RememberUsAlways, (edited ) to Palestine
@RememberUsAlways@newsie.social avatar

If there is no deal to rescue then there will be no .

will not stop pounding now as the sympathy in the and around the world try to extract demands using hostage and martyr.

I can't blame Israel for it's actions now. The legacy media world has taken the side of . has nothing to lose and no one will stop them.

Certainly not the nations LoL. The world abandoned .
@palestine
@israel

plink, to Israel
@plink@mastodon.online avatar

from
‘Israelis, go back to Europe’? Some on the left need to rethink their slogans
by -AnnMort

"A majority of Israel’s today are not descended from , but rather from nations. To expect them to leave is unprecedented, unrealistic and wrong."

[I don't agree with her opinion on "river to the sea", but I do agree on "go back to Europe".]



@palestine @israel

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/article/2024/may/15/israelis-go-back-to-europe-slogan?CMP=share_btn_url

Five things the United States knew about the Nakba as it unfolded (www.mei.edu)

An estimated 750,000 Palestinians were either driven from their homes or fled during the Nakba in 1948. To counter attempts at Nakba denial and "memoricide" by U.S. politicians and others, it is instructive to review the archives of U.S. diplomats stationed in Palestine and surrounding Arab countries who witnessed the Nakba...

rameshgupta, to random
@rameshgupta@mastodon.social avatar

After 75 years of failure, one would imagine that a people would learn what works and what doesn’t, both from their own experience, as well as the experience of others.

https://apnews.com/video/gaza-strip-israel-israel-hamas-war-war-and-unrest-israel-government-c28d7cc667e94e94ac97a7a460a90985

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rameshgupta,
@rameshgupta@mastodon.social avatar

⬆️

predicament is the direct or indirect outcome of three - wars, each about a generation apart. These are the wars that started in 1947, 1967, and 2000. Each war was a complex event with vast, unforeseen, and contested consequences for a host of actors, but the consequences for the Palestinian people were uniquely catastrophic: the first brought , the second brought , the third brought .

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rameshgupta,
@rameshgupta@mastodon.social avatar

⬆️

that began in 1947 was first a between and in , and then a multi-state war… from at least five sovereign countries—, , , , and —as well as small contingents from others. It was a war fought village by village and town by town, and it resulted in massive population displacements on both sides.

No Jews remained anywhere in parts of Palestine that fell under control

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rameshgupta,
@rameshgupta@mastodon.social avatar

⬆️

The was most pronounced in the center of the land [where] more land was conquered by the Legion than by .

This territory included many sites with religious and symbolic importance to both sides.

It became known then as the and it sits on a smaller patch of land that what had been allocated to a future Arab state in the rejected that preceded the war.

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rameshgupta,
@rameshgupta@mastodon.social avatar

⬆️

Almost no population remained west of the .

With few exceptions, the few places in central today with a significant Arab population were not actually conquered by the in the war; they were largely territories that were held by the invading army and that were ceded to Israel in the .

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rameshgupta,
@rameshgupta@mastodon.social avatar

⬆️

For the , the defeat in this war was and remains a searing trauma.

Not only had the goal that had united the Arabs in 1948—preventing the establishment of a Jewish state in the heart of the —been thwarted, but hundreds of thousands of Arabs living in had been displaced by war.

In time, their became the enduring image of that defeat and humiliation.

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rameshgupta,
@rameshgupta@mastodon.social avatar

⬆️

The went from being a people defined by their dispossession at the hands of a hated enemy across a sealed border to being a people defined by their dispossession at the hands of a hated enemy that now also ruled them as an occupier.

Unlike the larger trauma of defeat, which was mostly bookended in time by the end of actual combat, for Palestinians, this remains a continuous trauma right up into the present.

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rameshgupta,
@rameshgupta@mastodon.social avatar

⬆️

These 3 wars are as different in form as any wars could be. Yet in several crucial ways they are quite similar.

For one, all 3 of these wars were preceded by months of excitement in the world & heated rhetoric that was simultaneously righteous & violent.

Righteous in that the cause of attacking was held to be an absolute good and a moral exigency infused with theological overtones. Violent in that the rhetoric was often openly

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rameshgupta,
@rameshgupta@mastodon.social avatar

⬆️

This pattern was set in motion by the first of the wars. The vote by the General Assembly in 1947 to partition into two states, one and one , set off an explosion of violence against local Jewish communities almost immediately in itself.

If there were doubts about the justice of the cause being fought for—preventing the establishment of a Jewish state—there is little record for that.

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rameshgupta,
@rameshgupta@mastodon.social avatar

⬆️

What’s astonishing is that a war that was embarked on so willingly, with so much unanimity, and with so much excitement could be later remembered as a story of pure 🔥🔥🔥

Yet before the war was even fully over, Constantin published a passionate of the failure to defeat , The Meaning of the Disaster [], giving birth to the word that would be used from as a shorthand for the traumatic defeat in that war.

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rameshgupta,
@rameshgupta@mastodon.social avatar

⬆️ #EcstasyAndAmnesia #GazaStrip

[How meaning of “Nakba” evolved]

As time passed, memories of that defeat evolved and the #Nakba became not an #Arab event but a #Palestinian one, and not a humiliating defeat—“seven Arab states declare war on #Zionism in #Palestine [and] stop impotent before it” is how it is described on the first page of #Zureiq’s book—but rather the story of shame and #forcedDisplacement.

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rameshgupta,
@rameshgupta@mastodon.social avatar

⬆️

The same dynamic repeated itself 20 years later.

The weeks leading up to the 1967 war were, in the world, likewise a time of public displays of . The hour of “” was nigh, and the excitement was expressed in both mass public spectacles and elite opinion.

The president Gamal Abdel promised an elated crowd the week before the war broke out that “our basic objective will be to destroy .

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rameshgupta,
@rameshgupta@mastodon.social avatar

⬆️

As with the 1st - war, memories expanded and hardened with time, and the mythology of the defeat came to assume much larger dimensions than the size of the war or the actual defeat itself.

Major anniversaries of the were largely marked in the Arab world as “the beginning of the .”

Minimal reckoning with Arabs’ own failures was with military errors and not with the overall goal of exacting revenge and eliminating .

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rameshgupta,
@rameshgupta@mastodon.social avatar

⬆️ #EcstasyAndAmnesia #GazaStrip

Memories tend to exaggerate what actually happened:

#Israel was not yet a major recipient of #American aid or weaponry, and one of the #Arab belligerents, #Jordan, was decidedly not in the #Soviet camp.

But the war was experienced as a clash between a Western-aligned society and pro-Soviet anti-imperialist sphere.

The regime most responsible for the build-up to and outbreak of the war, #Nasser’s #Egypt, was also the one most closely associated with Moscow.

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rameshgupta,
@rameshgupta@mastodon.social avatar

⬆️

The common and deeper meaning to all was that ’s enemies needed to be protected from the consequences of THEIR defeat in the wars THEY initiated and LOST.

It’s notable that this doesn’t seem to have happened in - wars where didn’t feature in the rhetoric or the stated motivations— in 1956, in 1973, the wars in .

But it certainly happened in the wars that began in 1947, 1967, & 2000

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rameshgupta,
@rameshgupta@mastodon.social avatar

⬆️

A global diplomatic edifice that keeps the in a permanent holding pattern of misery stemming from defeated war efforts, where the Palestinians themselves weren’t even always the central actors in the descent to war or the principal combatants who lost them, is unlike anything the international community has attempted in other conflicts.

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rameshgupta,
@rameshgupta@mastodon.social avatar

⬆️

The - conflict isn’t a normal conflict, and the cause of Arab still isn’t a normal cause of national liberation.

The fundamental fact of this conflict, that one side believes the other’s is a metaphysical crime for which a just resolution can only be , means that standard diplomatic practice is much harder to apply at best, and gets scrambled, inverted, and abused at worst 🔥🔥🔥

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STEREOTYPING ARABS – A Timeless Hollywood Tradition (youtu.be)

Arabs suffer from a long and systematic stereotyping from the West. From the Orientalist movement of the 18th century till today, Western perceptions of Arabs and by extension Muslims, are based on what they have been conditioned to believe through the media be it in the form of literature, art, and more recently, movies and...

ematts, to Palestine
@ematts@mastodon.online avatar
msquebanh, to legal
@msquebanh@mastodon.sdf.org avatar

As Ontarians call for a permanent , the Association has documented a marked increase in in engaging in through their and their actions. One such example is the 's decision to bar entry into to individuals wearing the

https://muslimlink.ca/news/arab-canadian-lawyers-association-acla-statement-regarding-anti-palestinian-racism-and-the-queen-s-park-keffiyeh-ban

plink, to Israel
@plink@mastodon.online avatar
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