Israel/Palestine
Related: About this forumThe False Narrative of Settler Colonialism
On October 7th, Hamas killed four times as many Israelis in a single day as had been killed in the previous 15 years of conflict. In the months since, protesters have rallied against Israels retaliatory invasion of Gaza, which has killed tens of thousands of Palestinians. But a new tone of excitement and enthusiasm could be heard among pro-Palestinian activists from the moment that news of the attacks arrived, well before the Israeli response began. Celebrations of Hamass exploits are familiar sights in Gaza and the West Bank, Cairo and Damascus; this time, they spread to elite college campuses, where Gaza-solidarity encampments became ubiquitous this past spring. Why?
The answer is that, long before October 7, the Palestinian struggle against Israel had become widely understood by academic and progressive activists as the vanguard of a global battle against settler colonialism, a struggle also waged in the United States, Canada, Australia, and other countries created by European settlement. In these circles, Palestine was transformed into a standard reference point for every kind of social wrong, even those that seem to have no connection to the Middle East.
One of the most striking things about the ideology of settler colonialism is the central role played by Israel, which is often paired with the U.S. as the most important example of settler colonialisms evils. Many Palestinian writers and activists have adopted this terminology. In his 2020 book, The Hundred Years War on Palestine, the historian Rashid Khalidi writes that the goal of Zionism was to create a white European settler colony. For the Palestinian intellectual Joseph Massad, Israel is a product of European Jewish Settler-Colonialism, and the liberation referred to in the name of the Palestine Liberation Organization is liberation from Settler-Colonialism.
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Although Israel fails in obvious ways to fit the model of settler colonialism, it has become the standard reference point because it offers theorists and activists something that the United States does not: a plausible target. It is hard to imagine America or Canada being truly decolonized, with the descendants of the original settlers returning to the countries from which they came and Native peoples reclaiming the land. But armed struggle against Israel has been ongoing since it was founded, and Hamas and its allies still hope to abolish the Jewish state between the river and the sea. In the contemporary world, only in Israel can the fight against settler colonialism move from theory to practice.
Gift link: https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2024/08/how-settler-colonialism-colonized-universities/679514/?gift=jcG3tmvWxz4sWOuHjwSa6_jpO9BAC77lYsOjpEP5ee4&utm_source=copy-link&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=share
comradebillyboy
(10,541 posts)settler colonists migrated out of Africa to all corners of the Earth. Folks have been settling and colonizing since day one. It's not going to ever be undone.
Richard D
(9,445 posts). . . who are not Native American, are settler/colonialists.
Waterguy
(278 posts)you cannot take the perspective of the settlers in the new world, all the immigrants who came to this new world without understanding their sacrifices, hopes and dreams for a better life since most came from desperate circumstances regarding unelected kings and queens and religious doctrine that suited such kings and queens and authoritarian laws.
in too many narratives the foundations in which the narratives were perpetuated with the help of myths that relinquished one group of innocent people against another - something we all should try to always remember time and time again is forgotten within the mechanism - Today I feel the voices of the American native people, and those whose direct ancestry that were brought to this country for the express purpose of slavery are not represented enough.
And I have Palestinian friends as well who are good people and want only peace - and yes, that means they are very much against terrorism. What they want is simple. And what many Israelis also dream about is in essence simple. Peace.
And maybe to both Israeli and Palestinian alike it is a true possibility, but sadly for the last forty or so years, it seems like only a dream to one day realize.
It's a difficult situation that requires truly gallant leadership on all sides. This goes without saying!
For all people everywhere.
Waterguy
(278 posts)What happened on Oct 6 is unimaginable. Any human being understands as much!
But there has to be a peace made between Israel and the people on both sides stuck in the middle of this never-ending madness!
Personally, I see that Hamas has to go but I also feel that the current leadership in Israel is awful!
Iran - this country needs to be opened up with some kind of democracy by the people somehow as well. I know that's seemingly out of the question, but I don't stop holding out hope. (Authoritarian regimes sadly are very practiced at keeping the people down.)
I've never been in the ME but my dad and a lot of his friends were after WWII - It was once a beautiful place and the people in places like Iran and all over were beautiful - and I believe still are.
Peace!