Next Palestinian leader should look to Gandhi
By ERIC WEINER of The Los Angeles Times
One of the last foreigners to visit Yasser Arafat before he fell ill
was Arun Gandhi, grandson of Indian leader Mahatma Gandhi. He traveled
to Arafat’s compound in Ramallah with a simple message: Put down
the gun and adopt Gandhi’s way of nonviolent resistance.
By that time, it was a bit late to change Arafat’s tactics. The
Palestinian leader’s strategy, all through his life and in his final
days in Ramallah as well, had been one of victory at all costs and by
any means. But my advice to the next Palestinian leader would be this:
Look to Gandhi, not Arafat, as your role model.
This doesn’t mean capitulation, but rather the opposite. Gandhi’s
strategy of satyagraha—literally soul force — isn’t
some granola idea conjured up in the halls of the University of California,
Berkeley, nor should it be confused with weak-kneed pacifism.
It is a potent weapon—one that helped topple the British empire
and that could prove far more effective in Palestine than the bullets
and bombs that have characterized the four-year-old intifada so far. That
strategy, which has killed hundreds of Israelis and helped cause the death
of thousands of Palestinians, has gotten the Palestinians precisely nowhere.
It is time for new thinking, even if that means dusting off some old ideas.
One hundred years after Gandhi first experimented with nonviolent tactics
in South Africa, his approach to conflict resolution remains widely misunderstood.
A wily lawyer who understood the nature of power and how to use it, Gandhi
was no pacifist. He was a fighter.
His aim, however, was to transform his opponents, not merely defeat them.
Gandhi’s nonviolent tactics won’t work everywhere. They couldn’t
move a Stalin or a Hitler—or a Saddam Hussein.
But Israel, like Britain in Gandhi’s time, is a nation that views
itself as morally accountable and is therefore a perfect target for nonviolent
resistance.
Already, there are inklings of a nascent nonviolent movement among some
Palestinians. The prisoners who recently embarked on a hunger strike at
an Israeli prison borrowed a page from Gandhi’s playbook, knowingly
or not.
So have those who advocate a boycott of Israeli goods and peaceful protests
against the wall that Israel is erecting along the West Bank. But these
actions haven’t gone far enough, and too often they have been overshadowed
by the suicide bombings and other violent acts carried out by Hamas, Islamic
Jihad and other factions.
These groups argue that the ends—a free Palestine—justify
the means —violence. But Gandhi didn’t see it this way. He
made no distinction between means and ends. For him, they were one and
the same. He once said no man “takes another down a pit without
descending into it himself.’’
If Gandhi were alive today, he would no doubt tell Arafat’s successor
that freedom won through violence is no freedom at all. By adopting nonviolent
tactics, the Palestinians would have plenty of company. Martin Luther
King Jr. borrowed heavily from Gandhi during the U.S. civil rights movement.
The Philippines’ people power’ revolution, solidarity in
Poland and, more recently, the peaceful demonstrations in Serbia in 2000
are all successful examples of nonviolent resistance.
There are examples from the Muslim world, as well. In the 1920s and ‘30s
Abdul Ghaffar Khan used nonviolent methods to resist British occupation
along what is now the Pakistani-Afghan border. More recently, Iraq’s
Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani used his moral standing to peacefully end
the standoff at the Imam Ali shrine in Najaf. Why can’t the Palestinians
be next?
True, Hamas and Islamic Jihad are not likely to adopt nonviolent tactics,
at least not immediately, and even mainstream Palestinians such as Eyad
Sarraj, a leading psychiatrist in Gaza, worry that “nonviolent resistance
would look like a form of surrender.’’
Gandhi would counter that such resistance is a continuation of the struggle,
only through different means. Pictures of unarmed Palestinians lying down
before bulldozers about to raze their homes or marching up to the gates
of Jewish settlements in the West Bank and Gaza—again unarmed and
completely peacefully—would be powerful images that could do more
to advance the Palestinian cause than 100 suicide bombings.
It wouldn’t be easy. In fact, nonviolence is in many ways more difficult
to practice than violence. Many Palestinians might die in the process,
perhaps in greater numbers than they are dying now. On this point, Gandhi
was clear-eyed.
He and his followers were willing to die for their cause, just like the
Hamas suicide bombers. Unlike the Hamas bombers, they were not willing
to kill for it—under any circumstances. After years of terrorism,
the world would, understandably, cast a wary eye toward a new Palestinian
leader espousing nonviolence.
But once this nonviolent intifada, or what some Muslims are calling a
civil jihad, took hold, it would enable the Palestinians to reclaim the
moral high ground and garner international support. And surely Israel
wouldn’t object to a shift away from violence.
The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is ripe for Gandhi-style civil disobedience.
That’s a fact that Arafat was unable — or unwilling —
to grasp. It is one that his successor would be wise to embrace.
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