Arafat's tragic end and new
beginnings by
Marc Gopin
August 16, 2001
Reprinted from the Christian Science Monitor
Many things have ended in Israel and Palestine: The Oslo peace
process. The hundreds of carefully crafted relationships between
Israelis and Arabs. What also seems to be ending is the long and
dubious regime of Yasser Arafat. It may well be that he has control
over the direction of the military struggle against Israel. But the
moment he stands in the way of the infrastructures of combat that he
launched, he is finished.
Furthermore, Israel is trying hard to cause his rule to disintegrate.
Between the Israeli and Palestinian opposition, Mr. Arafat has no
place to move. He does hope to widen the conflict and thus force the
international community to his side, and this is his last card. But so
far, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon is outflanking him by being
particularly cautious in his response to Jewish casualties.
I have met with Arafat several times, as
recently as April. I and countless others
have always tried to move him toward his
side that is less violent and more visionary.
Several rabbis, sheikhs, and
nongovernmental institutions have worked
quietly for a couple of years on a parallel
cultural and religious track of peacemaking,
and - in the present circumstances -
ceasefire. We have had tacit support for our
work from government officials on all sides,
including the Americans.
Our vision was to jumpstart a new
relationship between the two peoples by virtue of highly public ethical and religious
gestures, including a cultural peace treaty
that was already written. These gestures
would be bilateral, and spearheaded by
government leaders on both sides, as well
as by key religious leaders. We came very
close to accomplishing this, with a
ceremony planned in Washington only a month ago. But the continuing attacks,
seemingly approved by Arafat, made it
impossible for participants to trust any
gestures that Arafat may have approved.
Essentially, no one trusts the Palestinian leader anymore. He has
trapped himself in his own structures of corruption and violence to
such a degree that he cannot struggle for his people's rights or
independence without those structures of corruption and violence.
Where is there hope? In the people of Palestine and Israel. Yes, they
are filled with rage. But the fact is that there were millions of people
on both sides ready for compromise, and for coexistence of two
states. Thousands on both sides have fought valiantly for democracy
and human rights. But the foolish essence of the Oslo peace process
was to keep peacemaking to a few select individuals, to turn a deaf
ear to daily suffering, and to squander the opportunity to build a
bicultural community of individuals committed to nonviolent struggle
for change. There were interests on all sides in preventing the
integration of the two communities. The third parties in this conflict -
those who blindly took sides - also share in the blame.
We have the solutions to this conflict. We know what fair distribution
of scarce resources means; we understand what sharing holy spaces
requires. All of this has been worked out. What is missing are
communities who can trust each other, who can engage in ethical
gestures of repair and apology. We cannot engage a peace process
again with corrupt and violent partners. The third parties, the rest of
us, must work, one relationship at a time, to build a community in
the middle of Israelis and Palestinians who will struggle for a new
reality.
My interviews in Israel time and time again reveal two basic ethical
prerequisites for a future relationship. On the Jewish side, it always
comes down to respect for the value of a Jewish life. On the
Palestinian side, it always comes down to respect, dignity, and
equality for Arabs. All the other complex disputes would be fixable if
these two prerequisites were in place, bolstered every day by
changes in word and deed. This will bring the only possible beginning
of a new moral and political community.
What I describe may be post-Arafat, post-Palestinian Authority, and
post-Sharon. But there is no alternative, except mutually assured
destruction. The time to start building is now. Some of us may
continue back-channel efforts to move the leaderships away from
violent cycles of struggle. But, in the long run, the capacity to live in
peace will reside with the majority of people on both sides. It is our
job to be honest with and compassionate toward both peoples and to
help them build a new political movement, and a new moral reality,
one relationship at a time.
Marc Gopin is visiting associate professor of international
diplomacy at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts
University, and visiting scholar at Harvard University's Program on
Negotiation.
|