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<h1 class="gmail-reader-title">Do Not Panic Palestine: Your Star in the Sky Will Shine</h1>
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<div class="gmail-reader-estimated-time">6-8 minutesApril 6, 2022<br></div></div></div><hr><div class="gmail-content">
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<img src="https://www.palestinechronicle.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/Nuh-Ibrahim-678x455.png" alt="" title="Nuh-Ibrahim" class="gmail-moz-reader-block-img" style="margin-right: 25px;" width="392" height="263">
Nuh Ibrahim's grave in the town of Tamrah in the Galilee. (Photos: Left by Ilan Pappé. Right: File)
<p><strong>By <a href="https://www.palestinechronicle.com/writers/ilan-pappe" title="Display all articles for Ilan Pappe">Ilan Pappe</a></strong></p><p>[<em>فلسطين
لا تفزعي، نجمك في السما درة – Do not Panic Palestine, your star in the
sky is a Pearl (Nuh Ibrahim, 1913-1938) – Referring also to Abu Dura,
the legendary Commander of the 1936 revolt.]</em></p>
<p>April, in the historic calendar of Palestine, is a very loaded month.
As a historian I recall, in particular, two past Aprils in Palestine’s
history. In this month in 1936, the first Palestinian uprising in the 20<sup>th</sup>
century erupted and, in April 1948, the Zionist forces demolished most
of the Palestinian towns and neighborhoods, including in my hometown,
Haifa.</p>
<p>Indeed, Haifa was an important location in both dramatic periods.
This year, in particular, I want to evoke the memory of one Haifawi, Nuh
Ibrahim, a son of Haifa, whose work is as relevant today as it was many
years ago. In fact, this month I went to visit his grave in the town of
Tamrah in the Galilee.</p>
<p>Ibrahim was born in Haifa in 1913, in Wadi Nisnas, the only
Palestinian neighborhood left intact by the Zionist forces that stormed
the city in April 1948 and demolished most of its other Palestinian
quarters. The remaining Palestinians were pushed into this neighborhood
from the rest of Haifa in a quick ethnic cleansing operation in the
early days of June 1948.</p>
<p>Ibrahim was the son of the Abu al-Hijja clan, now present in places
such as Tamra, Kawkab al-Hijja and other small communities, and once
dwelled in the destroyed villages of Ruwais, Damun and, most notable of
all, the panoramic village of Ayn Hawd, whose elegant houses were spared
because the liberal Zionist bohemians of Tel-Aviv wished to possess
them as their new abodes and persuaded the army not to demolish them.</p>
<p>Ibrahim, the master of the printing houses and machines, an
artisanship that brought him first to Baghdad and then to Manama,
Bahrain, opened the first-ever printing house there. But April 1936
called him back to Palestine. He was already impressed by the teaching
of Izz al-Din al-Qassam, whom he knew personally, and found poetry as
the best medium to express his love for his homeland and his
determination to struggle for its liberation.</p>
<p>He took an active part in the revolt on the ground and through his
poetry. One such poem, “Plan it, Mr Dill” cost him a prison term in the
notorious British Acre jail (a location of detention, torture and
executions). General Dill was the Commander in Chief of the British
troops in Palestine and the architect of the barbaric measures the
British army employed to suppress the revolt: house demolitions,
(sometimes with the people inside), walking people over minefields,
closures and curfews. All under a legal system bereft of any rights for
the detainees or the prisoners. A manual book of oppressive occupation,
fully implemented with the cutting-edge technology of the 20<sup>th</sup> and the 21<sup>st</sup>century by Israel since 1948.</p>
<p>“Plan it, Mr Dill” actually impressed the General, despite the fact
that it accused him of the oppression of the Palestinians, and he
released the prisoner. However, other poets and writers remained in
jail:</p>
<blockquote><p>“The best men in the country who were working and
well-known scholars. The charges against us were fabricated and very
bizarre, it suffices to prove one of them to push us to the gallows,
according to the new laws”.</p></blockquote>
<p>Thus wrote Ibrahim in his diary. The “new laws” are now 76 years old
and still intact this Ramadan, employed extensively in a desperate
Israeli attempt to prevent a third Intifada.</p>
<p>On the first day of Ramadan 1938, Ibrahim and two Syrian volunteers,
who were part of a movement of young Syrians coming to Palestine’s aid
in the revolt, were tracked, ambushed, and killed with the help of an
RAF squadron. Another historical lesson the Israeli army adopted – the
use of massive forces to capture one Palestinian freedom fighter
equipped with old pistols or guns.</p>
<p>Ibrahim was 25 years old when he was killed and yet managed to leave
us a huge cultural legacy. In a famous Mawal poem of his (the
folkloristic colloquial poetry), “Do not Panic Palestine”, he paid
tribute to Abu Dura, one of the leaders of the Palestinian revolt.
Praising his command over Christians and Muslims alike, a crucial
message for our time, which he repeated in other poems such as “A
Homeland for All”, written as an antidote to the British attempt to sow
division between Christians and Muslims in the national liberation
movement:</p>
<p><em>Christian and Muslim, their unity strong and resilient </em></p>
<p><em>Creed or religion is for God, while a homeland is for us all</em></p>
<p><em>Do not say Christian and Muslim, </em></p>
<p><em>We all are brothers of blood</em></p>
<p><em>Whatever you say or do, Adam is our father and Eve our mother</em></p>
<p><em>Every one of us understands, our unity is strong and resilient</em></p>
<p>During this Ramadan, Easter, and Passover, in this April of 2022,
unity is not an empty slogan. In this April, Haifa is still a
Palestinian city as much as it is inside Israel and the Haifawis are all
around, not forgetting and not giving up on their struggle for justice
and liberation.</p>
<p>One that will only be achieved by unity. Whether we are Christians,
Jews or Muslims, we live in a century where one democratic state for
all, all over historical Palestine, is the only solution, where
revolutions and revolutionaries are commemorated, catastrophes are
remembered and visions of liberation are still imagined. These visions
will, one day – for the benefit of us all, colonizers and colonized
alike – turn into a new reality on the ground. Do not panic Palestine,
your star in the sky will shine and your time will come.</p>
<div><p><img src="https://www.palestinechronicle.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Pappe.png" class="gmail-moz-reader-block-img" width="180" height="180"></p><p><span></span></p><p><em>-
Ilan Pappé is a professor at the University of Exeter. He was formerly a
senior lecturer in political science at the University of Haifa. He is
the author of The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine, The Modern Middle East,
A History of Modern Palestine: One Land, Two Peoples, and Ten Myths
about Israel. Pappé is described as one of Israel’s 'New Historians'
who, since the release of pertinent British and Israeli government
documents in the early 1980s, have been rewriting the history of
Israel’s creation in 1948. He contributed this article to The Palestine
Chronicle.</em></p><p></p></div>
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