34>
that showed that Israel’s official policy in Gaza since then was that of
“deliberate policy of near-starvation,” and that “security” had nothing
to do with the Gaza blockade.
In Israel’s Operation Cast Lead, over 1,400 Palestinians were killed and
5,500 wounded. But in Israel’s latest war the price tag for resistance
was increased to 2137 <http://www.imemc.org/article/68429>. More are
still dying from their wounds.
Gaza stands in ruins. Entire neighbourhoods were destroyed, villages
erased and whole families annihilated. Hundreds of schools, hospitals
and mosques were blown up in an orgy of death and destruction unprecedented.
Yet the resistance is yet to be defeated in Gaza. Because resistance is
not men and women with guns. Resistance is an idea, pure in its
intentions, romantic, at times, maybe, but certainly the work of an
entire collective, who had chosen to die fighting, if they must, but
never live carrying the shackles of a slave.
Not even the chilling words of Moshe Feiglin, deputy speaker of the
Israeli parliament (Knesset) were enough to intimidate Gaza. In his
Facebook plan to destroy the resistance
<http://electronicintifada.net/blogs/ali-abunimah/concentrate-and-exterminate-israel-parliament-deputy-speakers-gaza-genocide-plan>
on 1 August, 2014, Feiglin called for the “conquest of the entire Gaza
Strip, and annihilation of all fighting forces and their supporters,” in
addition to pushing its remaining inhabitants into concentration camps
near the Sinai desert. “In these areas, tent encampments will be
established, until relevant emigration destinations are determined.”
Feiglin, and his prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, among many others
in Israel’s political and military establishment, are real life leaders
of the Capitol, which is allowed to operate with complete impunity
<http://www.haaretz.com/dead-palestinian-babies-and-bombed-mosques-idf-fashion-2009-1.272500>
against the oppressed districts of Palestine.
And like the Mockingjay which was resurrected against great odds, Gaza
will remain the rebellious district. The blood of its “near-starved”
children will someday unite all districts against the Capitol. Then, all
the voices that doubted the wisdom of the resistance will be diminished
by the loud, but harmonious chanting of a united people. As the
resistance continues, Palestinians everywhere will express their victory
and defiance with by raising four fingers, Egypt’s “raba’a”, just as the
rebels of the 13 districts expressed by raising three.
Till then, the Mockingjay of Palestine, the thousands of living martyrs
will continue to circulate the skies singing the song of a rebellious
nation <http://thehungergames.wikia.com/wiki/Songs>.
“Are you, Are you
Coming to the tree
Where I told you to run, so we’d both be free
Strange things did happen here
No stranger would it be
If we met up at midnight in the hanging tree.”
If only the other districts would rise…
/*Ramzy Baroud* is an internationally-syndicated columnist, a media
consultant, an author and the founder of PalestineChronicle.com. His
latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story
(Pluto Press, London)./
--
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863.9977 www.freedomarchives.org
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