Many will agree that the past few months have posed many challenges to
Palestinian unity; yet, when reading the stories of Palestinian refugees and
internally displaced scattered around the world, one cannot but feel the
symbiotic union of a people; something that transcends borders and politics,
“something of the heart”, as a boy in the Al-Wihdat refugee camp puts it.
This special Nakba 60 issue of al Majdal aims to honor the 7 million
Palestinian refugees and internally displaced who live in forced exile
today. Voices, from Chile to Gaza, that come together to tell of their love
and longing for their home, land and people; voices that call for humanity,
justice and dignity – and for return, the return of rights, all rights. A
demand, after 60 years of ongoing dispossession and displacement, that is
stronger than ever.
Palestinians - the indigenous people of the land which is now Israel and the
occupied Palestinian territory - are suffering from historic injustices as a
result of the colonization and dispossession of their lands, territories and
resources. They are struggling against an ideology - Zionism – that contends
that there should be a Jewish State in ‘Eretz Israel’ - a territorial
construct that includes all of the land of Mandate Palestine, and upon which
a Jewish majority should be created and maintained. Concretely, this means
that Palestinians are faced with discriminatory policies and practices that
violate their fundamental rights, notably their rights to
self-determination, equality, and return.
Despite violations of their fundamental rights, Palestinians remain
steadfast and committed to regain the justice and dignity they have been
denied for the past 60 years. They know they are the indigenous people of
this land and that they will return, because they are Palestine. As Mahatma
Gandhi wrote in 1938,
Palestine belongs to the Arabs in the same sense that England
belongs to the English or France to the French. It is wrong and
inhuman to impose the Jews on the Arabs. What is going on in
Palestine today cannot be justified by any moral code of conduct.
The mandates have no sanction but that of the last war. Surely it
would be a crime against humanity to reduce the proud Arabs so that
Palestine can be restored to the Jews partly or wholly as their
national home.(1)