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<h1 class="gmail-reader-title">Ghassan Kanafani, Zionism and race: What determines the fate of a people</h1>
<div class="gmail-credits gmail-reader-credits">Joseph Massad - July 29, 2022<br></div>
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<div class="gmail-moz-reader-content gmail-reader-show-element"><div id="gmail-readability-page-1" class="gmail-page"><div><img src="cid:ii_l69hdhzx3" alt="image.png" width="392" height="221"><br>
<font size="1">Ghassan Kanafani is pointing to the question of ideology and power, and
not biological or racial identity, as that which determines the fate of a
people (Illustration by Haroon James)
</font><p>One of the strangest ironies in Zionist ideology is its reliance on the concept of biology and <a href="https://www.middleeasteye.net/opinion/how-zionists-use-racial-claims-deny-palestinians-right-their-homeland" target="_blank">race</a> to define who is a Jew, the very same concepts which 19th century Europe <a href="https://www.versobooks.com/books/3048-the-invention-of-the-jewish-people" target="_blank">invented</a> and weaponised against European Jews. </p>
<blockquote>
<p>Zionists deployed an antisemitic claim to argue that modern European
Jews are somehow rooted in Palestine in order to render them
fantastically the descendants of ancient Palestinian Hebrews</p>
</blockquote>
<p>This reliance of antisemites and Zionists on the separateness of the
Jews as a "race" proved catastrophic to the lives of millions of
European Jews who perished in Hitler's genocidal camps and triumphant
(if catastrophic to the Palestinian people) to those Jews who became
armed colonists in <a href="https://www.middleeasteye.net/countries/palestine" target="_blank">Palestine</a>. </p>
<p>The Zionists continued to insist on<a href="https://books.google.com/books?id=c3SYDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA290&lpg=PA290&dq=Israel+medical+experiments+race+1950s&source=bl&ots=gSydXjuuSR&sig=ACfU3U0OrUr5BcrqxG-WBp43ZrrEuQYFmw&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwi5pvjvuZ35AhUpkYkEHekvDaEQ6AF6BAgeEAM#v=onepage&q=Israel%20medical%20experiments%20race%201950s&f=false" target="_blank"> Jewish racialism</a>.
Indeed, in the last few decades, they have been fanatical enthusiasts
in welcoming the questionable conclusions of some geneticists about the
so-called "<a href="https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/G/bo12456289.html" target="_blank">Jewish gene</a>". </p>
<p>Ever since the coding of the human genome, the new discovery has led
to all kinds of commercial ventures that claim to tell people which
"race" they allegedly belong to according to their "genes," even
when many scientists believe that the very notion of "race" <a href="https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/race-is-a-social-construct-scientists-argue/" target="_blank">does not even exist</a> as a scientific biological category. </p>
<p>Scholars, especially historians of science, have been meticulous
critics of the suspect methodologies employed by geneticists to
interpret genetic data. The prominent geneticist <a href="https://www.google.com/books/edition/It_Ain_t_Necessarily_So/apSD85sQKbUC?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=it+Ain%27t+necessarily+so+lewontin&printsec=frontcover" target="_blank">Richard Lewontin</a>, for one, was tireless in exposing these questionable methods, as many others have been, especially when it came to the "<a href="https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/G/bo12456289.html" target="_blank">scientific</a>" search for the "<a href="https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2012/12/06/is-there-a-jewish-gene/" target="_blank">Jewish gene"</a>. </p>
<p>Nonetheless, Zionism <a href="https://www.sup.org/books/title/?id=364" target="_blank">insists</a>,
as it had since the beginning of the 20th century, that Jews from every
part of the world belong to one race and are one people. Zionists
deployed this originally antisemitic claim to argue that modern European
Jews are somehow rooted in Palestine in order to render them
fantastically the descendants of ancient Palestinian Hebrews. </p>
<p>Yet, in one rare instance, two major Zionist <a href="https://www.middleeasteye.net/opinion/how-zionists-use-racial-claims-deny-palestinians-right-their-homeland" target="_blank">leaders</a>, David Ben Gurion and Yitzhak Ben Zvi, argued in a <a href="https://www.lot-art.com/auction-lots/Eretz-Israel-Yiddish-Book-by-David-Ben-Gurion-and-Yitzhak-Ben-Zvi-First-Edition-New-York-1918/101-eretz_israel-24.9.20-pasarel" target="_blank">1918 book</a>
that it was Palestinian peasants - then the majority of the Palestinian
population - who were in fact the descendants of the ancient Hebrews, <a href="https://www.palestine-studies.org/ar/node/1648411" target="_blank">a claim</a> that has been buried since.</p>
<h3>Returning to Haifa </h3>
<p>Palestinian intellectuals, however, were never convinced by Zionism's
racialist arguments. Ghassan Kanafani took up the challenge in his 1969
novel <em>Returning to Haifa</em> and published a devastating riposte to the Zionists. </p>
<p>Kanafani's intellectual, literary, and political legacy persists 50
years after his assassination in an Israeli-planted car bomb at the age
of 36 with his 18-year-old niece in Beirut on 8 July 1972. </p>
<div>
<p><a href="https://www.middleeasteye.net/discover/ghassan-kanafani-palestine-life-writer" target="_blank"><img src="https://www.middleeasteye.net/sites/default/files/styles/read_more/public/images-story/ghassan-kanafani-title.png?itok=xGCrBXgu" alt="" class="gmail-moz-reader-block-img" style="margin-right: 0px;" width="392" height="245"></a></p><p><font size="1">Ghassan Kanafani: The life of a Palestinian writer</font></p>
</div>
<p><a href="https://www.pij.org/articles/1189/returning-to-haifa" target="_blank"><em>Returning to Haifa</em> </a>is
a brilliant and shattering refutation of Zionist biologism, where
Kanafani insists that principles and a commitment to justice are what
define a human being and not biology and blood, nor geographic origins
or paternal or maternal descent. </p>
<p>For Kanafani, Palestinians are to be defined by their principles in
contrast to racialism with which Zionism defines Jews. It is one
equation that Kanafani conjures that overturns geography and biology,
namely: "<a href="https://read.dukeupress.edu/boundary-2/article-abstract/42/4/187/6555/The-Cultural-Work-of-Recovering-Palestine?redirectedFrom=fulltext" target="_blank">al-insan qadiyyah</a>,"
or a human being is a cause and a set of principles, and humans must be
judged in accordance with those principles that make them who they
are. </p>
<div><p>When Sa'id and his wife Safiyya, 1948 refugees living in the
West Bank, return to Haifa after the 1967 occupation to recover their
lost child, who had remained in their house in the panic and pandemonium
of the expulsion during the 1948 Nakba, what they found there
transformed them at the core. </p><p>
Their house and all its contents had been stolen by Zionist settlers and
given to Polish Jewish colonists, Ephrat and Miriam Kochen, who were
brought to colonise Palestine by the Jewish Agency. </p></div>
<p>The Zionists find the Palestinian toddler left alone in the house and
grant him to the Kochens, who abduct/adopt him. Miriam's father, the
novella reveals, had been killed in Auschwitz, while her brother was
shot dead by the Nazis. Her husband Ephrat, like many Holocaust
survivors, had joined the Israeli army. He was killed in the 1956
Israeli invasion of Egypt.</p>
<p>In providing the tragic background history of Jewish colonists, Kanafani humanises the conquerors of Palestine.</p>
<p>When Miriam, for example, witnessed a dead and bloodied Palestinian
child being thrown by two Zionist soldiers into the back of a truck, she
knew he was not Jewish by the way he was discarded, and was reminded of
the fate of her brother and other Jewish children killed during World
War II. </p>
<div><p></p>
</div>
<p>Thus, Jews who had no political, racial, or military ideology of
conquest in Europe were victims of those European Christians who did,
while Jews who had a colonial ideology and racialised colonial power in
Palestine victimised the Palestinians.</p>
<p>Here Kanafani is pointing to the question of ideology and power, and
not biological or racial identity, as that which determines the fate of a
people. </p>
<h3>Ideology as identity</h3>
<p>Once Sa'id and Safiyyah realise that their firstborn son Khaldun
(meaning "the immortal one") had been abducted by the Jewish couple who
stole their home and who transformed Khaldun into a Jewish child,
renaming him Dov (or "bear"), they begin slowly but surely to understand
that Khaldun/Dov was no longer their son and that he had been lost to
them forever. </p>
<p>Miriam tells us that Dov looks exactly like Sa'id, but his habits are
those of his abductor/adopter father Ephrat. Dov was named not in line
with European Jewish tradition, after Jewish prophets, but in line with
Zionist ideology, after a predatory animal. </p>
<p>He is now serving in the Israeli army and refers to the Palestinians
as "the other side". Upon meeting his defeated Palestinian parents, Dov
rejects them outright with much contempt. </p>
<div>
<p><img src="https://www.middleeasteye.net/sites/default/files/000_APP2000012773403.jpg" alt="Kanafani Beirut" class="gmail-moz-reader-block-img" style="margin-right: 25px;" width="392" height="293"></p>
Palestinian author Ghassan Kanafani (2R) sits with other
Arab writers adn novelists at the Dar al-Fan gallery in Beirut in 1971,
one year before his assassination along with his niece (AFP)</div>
<p><span><img src="cid:ii_l69h0ts92" alt="image.gif" width="15" height="15"></span>Sa'id
and Safiyya quickly realise that Khaldun, the immortal one, turned out
to be mortal after all, and that he had indeed died in 1948 when
Palestine fell and was subsequently reincarnated as a predatory colonial
Jew.</p>
<p>It is at this moment that <a href="https://books-library.net/free-310530365-download" target="_blank">Sa'id wonders</a>
out loud: "What is a homeland? Is it these two chairs that remained in
this room for twenty years? The table? The peacock feathers? The
photograph of Jerusalem hanging on the wall?... Khaldun? Our illusions
about him? Paternity? Filiality? What is a homeland?... I am simply
asking."</p>
<blockquote>
<p>For Kanafani, Palestinians are to be defined by their principles, in contrast to racialism with which Zionism defines Jews</p>
</blockquote>
<p>The central question Kanafani's novel poses is that of origins. Are
human beings to be defined according to who their parents are, their
race and blood, their geographic origins, or by some other criteria?
Kanafani's questioning of biological descent as determinant of one's
identity is his questioning of what academic theorists call
"essentialism".</p>
<p>As some indigenous Palestinians, in the context of the novella, can
become colonising Jews and kill other Palestinians, and oppressed
European Jews can become oppressors and conquerors of the Palestinians,
are biological origins, genes, and geography then what is relevant in
determining identity or is it ideology and power?</p>
<p>Kanafani's conclusion is far reaching in its scope. He has Sa'id ask
"What is a homeland?" and then concludes that "A human being is a cause
and not flesh and blood that he inherits across generations".</p>
<p>For Kanafani, it is here that the Palestinian is transformed from
someone who is an original native of Palestine, or one who is
biologically determined through birth to Palestinian parents, into
someone who is a holder of liberatory and just principles that are
contained within and constitute the word "cause" or "qadiyyah".</p>
<h3>An optimistic message</h3>
<p>The struggle between Palestinians and the European Jewish usurpers of
their land, it turns out, was not, despite the insistence of the
Zionists, about origins, biological or geographical, after all - since
Palestine could become Israel with the stroke of a pen, and a
Palestinian son could become a European Jewish one - but rather about
ethical principles and justice. </p>
<div><p>Kanafani's novel rejects Palestinian nostalgia for an
unrecoverable dead past and insists on an achievable living future.
Writing his novel after the 1968 victory of the resistance against the
Israeli army in the Battle of Karameh, he has Sa'id regret his prior
opposition to his second son Khalid - who was born after the Nakba and
whose name, a variation on Khaldun, also means "the immortal one" -
joining the Palestinian guerrillas.</p><p><a href="https://books-library.net/free-310530365-download" target="_blank">Sa'id declares</a> to
Safiyya: "We made a mistake when we thought the homeland was only the
past, for Khalid, the homeland is the future... this is why Khalid wants
to carry arms. There are tens of thousands like Khalid who are not
halted by the tears men shed while looking in the depth of their defeats
for scraps of their shields and broken flowers, but look forward to the
future, and in doing so, they correct our mistakes, indeed the mistakes
of the entire world... Dov is our shame, but Khalid is our enduring
honour."</p></div>
<p>In this hopeful novella, Kanafani understands that the fascist nature
of Zionist racialism should never be replicated by the Palestinians in
staking their rightful claim to Palestine.</p>
<p>This is the reason that it is imperative for Kanafani that Khaldun,
who represents what was thought to be an immortal past, die once and for
all with that past, while Khalid, who represents an immortal future,
lives on as the agent of resistance to Zionist colonialism.</p>
<div><p>Kanafani's optimistic message continues to inspire the
Palestinian people today and reverberates inside the living Palestinian
resistance. </p><p><i>The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.</i></p></div>
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