[News] How Gaza United the World

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Fri Nov 24 13:47:31 EST 2023


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<https://www.counterpunch.org/2023/11/24/how-gaza-united-the-world/>
How Gaza United the World
Ramzy Baroud - November 24, 2023
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Image by Ehimetalor Akhere Unuabona.

For decades, the struggle for national liberation in Palestine was rightly
understood to be part and parcel of a global struggle for liberation,
mainly in the Global South.

And since national liberation movements were, per definition, the struggle
for indigenous people to assert their collective rights for freedom,
equality and justice, the Palestinian struggle was positioned as part of
this global indigenous movement.

Alas, the collapse of the Soviet Union, the growing dominance of the United
States and its allies, the return of Western colonialism in the form of
neocolonialism to Africa, the Middle East and elsewhere, have localized
many of the indigenous movements’ struggles.

This proved costly, as it allowed France, the US, Britain and others to,
once more, sectionalize the Global South into regions of influence,
controlling them through whatever military, political and economic
strategies they had in mind. Similar to the scramble for Africa in the late
19th century, recent decades wrought a new kind of colonial scramble for
the Global South.

In the Palestinian context, in particular, the struggle was multi-faceted:
the demise of global powers, like the USSR, which created some kind of
geopolitical balance, isolated Palestinian Resistance movements. This
forced these movements, namely those involved in the Palestine Liberation
Organization (PLO), to seek political ‘compromises’, without achieving
anything tangible in return.

For Washington, these concessions on the part of a once national liberation
movement in Palestine, were consistent with the US’s regional agenda and
the quest for a ‘New Middle East’.

Ultimately, this resulted in the wrongly termed ‘Palestinian division’,
factional clashes in 2007, and a state of political paralysis which defined
the so-called Palestinian leadership.

And, while Palestinians were busy sorting out their political and
leadership crisis, Israel’s settler-colonial process accelerated, at the
expense of whatever remained of the Occupied Palestinian Territories.

Of course, this does not, from an intellectual and historical point of
view, alter the essential nature of the Palestinian struggle, which
remained that of an indigenous nation fighting for its rights. However, it
did confuse the political definitions and discourses surrounding the
so-called Palestinian-Israeli conflict.

This confusion was a direct outcome of the misrepresentation of the
Palestinian struggle through Israeli propaganda and US-Western media, which
remained committed to elevating the Israeli line. Israel invested in
presenting Palestinians as a divided people, who have no vision of peace,
and their Resistance movements as essentially terrorist groups, hellbent on
the destruction of Israel and so on.

But things began to change in recent years, with the revival of indigenous
movements around the world, from the Black struggle in the US to the
indigenous people resurgence in North and South America, to the ultimate
rise of an actual global movement, centered around landless societies and
indigenous rights – which heavily invested in global solidarity and
intersectionality, allowing it to multiply its powers several times over.

The common element of “decolonization” – in all its manifestations – has
created intersectional links among various struggles around the world,
which allowed the Palestinian struggle for liberation to fit perfectly into
the new global narrative.

“Black Australians and Palestinians share a history and reality of erasure
that has lasted far beyond the anticolonial era of the early last century,
when most colonized peoples gained independence from colonial powers,”
Eugenia Flynn and Tasnim Sammak wrote in their article ‘Black Australia to
Palestine: solidarity in decolonial struggle’.

The Black Lives Matter Movement also played a central role in recentering
Palestine around urgent and revived struggles in the United States and even
beyond US political geography.

“Palestinians played a crucial role in the (2014) Ferguson, Missouri,
uprising that flared that year in the wake of the police killing of Black
teenager Michael Brown,” Russell Rickford wrote in an article in Vox.

“Palestinian activists used social media to share with African American
protesters tactics for dealing with tear gas attacks by militarized police
forces — an experience with which many subjects of Israeli occupation are
all too familiar,” Rickford added.

This was only the beginning, however, as, over the years, Palestine began
featuring as a staple in the Black struggle discourse in the US. Both
movements fed on each other’s popularity, conceiving new networks and
connecting other global struggles together in a most harmonious fashion.

All of this has been propelled forward by the growing connectivity of
activists and their struggles around the world, thanks to the utilization
of social media, along with independent indigenous media as critical
components in organization and mobilization.

While the credibility of mainstream media is being greatly questioned by
Western societies, social media is now appearing to be a reliable source of
information of news about popular mobilization and direct action.

The ongoing Israeli genocide in Gaza has demonstrated the power of social
media in terms of its ability to overcome the intentional lies and
deception of corporate media, thus greatly diminishing its traditional role
in shaping public opinion around Palestine, the Middle East, the US’
self-serving ‘war on terror’ and many other issues.

It would not be an exaggeration to state that there is a parallel war to
the one happening in Gaza now, one that engages millions of people around
the world, working diligently to defeat Israeli-US-Western propaganda and
to demand accountability for those carrying out war crimes in Gaza.

It would be inaccurate to say that Western governments have been ‘silent’
in the face of Israeli atrocities in Gaza. As indigenous struggles around
the world ally with the struggle of the Palestinians, colonial and
neocolonial powers have no other option but to ally with colonial Israel.

This means that Western powers are active participants in the Israeli war
on Gaza, through their generous military support of Israel, the sharing of
intelligence information and through political and financial backing.

Whether the war lasts for another week, another month or a year, the
consequences of this war will certainly be felt for many years to come, not
only in Palestine or even the Middle East, but worldwide as well.

The war in Gaza has galvanized global solidarity movements, especially
those who are invested in indigenous rights. All of this is reminiscent of
the height of the anticolonial national liberation movements of decades ago.

Thus, this historic moment must be seized, not only for the sake of Gaza
and the Palestinian people but also for the sake of freedom and justice
everywhere else in the world.

*Ramzy Baroud is a journalist and the Editor of The Palestine Chronicle. He
is the author of five books. His latest is “**These Chains Will Be Broken*
<https://www.amazon.com/These-Chains-Will-Broken-Palestinian/dp/1949762092>*:
Palestinian Stories of Struggle and Defiance in Israeli Prisons” (Clarity
Press, Atlanta). Dr. Baroud is a Non-resident Senior Research Fellow at the
Center for Islam and Global Affairs (CIGA), Istanbul Zaim University (IZU).
His website is **www.ramzybaroud.net* <http://www.ramzybaroud.net/>
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