I have been reflecting on the many anniversaries during the
month of November, aside from the fact
that I turned 80 last November on the day my book “Reflections from Palestine – A Journey of
Hope” was launched, and that the birthday of my granddaughter’s best friend
Juman, falls on the 2nd of November.
I am sure neither Juman nor her mother had much choice in determining
that day to coincide with the
anniversary of the Balfour Declaration in 1917 which the Palestinians consider
to be the root cause of their dispossession.
But then November 9 was the twenty fifth anniversary of the
collapse of the Berlin Wall. Whoever
thought that wall will ever collapse?
That is why this is a very meaningful day for us, the Palestinians, as it gives us hope that the infamous Separation
Wall which separates the Palestinian territories from each other
in the name of security, will eventually collapse some day. However the 19th anniversary of the assassination of Yitzhak
Rabin on November 4 continues to remind
us that the whole peace process was a farce, and led us nowhere,
while at the same time it
shielded Israeli impunity as it continued to create new realities on the
ground.
November 11 is
Armistice Day, or Veteran’s day as it is
called in the USA ,
which marked the end of World War I in 1918. Again it makes us wonder at the
brutality of wars. As if the loss of
many lives in both World War I and World War II was not enough, the colonial
powers continued to wage so many wars in
other peoples’ countries and under a variety of
pretexts. Will November 11 ever make those powers realize that wars are
not about solving problems but about greed, sale of armament, hegemony and devastation. Devastation not only of the land and its natural resources, but
devastation of humanity and the mushrooming of new radical movements. It is very hard under the circumstances,
where we watch regions torn apart, to envisage any hope for an armistice day for our region or peace around
the whole world.
Ironically November 11 is also the tenth anniversary of the
death of Yasser Arafat. I remember I was
in Hawaii at
the time and we stayed up late with my cousin Diana and her husband Jerry to
watch the end of an era for the Palestinians.
Of course Israel
has claimed him to be “no peace partner” despite all the concessions he made
for the sake of peace. In fact November 15 is the 26h anniversary of the Declaration of the Independence
of the State of Palestine within the 1967 borders, and it is an official
holiday in Occupied Palestine. I still
do not know what we are celebrating, after making such a compromise and still not being independent on that 22% of our
historic Palestine . But I know the teachers and students are
happy to have a long week end off. I
still remember when November 14 was an official holiday during the Jordan times,
as it was the birthday of King Hussein.
Salwa, the school principal at Rawdat El-Zuhur had the
same birthday, so her birthday was always an official holiday.
Thank you Samia for reminding us of all these anniversaries of the month. The fall of the Berlin wall should be, for us Palestinians, the harbinger for the fall of the wall of shame someday 'soon'. However, no such drastic change comes without hard work, determination and first and foremost, proper planning!
ReplyDeleteLet us continue to hope.
Thank you, Samia.
ReplyDeleteThese are other November anniversaries of note, all centered on November 29th:
1947 - United Nations General Assembly Partition of Palestine between Arabs and Jews (Resolution 181)
1978 (first observance; annually thereafter) - International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People, a UN-organized anniversary
2012 - United Nations General Assembly accorded Palestine ‘Non-Member Observer State’ status in UN
Thank you for this Samia - and it has been an unforgettable month as I started with Sabeel November 1st.
ReplyDeleteWhen I met with Assis Naim in Dallas I took time and went to the grassy knoll and warehouse where Lee Harvey Oswald assassinated JFK on November 22 1963.
Looking forward to your birthday to lift our November spirits.
William