An inspiring march and rally on Saturday May 11th as Sheffield remembers the Nakba and satnds with Palestinians as the attacks on Rafah intensify.
Below is a great summary of the Nakba and its meaning today, taken from a speech by long time activist for justice in Palestine, Paul Kelemen, at our rally in Sheffield on Saturday May 2024.
This year’s Nakba Day has a special meaning, a special
significance:
- Palestinians are again subjected to ethnic cleansing and
mass murder; - We are again seeing unarmed Palestinians fleeing on foot
and on carts, in the face of savage bombardments, just as
they as they were forced to do from Dec 1947 to the first
few months of 1949.
Then, as now, the Palestinian resistance had to fight without
much support from the neighbouring states. In Zionist
mythology it is said that the Zionist militias had to withstand 5
Arab armies.
The truth is that the neighbouring Arab states led by Western
stooges made largely token gestures at fighting to placate their
own public. The King of Jordan, the only leader with a serious
military clout had an army run by British officers. He made a
deal with the Zionists to carve up Palestine, which is what the
British wanted.
After the 1948, it became the standard defence for Israel to
claim that it had to be established because Jewish people could
find safety only by having their own state.
It is true, that the during the rise of fascism the so called liberal
democracies did not want to open their doors to large numbers
of persecuted Jewish people. But people who seek refuge
don’t become colonisers merely by taking refuge in another
country – instead they settle down amongst the people living in
that place.
It was the Zionist movement which turned the Jewish people
who went to Palestine into colonisers, by recruiting them into a
project which involved Jewish immigrants being given land
taken from the Palestinians and being given jobs and resources
that were denied to the Palestinians.
The same colonisation process is now being implemented in
the West Bank and it is also the goal that Israel is pursuing in
Gaza. By reducing Gaza to rubble, by making it unliveable,
Israel is hoping to push out its population.
The Naqba has never ended. Although there are haunting parallels between Israel’s current genocide and the 1948 massacres and expulsion, there is also a very important difference.
In 1948, there were no public protests at the expulsion of
750,00 Palestinians. In Western countries, it barely registered on public
consciousness. In the UK, no political party or organisation
spoke out for the Palestinians. To give but one example. Prior
to 1948, Labour party conferences had passed 11 resolutions in
support of the Zionist movement. They mostly repeated the
Zionist argument that Jewish settlement would also benefit the
Palestinians.
In the autumn of 1949, as the traumatised Palestinian refugees
were sheltering in refugee camps some under tents but most
under trees, with little to eat or drink, the Labour Party had its
annual conference. About the destruction of Palestine, not a
single word was uttered at the conference.
It is not an exaggeration to say that for about 20 years after
Israel’s establishment in 1948, in Western countries, the
Palestinians were forgotten. Their ethnic cleansing was
covered up by thick layers of mythology about Israel finding a
barely populated land.
In this respect there is a fundamental difference between the
lack of an international response to the Nakba, and the popular
mobilisation on the side of the Palestinians against Israel’s
current genocidal war. Completely unexpectedly to Israel and
its allies, this has opened up a second front in the Palestinian
struggle.
Some of the most significant anti-colonial struggles in the past
century, as in Kenya, in Algeria and in Vietnam were won
because the moral authority of the coloniser collapsed. And it
collapsed in the imperial centres as well as globally because of
the resistance of the colonised but also because of the
international protest movements which that resistance
provoked.
A sure sign of this happening now, is that the likes of Biden,
Sunak and Starmer are now desperately trying to recover the
moral high ground, by feigning concern over Israel’s attack on
Rafah.
But even as they make great play of their concern, they
continue to supply Israel with weapons, to demonise the
Palestinian resistance and to accuse us, who refuse to turn a
blind eye to genocide, of being motivated by racism.
The truth is that it is their racism that has been exposed. They
incite hatred against migrants and pretend to shed tears over
Ukrainians to expand NATO to Russia’s border, but they believe
that massacring Palestinians is something we should quietly
accept.
In contrast to the total moral bankruptcy of Western leaders,
the people of Gaza have kept their unity. In the midst of the
grief, the stress and the shortages, they might have turned
against each other. They have not.
In military terms, the Palestinians cannot match the most
advanced US, German and British weaponry supplied to the IDF,
but they do not have to win on the battlefield.
They and the international solidarity movement can and are
winning the political battle.
There is a long struggle ahead but after 76 years the political
tide has turned. The task for us, is to make British complicity
with Israel into a mainstream political issue and to build a
powerful Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions campaign.
That is the least we owe to Palestinians in Gaza, in the West
Bank, in Israel, in exile here among us and around the world
who have continued fighting for their people’s liberation
They have demonstrated that the Westen imperial order can be
defied and discredited and that there are people everywhere
willing to join the fight to defeat racism and colonialism.