On the Web: http://stopthewall.org/2011/10/16/global-intifada

The Global Intifada

Palestine is an international symbol of struggle against occupation,
racism, and colonialism. On October 15, 2011 the world gathers in what
some have called a global intifada, to stand up against imperialism.

The first time an international activist came up to me and sincerely
thanked me for a speech in which I had promised that we as
Palestinians would never give up our struggle until we have reached
liberation and justice, I was surprised. Now I have learned to
understand the importance of our struggle for the rest of the world
and the responsibility that necessarily follows. As long as Palestine
resists, there is hope for more than our own people.

In 2010, The South African Trade Union Congress wrote, “The
(Palestinian) struggle has become a global symbol of resistance
against apartheid, occupation and colonialism in our age.”

This statement describes exactly my experience in over a decade of
innumerable encounters and collaborations with international activists
from all over the globe. The Palestinian struggle not only has a
global dimension, it has inspired people globally.

Whether it's British activists ready to go to prison for their
solidarity actions with Palestine, a deeply felt speech by an activist
of the farmers' movement in Mozambique recalling the Palestinian
resistance, or the fact that a Palestinian will never go without a
standing ovation in front of a Cuban audience, theirs are true
expressions of global solidarity with Palestine. Other deep gestures
of togetherness and common struggle were the tribal ceremony in which
I received from one of the elders of the First Nations in Canada a
ring to protect me from my enemies, or the residents in Norway’s most
northern city forming two competing solidarity groups, or the signs
reading “Occupy Wall Street, Not Palestine” and “Tear Down This Wall
Street” appearing on the banners of the protesters in the popular
movements of the United States who are standing up right now in their
streets, demanding justice.

We have all seen the slogan, “We are all Palestinians.” The
Palestinian cause and our resistance to Israeli occupation and
apartheid are an intrinsic part of the imagination of many people and
the global struggle against colonialism, racism, and war. People all
over the world stand in solidarity because they know our struggle is
also their struggle. This connection is the true global solidarity.

Our symbols of struggle, like the keffiyeh, have become symbols of
struggle all across the globe. The word Intifada is understood in
almost all languages of the world. The Mexican activists in Oaxaca in
2006 called their uprising an Intifada and many Kashmiris use the term
as well.

Our common, borderless struggle is the reason why Stop the Wall calls
each year for the International Week against the Apartheid Wall. From
9 to 16 November in Palestine and around the globe–from Australia to
Canada, and from Norway to Argentina–people will mobilize for
worldwide actions to participate in this global action week. This
year, once again, we will be able to feel this spirit of solidarity
and joint struggle for our liberation as part of the global struggle
for justice, peace and humanity as part of the emerging global
Intifada.

There are moral, political, and historical reasons that the
Palestinian struggle is an international symbol. Each one of these
reasons is in and of itself a victory for the movement to free
Palestine and can be credited to Palestinian grassroots activists.

After centuries of suffering caused by colonialism's system of racial
discrimination, slavery, apartheid, ethnic cleansing, and slow
genocide, the world's people now feel a moral obligation to protect
human rights. The effects and conditions of imperialism have been
rejected as the mechanisms of tyranny and destruction of our species.
Today, in modern times, those under occupation in Palestine face human
rights violations of the kind experienced by colonial subjects, which
gives the Palestinian solidarity movement a moral imperative.

The strength of our people and our steadfastness against Israeli
occupation is an inspiration. Israel’s unique combination of
colonialism, apartheid, occupation, and drive to permanently displace
our people creates a multilayered system of mechanisms of repression.
Many around the world admire the fact that the Palestinians haven’t
surrendered.

Palestinians have a strong identity and a large diaspora. Those that
have been deported, relocated, exiled, or who have migrated from
Palestine have sought abode in the rest of the world's countries as
refugees or immigrants. The over six million refugees, despite facing
pervasive discrimination, have been able to live and identify
themselves proudly as Palestinians. They have not only preserved their
culture and identity but also challenged conditions of poverty and
isolation, so as to keep the Palestinian struggle in the hearts and
minds of the world.

Historically, the Palestinian popular resistance against occupation
has not isolated itself but become part of international political
alliances, especially those existing before the Cold War ended.
Palestinian revolutionaries identified themselves with other struggles
around the world, such as the struggle against apartheid in South
Africa by sending resources and other support to the resistance
movement. Good relationships with progressive countries were built
intentionally, while the wider network of solidarity was cultivated
consciously.

And finally, Palestine in its confrontation with Israel represents the
global progressive movement's confrontation with imperialism and
colonialism far beyond the Middle East. As Palestinians stand up to
Israeli crimes, peace, freedom, and justice are strengthened for all.

Today, the moral and political support that Palestine has received
historically from the international community is reflected back to us
in the inspired actions of the alter-globalization movement. It has
served as an inspiration for nearby and global spheres, from Tunis to
New York City, as masses of citizens recognize the destruction of
imperial globalization.

At the beginning of this year, the people in the Arab world rose up,
took to the streets and squares, and made crucial steps on the long
road towards a just and free Middle East. The Palestinian Intifada has
become Arab; the walls of fear from dictatorship have been torn down.
People in Egypt, Tunisia, Yemen, Syria, and beyond have inspired the
world with their courage. They have shown that people, determined and
united, can make a difference. They themselves have been inspired by
the Palestinian Intifadas, the actions of popular struggle and
endurance of Palestinian resistance, and the dignity displayed by
innumerable Palestinian activists in front of repression, arrests,
torture and humiliation. Now, uniting in a day of action on 15
October, the mobilization of people all over the world occupying
streets and square has been expression of what has recently been
coined the first global Intifada.

However, the global impact of the Palestinian struggle is not only an
outcome of our struggle, it is the result of the very character of our
oppression. The over six million Palestinian refugees who have been
expelled by Israel from their homes and lands and who have been
scattered all over the world for more than sixty years are now
ambassadors for our cause. Furthermore, the Palestinian struggle is a
global issue by creation. It was the international community gathered
in the United Nations that decided the fate of our lands–completely
ignoring our right to self-determination–and which has, over the
decades, documented Israeli violations of our human rights and
international law, condemning them regularly but never acting to stop
them.

Knowing that we are linked not only by the complicity of the
governments and corporations that support and profit from Israeli
apartheid, but also by a common struggle with people around the world
is important. It is necessary we remind ourselves over and over about
this.

The October 15, 2011 day of protest has galvanized people around the
globe and in Palestine. Together, as a unified front against racism
and imperialism, a spirit of solidarity for liberation of all people,
Palestine stands against imperialism on October 15 and every day.

Jamal Juma is the coordinator of the Stop the Wall Campaign.

--
"Hige sceal þe heardra, heorte þe cenre, mod sceal þe mare, þe ure
mægen lytlað."
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