Resistance is not a band of armed men
hell-bent on wreaking havoc. It is not a cell of terrorists scheming ways to
detonate buildings.
True resistance is a culture.
It is a collective retort to oppression.
Understanding the real nature of resistance,
however, is not easy. No newsbyte could be thorough enough to explain why
people, as a people, resist. Even if such an arduous task was possible, the
news might not want to convey it, as it would directly clash with mainstream
interpretations of violence and non-violent resistance. The Afghanistan story
must remain committed to the same language: al-Qaeda and the Taliban. Lebanon
must be represented in terms of a menacing Iran-backed Hizbullah. Palestine’s
Hamas must be forever shown as a militant group sworn to the destruction of
the Jewish state. Any attempt at offering an alternative reading is tantamount
to sympathizing with terrorists and justifying violence.
The deliberate conflation and misuse of
terminology has made it almost impossible to understand, and thus to actually
resolve bloody conflicts.
Even those who purport to sympathize with
resisting nations often contribute to the confusion. Activists from Western
countries tend to follow an academic comprehension of what is happening in
Palestine, Iraq, Lebanon, and Afghanistan. Thus certain ideas are perpetuated:
suicide bombings bad, non-violent resistance good; Hamas rockets bad,
slingshots good; armed resistance bad, vigils in front of Red Cross offices
good. Many activists will quote Martin Luther King Jr., but not Malcolm X.
They will infuse a selective understanding of Gandhi, but never of Guevara.
This supposedly ‘strategic’ discourse has robbed many of what could be a
precious understanding of resistance – as both concept and culture.
Between the reductionst mainstream
understanding of resistance as violent and terrorist and the ‘alternative’
defacing of an inspiring and compelling cultural experience, resistance as a
culture is lost. The two overriding definitions offer no more than narrow
depictions. Both render those attempting to relay the viewpoint of the
resisting culture as almost always on the defensive. Thus we repeatedly hear
the same statements: no, we are not terrorists; no, we are not violent, we
actually have a rich culture of non-violent resistance; no, Hamas is not
affiliated with al-Qaeda; no, Hizbullah is not an Iranian agent. Ironically,
Israeli writers, intellectuals and academicians own up to much less than their
Palestinian counterparts, although the former tend to defend aggression and
the latter defend, or at least try to explain their resistance to aggression.
Also ironic is the fact that instead of seeking to understand why people
resist, many wish to debate about how to suppress their resistance.
By resistance as a culture, I am referencing
Edward Said’s elucidation of “culture (as) a way of fighting against
extinction and obliteration.” When cultures resist, they don’t scheme and play
politics. Nor do they sadistically brutalize. Their decisions as to whether to
engage in armed struggle or to employ non-violent methods, whether to target
civilians or not, whether to conspire with foreign elements or not are all
purely strategic. They are hardly of direct relevance to the concept or
resistance itself. Mixing between the two suggests is manipulative or plain
ignorant.
If resistance is “the action of opposing
something that you disapprove or disagree with”, then a culture of resistance
is what occurs when an entire culture reaches this collective decision to
oppose that disagreeable element - often a foreign occupation. The decision is
not a calculated one. It is engendered through a long process in which
self-awareness, self-assertion, tradition, collective experiences, symbols and
many more factors interact in specific ways. This might be new to the wealth
of that culture’s past experiences, but it is very much an internal process.
It’s almost like a chemical reaction, but
even more complex since it isn’t always easy to separate its elements. Thus it
is also not easy to fully comprehend, and, in the case of an invading army, it
is not easily suppressed. This is how I tried to explain the first Palestinian
uprising of 1987, which I lived in its entirely in Gaza:
“It’s not easy to isolate specific dates and
events that spark popular revolutions. Genuine collective rebellion cannot be
rationalized though a coherent line of logic that elapses time and space; its
rather a culmination of experiences that unite the individual to the
collective, their conscious and subconscious, their relationships with their
immediate surroundings and with that which is not so immediate, all colliding
and exploding into a fury that cannot be suppressed.” (My Father Was A Freedom
Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story)
Foreign occupiers tend to fight popular
resistance through several means. One includes a varied amount of violence
aiming to disorient, destroy and rebuild a nation to any desired image (read
Naomi Klein’s The Shock Doctrine). Another strategy is to weaken the very
components that give a culture its unique identity and inner strengths – and
thus defuse the culture’s ability to resist. The former requires firepower,
while the latter can be achieved through soft means of control. Many ‘third
world’ nations that boast of their sovereignty and independence might in fact
be very much occupied, but due to their fragmented and overpowered cultures –
through globalization, for example - they are unable to comprehend the extent
of their tragedy and dependency. Others, who might effectively be occupied,
often possess a culture of resistance that makes it impossible for their
occupiers to achieve any of their desired objectives.
In Gaza, Palestine, while the media speaks
endlessly of rockets and Israeli security, and debates who is really
responsible for holding Palestinians in the strip hostage, no heed is paid to
the little children living in tents by the ruins of homes they lost in the
latest Israeli onslaught. These kids participate in the same culture of
resistance that Gaza has witnessed over the course of six decades. In their
notebooks they draw fighters with guns, kids with slingshots, women with
flags, as well as menacing Israeli tanks and warplanes, graves dotted with the
word ‘martyr’, and destroyed homes. Throughout, the word ‘victory’ is
persistently used.