Hashtag Genocide: Why Gaza Fought Back - Not About Mere Resistance Strategies, But Their Very Survival
19 September 2014
By Ramzy Baroud
My old family house in the Nuseirat refugee camp in
Gaza was recently rebuilt by its new owner, into a
beautiful three-story building with large windows
adorned by red frames. In Israel's most recent and
deadliest war on Gaza, the house sustained significant
damage. A large hole caused by Israeli missiles can be
seen from afar, in a part of the house where our
kitchen once stood.
It seems that the original target was not my house,
however, but that of our kindly neighbor, who had
spent his entire working-life toiling between manual
jobs in Israel, and later in life as a janitor for
UN-operated schools in Gaza. The man's whole
lifesavings were invested in his house where several
families lived. After "warning" rockets blew up part
of his house, several missiles pulverized the rest.
My entire neighborhood was also destroyed. I saw
photos of the wreckage-filled neighborhood by accident
on Facebook. The clearance where we played football as
little kids was filled with holes left by missiles and
shrapnel. The shop where I used my allowance to buy
candy, was blown up. Even the graveyard where our dead
were meant to "rest in peace" was anything but
peaceful. Signs of war and destruction were
everywhere.
My last visit there was about two years ago. I caught
up with my neighbors on the latest politics and the
news of who was dead and who was still alive
underneath the shady wall of my old house. One
complained about his latest ailments, telling me that
his son Mahmoud had been killed as he had been a
freedom fighter with a Palestinian resistance
movement.
I couldn't fathom the idea that Mahmoud, the child I
remembered as running around half-naked with a runny
nose, had become a fierce fighter with an automatic
rifle ready to take on the Israeli army. But that he
was, and he was killed on duty.
Time changes everything. Time has changed Gaza. But
the strip was never a passive place of people
subsisting on hand-outs or a pervasive sense of
victimhood. Being a freedom fighter preceded any
rational thinking about life and the many choices it
had to offer growing up in a refugee camp, and all the
little kids of my generation wanted to join the
Fedayeen.
But options for Gazans are becoming much more limited
than ever before, even for my generation.
Since Israel besieged Gaza with Egypt's help and
coordination, life for Gazans has become largely about
mere survival. The strip has been turned into a
massive ground for an Israeli experiment concerned
with population control. Gazans were not allowed to
venture out, fish, or farm, and those who got even
close to some arbitrary "buffer zone," determined by
the Israeli army within Gaza's own borders, were shot
and often killed.
With time the population of the strip knew that they
were alone. The short stint that brought Mohammed
Morsi to power in Egypt offered Gaza some hope and a
respite, but it soon ended. The siege, after the
overthrow of Morsi became tighter than ever before.
The Palestinian leadership in Ramallah did very little
to help Gaza. To ensure the demise of Hamas, Mahmoud
Abbas' Palestinian Authority carried on with its
"security coordination" with Israel, as Gaza suffered
a Draconian siege. There was no question, that after
all the failed attempts at breaking the siege and the
growing isolation of Gaza, Gazans had to find their
own way out of the blockade.
When Israeli began its bombardment campaign of Gaza on
July 6, and a day later with the official launch of
the so-called Operation Protective Edge, followed by a
ground invasion, it may have seemed that Gaza was
ready to surrender.
Political analysts have been advising that Hamas has
been at its weakest following the downturn of the Arab
Spring, the loss of its Egyptian allies, and the
dramatic shift of its fortunes in Syria and, naturally
Iran. The "Hamas is ready to fold" theory was advanced
by the logic surrounding the unity agreement between
Hamas and Fatah; and unity was seen largely as a
concession by Hamas to Abbas' Fatah movement, which
continued to enjoy western political backing and
monetary support.
The killing of three Israeli settlers in the occupied
West Bank in late June was the opportunity for Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to test the
misleading theory on Hamas' weakened position. He
launched his war that eventually mounted into a
genocide, hoping that Hamas and other resistance
groups would be forced to disarm or be completely
eradicated - as promised by various Israeli officials.
But it didn't. From the very first days of the war it
became clear the resistance could not be defeated, at
least not as easily as Netanyahu had expected. The
more troops he invested in the war on Gaza, the more
Israeli army casualties increased. Netanyahu's
response was to increase the price of Palestinian
resistance by inflicting as much harm on Palestinian
civilians as possible: He killed over 1,900, wounded
nearly 10,000, a vast majority of whom were civilians,
and destroyed numerous schools, mosques, hospitals,
and thousands of homes, thus sending hundreds of
thousands of people on the run. But where does one run
when there is nowhere to go?
Israel's usual cautious political discourse was
crumbling before Gaza's steadfastness. Israeli
officials and media began to openly call for genocide.
Middle East commentator Jeremy Salt explained:
"The more extreme of the extreme amongst the Zionists
say out loud that the Palestinians have to be wiped
out or at the very least driven into Sinai," he wrote,
citing Moshe Feiglin, the deputy of the Israeli
Knesset, who called for "full military conquest of the
Gaza strip and the expulsion of its inhabitants. They
would be held in tent encampments along the Sinai
border while their final destination was decided.
Those who continued to resist would be exterminated."
From Israeli commentator Yochanan Gordon, who flirted
with genocide in "when genocide is permissible," to
Ayelet Shaked, who advocated the killing of the
mothers of those who resist and are killed by Israel.
"They should follow their sons. Nothing would be more
just. They should go as should the physical houses in
which they raised the snakes. Otherwise more little
snakes are raised," he wrote on Facebook.
References to genocide and extermination and other
devastatingly violent language are no longer "claims"
levied by Israeli critics, but a loud and daily
self-indictment made by the Israelis themselves.
The Israelis are losing control of their decades-long
hasbara, a propaganda scheme so carefully knitted and
implemented, many the world over were fooled by it.
Palestinians, those in Gaza in particular, were never
blind to Israel's genocidal intentions. They assembled
their resistance with the full knowledge that a fight
for their very survival awaited.
Israel's so-called Protective Edge is the final proof
of Israel's unabashed face, that of genocide. It
carried it out, this time paying little attention to
the fact that the whole world was watching. Trending
Twitter hashtags which began with #GazaUnderAttack,
then #GazaResists, quickly morphed to #GazaHolocaust.
The latter was used by many that never thought they
would dare make such comparisons.
Gaza managed to keep Israel at bay in a battle of
historic proportions. Once its children are buried, it
will once again rebuild its defenses for the next
battle. For Palestinians in Gaza, this is not about
mere resistance strategies, but their very survival.
- Ramzy Baroud is a PhD scholar in People's History
at the University of Exeter. He is the Managing Editor
of Middle East Eye. Baroud is an
internationally-syndicated columnist, a media
consultant, an author and the founder of
PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father
Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto
Press, London).