Showing posts with label peace camp. Show all posts
Showing posts with label peace camp. Show all posts

August 03, 2011

No, it’s actually not all about you

There’s a rather neat encapsulation of the Israeli peace camp’s attitude towards Boycott Divestment Sanctions (BDS) on display at the Daily Kos website (Daily Kos is a sort-of leftish US site which has recently smeared Philip Weiss as an antisemite). In this article, a stalwart member of that vanishing tribe of Zionist peace-folk is given free rein to complain about BDS. The problem with BDS, or rather his problem with BDS is that it fails to give him and other Israelis an adequately heroic role, a central enough place in any liberation of Palestine. Instead Israelis are reduced to objects, no longer all-important subjects.

Some may consider this to be a pleasant side-benefit of BDS, a demonstration of how Palestinian-led it actually is. Indeed the article could be read as a critique of the failure of that Israeli peace movement, its slide into irrelevance. There’s the glimmer of understanding that no-one bothers much with them anymore because they have proven so useless. We can find perhaps a certain self-mockery in the depiction of their dreams:

“If only the left could organize more successfully! If we had just a bit more electoral power, a bit more leverage, then a government would come into power and start the transition - undoubtedly lengthy - into a real democracy, side by side with Palestinians.”

Yet any nascent self-awareness is drowned by the sludge of self-indulgence. This feeling of being a victim increasingly appears to be the default setting, the patina through which Israelis of a certain age address the world. It is a self-indulgence the author doesn’t need to confront precisely because he is allowed to express and emote it so freely among his civilised Western peers, thereby feeding their own feelings of helpless superiority.

His lack of interest in understanding the Palestinian point of view makes it paradoxically hard not to imagine what a Palestinian in Gaza or Qalqilya, or even Dublin, would make of this. Of someone declaring that the problem with BDS is… well, it’s that I don’t feel wanted, I’m not getting enough attention.

Essentially what drowns the self-understanding is the underlying colonial attitude, the absolute failure to understand that those enlightened sections of the colonial elite that exist only do have a supplementary role to play – something the author bemoans as unacceptable, unfitting for people of his status. But as those in the Boycott from Within movement understand, as South African white involvement in the anti-apartheid movement demonstrated, such a supplementary role can be important . It is probably no coincidence that this article appears now, in the aftermath of the anti-boycott law in Israel. Or in other words, at precisely the time when Israeli support for boycott does become politically significant, the author is seeking to undermine this support, saying it’s not something for Israelis to get involved in, not really.

Instead, just as Western charities talk of ‘partnership’ with those natives somewhat lest benighted, somewhat more pliable than the rest of the lumpenmass in the third world, so the author’s vision remains that of partnership. Partnership with the nice Palestinians, the grateful enlightened ones who do not threaten his wielding of the whip hand in this partnership. Understandably he feels betrayed that Palestinians - for some strange reasons of their own – are no longer playing his self-esteem shell games.

So maybe there’s some understanding after all. Palestine will not be liberated to the strains of some Israeli Zionist peace song. The question then becomes what role these Israelis now have. Do they become like the author – just another obstacle, or can they do what the rest of the world has managed to do – as evinced by the success of BDS - and get over themselves.


P.S. This piece could be read as a companion piece to Gabriel’s brief and very informative analysis of the tent city movement in Israel. It’s not directly related and the two posts were thought up separately, but in some ways this is a commentary on his post – especially his fourth point. The comment being that if the tent-city protests are to develop into anything and fundamentally address the problems of Israel, Israelis need to get over their myopia about Palestinians.

June 20, 2011

Brian Haw brings a whole new meaning to Rest in Peace

Brian Haw died of lung cancer yesterday in Germany where he was being treated.

Here's the BBC:

Mr Haw, 62, set up a camp in London's Parliament Square in 2001 in protest against UK and US foreign policy.
In March 2011, a High Court ruling obtained by London's mayor forced him to move his camp on to the pavement.
In a statement posted on Mr Haw's website, his family said he had died on 18 June in Germany, where he had been receiving medical treatment.
They said Mr Haw, from Redditch, Worcestershire, passed away in his sleep in no pain.
A real fighter for peace.

June 06, 2011

Cross with Brian Haw

Brian Haw and some camp followers have hung in for a long time at Parliament Square to protest wars on Iraq, Afghanistan, in Palestine, now on Libya. Well, it's really a protest against war in general now. Many methods have been used to try to get rid of Brian Haw but now it looks like the end is nigh.


Here's The Independent from a few days ago:
Brian Haw's anti-war protest camp has dominated Parliament Square for 10 years, cut off from curious pedestrians by the busy lanes of traffic that surround it.
Now Westminster City Council wants to change that by installing a pedestrian crossing. Although they claim their intention is merely to make it easier for Londoners and tourists to access the square, its creation is also likely to result in the eviction of Mr Haw and the protesters gathered around him.
In March, a High Court ruling obtained by the Mayor of London Boris Johnson forced Mr Haw to move his camp from the grass on the square to the pavement.
Now the council, which is responsible for the pavement, is seeking to repeal his right to sleep there too – by establishing that he and his fellow protesters are "proving an obstruction to the footway" and acting as a "hindrance" to pedestrians. Mr Haw, a carpenter from Worcestershire, set up his camp in 2001 and remained there until September last year, when he was flown to Germany to be treated for lung cancer.
Well now there are two letters protesting the move against the peace camp:
So it looks like a pedestrian crossing will spell the end for Brian Haw and his peace camp (report, 3 June)?
This is a great shame because, even for those not directly associated with his cause, the camp provides a important (and colourful) focus for our consciences in stark contrast to all-pervasive advertising which dominates the rest of London aggressively encouraging us to indulge in "the latest gadgets, cheap flights and various forms of fast food".
In my view, we could do well to have a little more "conscience" and a lot less "stuff". Indeed, Councillor Colin Barrow mentions, "We of course support the right to protest and will continue to do so [...]". If this is the case, why not lift the ban on protests within a half-mile radius of Parliament Square?
Alan Mitcham
Cologne, Germany
When I first visited London after moving back here from America, I was delighted by the sight of Brian Haw's protest camp in Parliament Square. What a lesson, for tourists from China or even America, in the tolerance that ornaments a free society.
How disillusioning to learn that our society, too, has set over itself humourless and narrow-minded repressors such as the Mayor of London and the Westminster council ("Pedestrian crossing may spell the end for Westminster peace camp", 3 June).
Guy Ottewell
Lyme Regis, Dorset
It's been a remarkable protest. Still it ain't over til it's over.