‘From The River To The Sea’

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JVL Introduction

The chant heard increasingly heard on pro-Palestinian demonstrations is “From the River to the Sea, Palestine shall be free”.

It expresses a longstanding aspiration as Maha Nassar clearly shows in this essay published in the Forward in December 2018. It is as relevant as when it was written.

Many Zionists have always treated this demand as expressing a programme of “throwing the Jews into the sea” (as many white South Africans treated opposition to apartheid) some even going so far as to call it a “warrant for genocide”.

It is no such thing.

As Amnesty International, following B’Tselem and Human Right Watch, have made clear there is already one regime from the river to the sea. What is at stake is the nature of the regime.

This historic slogan, alive once more, is a rejection of the current reality of settler colonialism, occupation and apartheid in favour of equal human rights and equal freedom for all in historic Palestine, whatever the political forms through which these goals are expressed.

This article was originally published by Forward on Mon 3 Dec 2018. Read the original here.

‘From The River To The Sea’ Doesn’t Mean What You Think It Means

Over the weekend, scholar and social justice activist Marc Lamont Hill apologized for ending his recent remarks at United Nations by calling for “a free Palestine from the river to the sea.” His apology came after three days of furious online attacks and criticism from many people who felt deeply hurt by his remarks.

Critics have pointed to Hamas’s use of this phrase to claim that Hill was either deliberately parroting a Hamas line that calls for Israel’s elimination, or at the very least ignorantly repeating a deeply offensive and triggering phrase.

Yet lost in all these discussions is any acknowledgement of what this phrase actually means — and has meant — to Palestinians of all political stripes and convictions. As a Palestinian American and a scholar of Palestinian history, I’m concerned by the lack of interest in how this phrase is understood by the people who invoke it.

It helps to remember the context in which Hill delivered his original remarks. He made them last Wednesday as part of the Special Meeting of the Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People, in observance of the United Nations International Day of Solidarity With the Palestinian People, which is held during the final days of November each year.

The date is important. On November 29th, 1947, the United Nations General Assembly voted to partition Palestine into a Jewish state and an Arab state. While Jews in Palestine rejoiced, the country’s Arabs bitterly opposed the partition plan.

The reason was that they saw all of Palestine — from the river to the sea — as one indivisible homeland. They invoked the story of Solomon and the baby to explain their stance. Like the real mother in the parable, who begged Solomon to refrain from splitting her baby in half, Palestinian Arabs couldn’t stand to see their beloved country split in two. And they saw the Zionists’ eager reception of the plan as an ominous sign that they intended to conquer the whole of Palestine.

Moreover, the proposed borders of the two states meant that the Jewish state would have roughly 500,000 Palestinians living in it as a minority. And while the Israeli narrative holds that those Palestinians would have been welcomed as equals in the new Jewish state, the clashes between Jews and Arabs in Palestine that followed the UN vote, particularly the attacks by Zionist militants and the subsequent forcible removal of Palestinians from their homes and lands in areas allotted to the Jewish state, led Palestinians to conclude otherwise.

As for those Palestinians who managed to remain on their lands in the new Israeli state, they were eventually granted citizenship, but it was clearly subordinate to the status of Jewish Israelis. They were subject to military rule rather than civilian law, which meant they needed permits from the military governor to travel to work and school. They also encountered widespread prejudice from Israelis who saw them as a benighted, traditional underclass in need of the state’s benevolent modernization.

And Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, living under Jordanian and Egyptian rule respectively, faced authoritarian crackdowns that prevented them from being able to fully express their political views.

In other words, after 1948, Palestinians were not able to live with full freedom and dignity anywhere in their homeland.

That’s how the call for a free Palestine “from the river to the sea” gained traction in the 1960s. It was part of a larger call to see a secular democratic state established in all of historic Palestine. Palestinians hoped their state would be free from oppression of all sorts, from Israeli as well as from Arab regimes.

To be sure, a lot of Palestinians thought that in a single democratic state, many Jewish Israelis would voluntarily leave, like the French settlers in Algeria did when that country gained its independence from the French. Their belief stemmed from the anti-colonial context in which the Palestinian liberation movement arose.

That’s why, despite the occasional bout of overheated rhetoric from some leaders, there was no official Palestinian position calling for the forced removal of Jews from Palestine. This continued to be their position despite an Israeli media campaign following the 1967 war that claimed Palestinians wished to “throw Jews into the sea.”

While Palestinians viewed Zionists as akin to colonial settlers, Jews who were willing to live as equals with the Palestinians were welcome to stay. In his 1974 speech to the UN, Fatah leader and PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat declared, “when we speak of our common hopes for the Palestine of tomorrow we include in our perspective all Jews now living in Palestine who choose to live with us there in peace and without discrimination.”

In the 1980s and ‘90s, Fatah and the PLO changed their official stance from calling for a single state to supporting a two-state solution. Many Palestinians —particularly the refugees and their descendants — saw them as abandoning the core of their homeland and acquiescing to colonial theft. They were allowing the proverbial baby to be split.

With Fatah seen as selling out, Hamas picked up the call for a free Palestine “from the river to the sea.” It sought to burnish its own anti-colonial bona fides at the expense of Fatah. And although many people point to Hamas’s 1988 charter as evidence of its hostility to Jews, in fact the group long ago distanced itself from that initial document, seeking a more explicit anti-colonial stance. Moreover, its 2017 revised charter makes even clearer that its conflict is with Zionism, not with Jews.

And notwithstanding the extreme rhetoric of some leaders on both sides, a recent joint poll shows that only a small minority of Palestinians see “expulsion” as a solution to the conflict – 15% — which is incidentally the same percentage of Israelis who view this as the only solution.

What Palestinians do want is equal rights. They want to be able work hard to achieve their dreams without being discriminated against. They want to be able to live where they choose without being told they can’t because of their ethnicity or religion. They want to be able to choose the leaders who control their lives.

In other words, they want freedom. And they want that freedom throughout their historic homeland, not just on the 22% that comprise the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

This desire for freedom is what Marc Lamont Hill was invoking when he called for “a free Palestine from the river to the sea.” His remarks were intended to center Palestinians’ aspirations, not disparage Israelis’. This has been lost on his critics, which speaks to a larger problem.

Dismissing or ignoring what this phrase means to the Palestinians is yet another means by which to silence Palestinian perspectives. Citing only Hamas leaders’ use of the phrase, while disregarding the liberationist context in which other Palestinians understand it, shows a disturbing level of ignorance about Palestinians’ views at best, and a deliberate attempt to smear their legitimate aspirations at worst.

Most troubling for me, the belief that a “free Palestine” would necessarily lead to the mass annihilation of Jewish Israelis is rooted in deeply racist and Islamophobic assumptions about who the Palestinians are and what they want.

Rather than just lecture Palestinians and their supporters about how certain phrases make them feel, supporters of Israel should get more curious about what Palestinians themselves want. There isn’t a single answer (there never is), but assuming you already know is no way to work towards a just and lasting peace.

Maha Nassar is an Associate Professor in the School of Middle Eastern and North African Studies at the University of Arizona and a 2018 Public Voices Fellow with the OpEd Project. Follow her on Twitter @mtnassar.

Comments (9)

  • It is of course unbelievable that a call for equal right for all – Israeli Jews and Palestinians within 1 state is considered to be genocide of Jews. That is because an end to Jewish supremacy means an end to the Jewish state of oppression. There is nothing new in this. It is what Whites in southern Africa believed too.

    It is also a sign of their weakness.

    Likewise the claim that Israel is the world’s only Jewish state as if that is a good thing. States based on ethno-religious nationalism are always, without exception, repressive and racist and we should not be on the defensive about this.

    It’s a pity that Marc Lamont Hill apologised. NEVER APOLOGISE TO RACISTS

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  • Joseph Hannigan says:

    Thanks for this..and the implied hope that peoples do change their minds and positions….sometimes for the best.

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  • rc says:

    Nassar is worthy but a bit mealy-mouthed in implying that Zionist ‘militants’ – by ordinary definitions extremist outriders to a more moderate establishment – started the attacks on Palestinians, and only later did mainstream Zionism follow up. No, Ben Gurion was such a militant – read not only Ilan Pappe but also ultraZionist Benny Morris. Zionists did not stand idly by in the 1930s, either, when the might of the British empire was hurled for three years at the Palestinians – recall Bernard Montgomery, whom I should call ‘the Franco of the Levant’. Recall Orde Wingate and his storm detachments. That is one struggle the allegedly paltering British imperialists DID ‘intervene’ in!

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  • Jo Bird says:

    “So what do we mean when we say ‘Palestine shall be free’? We mean free from oppression, free from apartheid, free from occupation and war.” https://jobird2.wixsite.com/website/post/shalom-alaichim

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  • Peter Jones says:

    Westminster governed the 10,400 sq miles of Mandated Palestine for 30 years while denying suffrage to all inhabitants – numbering 1.9 million by 1947.
    That same 10,400 sq mile territory has now been governed by the Knesset for 53 years and today suffrage is permitted to only about 9 million of the territory’s 14 million inhabitants.
    What would be wrong with a demand for “one man, one vote” for all of voting age who fall under the governance of the Knesset?

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  • Stephen Richards says:

    A ‘One State Solution’ for the land of Palestine, where Jew, Arab & Christian can live together united in a quest to find peace & harmony in the ‘holy land’. If this is anti-Semitism then there is a problem with its definition; perhaps the ‘Nation State Law’ is just one indicator?

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  • Naomi Wayne says:

    Response to Peter Jones – in 2022 it is rather inappropriate to be calling for ‘one man one vote’ – don’t you think? Fifty years ago, during ‘second wave feminism’, we were dealing the the exclusion of female existence by rejecting terms like ‘chairman’. Am disappointed to see this exclusion continues to be demonstrated on the JVL site – and also that the person posting JVL material didn’t take the opportunity to ask Peter if he wished to reformulate his last sentence somewhat.

    And is this relevant to a discussion about Israel/Palestine? Well, it’s always relevant. Plus, as very many campaigning Jewish and Palestinian women complain – Jewish and Palestinian communities across Israel/Palestine are characterised by sexism and misogyny. So it’s especially important always to acknowledge explicitly – and crucially in a comment about democracy – that women in both these communities hold up 50% of the sky.

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  • Philip Horowitz says:

    “While Palestinians viewed Zionists as akin to colonial settlers, Jews who were willing to live as equals with the Palestinians were welcome to stay.”

    So how many Jews in Israel would be regarded as Zionists? What would they have to do to convince Palestinians they were willing to live as equals with them and what would happen to those who failed in this.

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  • Harvey Taylor says:

    Peter,
    “What would be wrong with a demand for ‘one man, one vote’ … ?”

    Universal suffrage does not necessarily produce freedom, liberty, equality of rights and opportunities. It IS an important mechanism, but history is littered with examples of anti-democratic mechanisms and devices shaping political systems.

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