logo
'Humanity will win' - Is there change in air over Palestinian state?

'Humanity will win' - Is there change in air over Palestinian state?

Each was serenely at odds with the screams, pain and anger that had accompanied the deaths of their owners.
It was a beautiful early Spring day in 2001 and the Second Palestinian Intifada - or uprising - was now into its sixth month.
Hot and weary after an afternoon spent interviewing some Palestinians about where they thought the uprising was now heading, I had sought sanctuary from the tension of the streets in the West
Bank town of Ramallah in the cool and calm of the Khalil Sakakini Cultural Centre art gallery.
Here, only the tapping of shoe heels and gentle sputtering of the candles that lined the dimly lit gallery floor intruded on the quiet.
I had already witnessed so much killing in the years that I'd spent covering this battle of wills between Israelis and Palestinians.
But little did I know that day, as I made my way through this exhibition of photographs and objects entitled 'The Hundred Martyrs', that in the decades to come the suffering and sacrifice would escalate to the unimaginable levels of today.
During my visit, the exhibition's curators told me how they had been inundated with requests by the relatives of other Intifada victims who wanted their loved ones' belongings and memories to be part of this temporary monument.
Each of the objects that I saw displayed underneath the photographs in transparent plastic cases represented individual shrines. Their value was not material, but purely symbolic in that they belonged to a 'martyr,' someone who had died directly or indirectly as a result of the uprising.
In each instance, curators' assistants had journeyed out through the Israeli checkpoints and cordons that surrounded Palestinian communities to collect these personal photographs and artefacts
They stood alone as testament to an individual life. Lives not just remembered, but preserved, along with stories equally powerful and emotive.
I remember that day stopping before the empty birdcage belonging to 15-year-old Nizar Eideh of Ramallah, who on the morning just before he was shot dead in stone throwing clashes with Israeli troops, released a bird he had bought a few days earlier, worried that the bird's mother might miss him.
(Image: EYAD BABA)
GENERATION IN PERIL
ALMOST two and a half decades later, photographs and objects, just like those in 'The Hundred Martyrs' exhibition, continue to serve as mute witnesses to a generation of Palestinians in peril. One such image released just this past week shocked the world.
The harrowing photograph taken by journalist Ahmed al-Arini of 18 month old infant, Muhammad Zakariya Ayyoub al-Matouq in his mother's arms, bones visible from starvation and dressed only in a nappy improvised from a bin bag, is difficult to look at.
So much of what we see coming out of Gaza these past 21 long months has been difficult to look at, let alone absorb and comprehend.
As my good friend the Palestinian writer Raja Shehadeh - himself a human rights lawyer - observed recently, ultimately 'it will be our humanity, not international law that will judge and hold Israel and its allies accountable.'
I so hope Shehadeh is right even if at times that humanity seems absent in the response of so many people right now.
That latest picture from Gaza of 18 month old Muhammad, reminds me of another from Gaza back during the Second Intifada.
In its own way it too became a defining image. The 12-year boy in that earlier picture was also called Muhammad.
It was on September 30, barely days after the start of the Second Intifada that Mohammed al-Durra was killed as his father tried to shield him after being caught in Israeli crossfire at Gaza's Netzarim Junction.
Caught on live television the youngster's horrific death was broadcast around the world.
In Baghdad, they would subsequently name a street after this little boy. In Morocco, a public park. In Jordan, the Tai Kwon Do Association gave his name to their annual championship. In other Arab countries, postage stamps were issued carrying his picture.
The TV pictures of his death became a rallying cry for international action and to this day the circumstances surrounding Mohammed al-Durra's killing remain the subject of anger, controversy and debate.
Some Israeli officials even insisted at the time that it was 'staged' by the Palestinians, while one pro-Israeli American academic derisorily called the pictures nothing more than 'Pallywood cinema'.
Even in death it seemed, little Mohammed al-Durra continued to be a target in this, a conflict where there must always be two stories.
As a journalist covering the Intifada at that time, I like others, wondered just for a moment whether maybe, just maybe, something good might come from such a tragedy.
Perhaps at long last, from the haunted look on the face of this little boy, the realisation might dawn that the eye-for an-eye score settling between Israelis and Palestinians could not continue forever.
NO REMORSE?
IN a recent article of his own, Raja Shehadeh asked two important questions. How is it that most Israelis do not acknowledge their humanity. How are they able to show no remorse for what their army is carrying out in their name?
Back during the time of the both First and Second Intifadas, many Israelis then too seemed able to live with the atrocities they heard and read about daily.
For some Israelis - sheltering just beyond the shadow of such bloodshed – the self-deception required to do so was made easier by the fact that the carnage was largely confined to the occupied territories and rarely trickled onto their own streets.
The attacks of October 7, 2023, by Hamas on Israeli communities subsequently put paid to that of course and today both Israelis and Palestinians are living with the terrible consequences.
But even back during those early Intifada times not every Israeli – as is the case today - turned the other way though.
In the autumn of 1988 shortly after the start of the first uprising, the Israeli novelist, A B Yehoshua, was so disgusted by the complacency of his fellow citizens that he said he now understood how so many Germans after World War Two could say they had never seen or heard of the Holocaust concentration camps.
It goes without saying of course that Yehoshua's comments went straight to the heart of the Israeli psyche and generated a bitter backlash.
But whether Israelis liked it or not, the irrefutable evidence of widespread human rights abuses against ordinary Palestinians was there to see for anyone who took the time to go and look for themselves.
In today's digital world of course there is no need to do that, for images like those of Muhammad Zakariya Ayyoub al-Matouq, inevitably manage to seep out into our consciences.
This happens in part thanks to the courage of Palestinian journalists. It happens also despite an Israeli ban on international reporters having access to Gaza. It means too that we cannot ignore the mass starvation before our eyes.
As I write this, one in three Gazans goes multiple days without eating. Malnourished mothers can no longer produce milk to breastfeed their children, the injured are unable to heal and hospitals have run out of nutritional supplements to treat countless emaciated infants like Muhammad Zakariya Ayyoub al-Matouq.
Just a few days ago, countries including Britain and many member states of the European Union (EU) condemned the 'drip feeding' of aid.
But let's call this man-made starvation for what it really is given that any inadequate provision of aid to civilians on terrain that is, in effect, under occupation is a war crime. In response Israel says such criticisms are 'disconnected from reality.'
But for so long now - going back decades - it has been Israel that has chosen to block out the uncomfortable reality of what it was becoming.
Those journalists like myself and others, who have watched this perverse metamorphosis began witnessing the tell-tale signs years ago.
Once again by way of example, I need only cast my mind back to one of many instances during the Second Intifada.
'DEFENSIVE SHIELD'
IT was April 2002, during what the Israelis - using a characteristic misnomer - had dubbed 'Operation Defensive Shield' that I watched hundreds of Palestinian men herded together under guard by soldiers in armoured personnel carriers in the al-Amari refugee camp in Ramallah.
Blindfolded, their hands still bound behind their back, myself and a colleague watched as Israeli soldiers wrote a number on each of the prisoners' forearms before the men were then forced to sit silently in the baking sun with guns trained on them, each waiting their turn for interrogation.
Such methods repeated time and again in the following days outraged some Israelis, which they felt were reminiscent of the Nazis during World War Two. As increasing evidence emerged, many Israelis were compelled to speak out.
Yosef (Tommy) Lapid, a member of the Israeli parliament, leader of the Shinui Party and a former concentration camp victim, confronted Israeli General, Shaul Mofaz, during a meeting of the Foreign Affairs and Defence Committee, saying that as a Holocaust survivor he found the IDF methods intolerable and shocking.
In a letter to Dr Shevah Weiss, the chairman of Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum, Mohammed Barakeh, an Arab–Israeli Knesset member, put into words the thoughts of many over Israel's tactics during the ongoing invasion of the West Bank at that time.
'In these wretched days, I've asked myself more than once how, within such a short period of history, the victim has become the murderer, and a people who, perhaps, suffered more than any other from arbitrary repression and refugee status, is capable of meting out the same fate to others,' Barakeh grimly noted.
From what I witnessed in Ramallah and elsewhere during those days, it was evident that the Israeli army's 'tactics' made a mockery of its claim to believe in 'purity of arms'. More recently in Gaza this contradiction has been borne out time and again.
This weekend as France prepares to declare its recognition of a Palestinian state and British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer comes under increasing pressure to do the same, his [[Israel]]i counterpart Benyamin Netanyahu and his coalition government appears undeterred.
Speaking recently about French president Emmanuel Macron's insistence that recognising Palestine was a 'moral duty', [[Israel]]'s defence minister, [[Israel]] Katz, pledged [[Israel]] would further tighten its grip on the West Bank..
'They will recognise a Palestinian state on paper - and we will build the Jewish-Israeli state on the ground,' he said. 'The paper will be thrown in the trash can of history and the State of Israel will flourish and prosper,' Katz attested.
Bold words, but ones that as a long term observer of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, I believe have an increasingly hollow ring. Instead, I'm of the view that we are fast approaching a critical juncture in this seemingly interminable battle of wills.
Read more
Tears and trauma: David Pratt in Ukraine
DAVID PRATT ON THE WORLD: Whatever happens in Brazil's resentful and rancorous election, the result will have major repercussions for us all
David Pratt in Ukraine: It's hard to comprehend this level of destruction
David Pratt: Kremlin's protestations have a hollow ring as atrocities mount up
'IRRESISTIBLE FORCE'
YES, I know talk of a 'turning point' has been mooted many times in the past, but there is just an inkling that the political ground is shifting on both sides of what the Israeli writer Amos Elon once described as an 'irresistible force colliding with an immovable body'.
Forget the River Jordan, for it's the Rubicon that is being crossed here for both Palestinians and Israelis alike.
Given what has unfolded in Gaza, there is no going back to the way things were for either side and that in itself could lead to a tectonic political shift.
Much of the world now sees through Israel's victimhood veil and Netanyahu's use of war to keep himself in power has all but run its course.
As for the Palestinians, they must seize the opportunity to capitalise on any growing goodwill like never before and endeavour to do what they have failed to achieve for the past thirty years - unity.
As for the international community, to repeat Raja Shehadeh words, 'it will be our humanity, not international law' that will in the end win the day.
All these remarks might seem out of step with the political moment, but the irrefutable fact is that there will be no peace until there is a Palestinian state. To that end I for one can't help but sense a whiff of change in the air. Insubstantial yet perhaps, but undeniable, nonetheless.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Gaza becomes 'most expensive place to eat in the world'
Gaza becomes 'most expensive place to eat in the world'

Metro

time4 hours ago

  • Metro

Gaza becomes 'most expensive place to eat in the world'

'Where in the world is food more expensive than London, Dubai, and New York?' It sounds like a setup to a cheap joke but the harrowing answer is Gaza. Under a suffocating Israeli blockade, food, fuel and humanitarian aid have become luxuries for Palestinians. The result? People are starving. Not metaphorically, not gradually – literally. What little food remains has been pushed to black-market extremities, as shown by prices shared with Metro by Christian Aid workers on the ground. A 25kg sack of flour is now more expensive than a Michelin-star dinner in Paris, costing as much as £414, compared to £8.80 before the start of the war. A kilogram of sugar is £88, in stark contrast with the price of £0.60 less than two years ago. Staples like oil, bread and eggs – when available – have all become entirely out of reach for Palestinians. Speaking of the impact of the unfolding famine, Ranin Awad who works for Christian Aid's local partner in Gaza, Women's Affairs Centre (WAC), said: 'My colleagues and I only eat one meal a day, depending on what we can afford and what is available. We are dealing with fatigue, dizziness, and overwhelming weakness. 'Recent months have been filled with death, fear and displacement. It is like a nightmare that has devastated our hopes, memories, and houses. 'Our home was destroyed and we were forced to flee many times. All of our memories have been obliterated. 'My son was just a month old when the war began. He had a new, lovely room with pretty furniture and toys. There is nothing left for him now, all is ash.' Gaza's Health Ministry has recorded six more deaths in the past 24 hours due to famine and malnutrition, including two children. This brings the total number of starvation deaths to 133, which included 87 children. Philippe Lazzarini, the commissioner-general for the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees (UNRWA), said: 'People in Gaza are neither dead nor alive, they are walking corpses.' He said that one in five children in Gaza City is malnourished – a number increasing every day that unhindered humanitarian aid is denied. In a post on X, Lazzarini warned: 'When child malnutrition surges, coping mechanisms fail, access to food and care disappears, and famine silently begins to unfold. 'Most children our teams are seeing are emaciated, weak and at high risk of dying if they do not get the treatment they urgently need.' Amid the starvation, Egyptians have launched an initiative called 'From sea to sea – a bottle of hope for Gaza'. Plastic bottles are being filled with grains, rice and lentils and hurled into the Mediterranean Sea in the hope that they will reach the enclave – even though the Israeli Defence Forces have banned Palestinians from entering the water. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video While largely symbolic – aimed at highlighting Israel's purposeful starvation of civilians, several bottles appear to have reached Gaza. A video shared on TikTok by creator Saqer Abu Saqr, from the north of the enclave, shows him thanking Egyptians for sending him a bottle filled with yellow lentils. Waving the gift, he says: 'This came by the sea from the young people in Egypt. Thank you, may Allah bless you.' Another Palestinian creator with some 2.5 million followers on Instagram, Mohamed Al Khalidi, shared a video titled 'The most expensive city in the world.' Walking through Gaza City's crumbling streets, Mohamed highlights some of the prices of basic goods – £37 for a kilogram of flour, £66 for a kilogram of sugar, and £22 for a kilogram of lentils. He says: 'The famine is intensifying significantly. Even the simplest items now cost 10 times their normal price, and only a few things are available. Everything is scarce. I keep thinking about those who have no money at all.' Israel has been facing growing criticism over the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza as indirect ceasefire talks in Doha between Israel and Hamas have broken off with no deal in sight. Prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu lashed out at the United Nations over the weekend to stop blaming his government for what the WHO chief, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, described as 'man-made mass starvation'. This came hours after the military said it would pause operations for 10 hours a day in three areas – Al Mawasi, Deir al-Balah and Gaza City – and permit new aid corridors. Jordan and the United Arab Emirates airdropped 25 tonnes of food and supplies to the enclave – which is still less than what one of the hundreds of humanitarian aid trucks stuck outside of Gaza could bring in if allowed. But Lazzarini stressed that aid airdrops will not reverse the starvation and added: 'They are expensive, inefficient and can even kill starving civilians. It is a distraction and screensmoke. More Trending 'A manmade hunger can only be addressed by political will. Lift the siege, open the gates and guarantee safe movements and dignified access to people in need. 'Allow the UN including UNRWA and our partners to operate at scale and without bureaucratic or political hurdles. 'At UNRWA, we have the equivalent of 6,000 trucks in Jordan and Egypt waiting for the green light to get into Gaza. 'Driving aid through is much easier, more effective, faster, cheaper and safer. It's more dignified for the people of Gaza.' Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@ For more stories like this, check our news page. MORE: What's stopping Keir Starmer from recognising Palestine as a state? MORE: Keir Starmer says state is 'inalienable' right of Palestinian people MORE: Pro-Palestine protesters block Israeli cruise ship from docking on Greek island

Israel announces 'tactical pause' for UK-backed aid air drops in Gaza as Starmer condemns 'utterly horrifying' images of children starving
Israel announces 'tactical pause' for UK-backed aid air drops in Gaza as Starmer condemns 'utterly horrifying' images of children starving

Daily Mail​

timea day ago

  • Daily Mail​

Israel announces 'tactical pause' for UK-backed aid air drops in Gaza as Starmer condemns 'utterly horrifying' images of children starving

The Israeli military said it would pause fighting in three populated areas of Gaza for 10 hours a day and open secure routes for aid delivery to desperate Palestinians. The steps are meant to address a surge in hunger in the territory as Israel faces a wave of international criticism over its conduct in the 21-month war. The military said it would begin a 'tactical pause' in Gaza City, Deir al-Balah and Muwasi, three areas of the territory with large populations, to 'increase the scale of humanitarian aid' entering the territory. The pause would begin every day at 10am to 8pm local time until further notice, beginning from Sunday. The military also said that it carried out aid airdrops into Gaza, which included packages of aid with flour, sugar and canned food. Food experts have warned for months of the risk of famine in Gaza, where Israel has restricted aid because it says Hamas siphons off goods to help bolster its rule. Images emerging from Gaza in recent days of emaciated children have fanned global criticism of Israel, including by close allies, who have called for an end to the war and the humanitarian catastrophe it has spawned. Israel said the new measures were taking place while it continues its offensive against Hamas in other areas. The local pause in fighting came days after ceasefire efforts between Israel and Hamas appeared to be in doubt. On Friday, Israel and the US recalled their negotiating teams, blaming Hamas, and Israel said it was considering 'alternative options' to ceasefire talks with the militant group. After ending the latest ceasefire in March, Israel cut off the entry of food, medicine, fuel and other supplies completely to Gaza for two and a half months, saying it aimed to pressure Hamas to release hostages. Under international pressure, Israel slightly eased the blockade in May. Since then, it has allowed around 4,500 trucks for the UN and other aid groups in to distribute. The average of 69 trucks a day, however, is far below the 500 to 600 trucks a day the UN says are needed for Gaza. The UN says it has been unable to distribute much of the aid because hungry crowds and gangs take most of it from its arriving trucks. As a way to divert aid delivery away from the UN, Israel has backed the US-registered Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which in May opened four centres distributing boxes of food supplies. More than 1,000 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces since May while trying to get food, mostly near those new aid sites, the UN human rights office says. Israel has railed against the UN throughout the war, saying that its system allowed Hamas to steal aid, without providing evidence. The UN denies that claim and says its delivery mechanism was the best way to bring aid to Palestinians. The military said the new steps were made in co-ordination with the UN and other humanitarian groups. Much of Gaza's population, squeezed by fighting into ever tinier patches of land, now relies on aid. The war began with Hamas's attack on southern Israel on October 7 2023, when militants killed 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took 251 hostages. Hamas still holds 50 hostages, more than half of them believed to be dead. Israel's retaliatory offensive has killed more than 59,700 Palestinians, according to Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry. Its count doesn't distinguish between militants and civilians, but the ministry says that more than half of the dead are women and children. The ministry operates under the Hamas government. The UN and other international organisations see it as the most reliable source of data on casualties.

'Humanity will win' - Is there change in air over Palestinian state?
'Humanity will win' - Is there change in air over Palestinian state?

The Herald Scotland

timea day ago

  • The Herald Scotland

'Humanity will win' - Is there change in air over Palestinian state?

Each was serenely at odds with the screams, pain and anger that had accompanied the deaths of their owners. It was a beautiful early Spring day in 2001 and the Second Palestinian Intifada - or uprising - was now into its sixth month. Hot and weary after an afternoon spent interviewing some Palestinians about where they thought the uprising was now heading, I had sought sanctuary from the tension of the streets in the West Bank town of Ramallah in the cool and calm of the Khalil Sakakini Cultural Centre art gallery. Here, only the tapping of shoe heels and gentle sputtering of the candles that lined the dimly lit gallery floor intruded on the quiet. I had already witnessed so much killing in the years that I'd spent covering this battle of wills between Israelis and Palestinians. But little did I know that day, as I made my way through this exhibition of photographs and objects entitled 'The Hundred Martyrs', that in the decades to come the suffering and sacrifice would escalate to the unimaginable levels of today. During my visit, the exhibition's curators told me how they had been inundated with requests by the relatives of other Intifada victims who wanted their loved ones' belongings and memories to be part of this temporary monument. Each of the objects that I saw displayed underneath the photographs in transparent plastic cases represented individual shrines. Their value was not material, but purely symbolic in that they belonged to a 'martyr,' someone who had died directly or indirectly as a result of the uprising. In each instance, curators' assistants had journeyed out through the Israeli checkpoints and cordons that surrounded Palestinian communities to collect these personal photographs and artefacts They stood alone as testament to an individual life. Lives not just remembered, but preserved, along with stories equally powerful and emotive. I remember that day stopping before the empty birdcage belonging to 15-year-old Nizar Eideh of Ramallah, who on the morning just before he was shot dead in stone throwing clashes with Israeli troops, released a bird he had bought a few days earlier, worried that the bird's mother might miss him. (Image: EYAD BABA) GENERATION IN PERIL ALMOST two and a half decades later, photographs and objects, just like those in 'The Hundred Martyrs' exhibition, continue to serve as mute witnesses to a generation of Palestinians in peril. One such image released just this past week shocked the world. The harrowing photograph taken by journalist Ahmed al-Arini of 18 month old infant, Muhammad Zakariya Ayyoub al-Matouq in his mother's arms, bones visible from starvation and dressed only in a nappy improvised from a bin bag, is difficult to look at. So much of what we see coming out of Gaza these past 21 long months has been difficult to look at, let alone absorb and comprehend. As my good friend the Palestinian writer Raja Shehadeh - himself a human rights lawyer - observed recently, ultimately 'it will be our humanity, not international law that will judge and hold Israel and its allies accountable.' I so hope Shehadeh is right even if at times that humanity seems absent in the response of so many people right now. That latest picture from Gaza of 18 month old Muhammad, reminds me of another from Gaza back during the Second Intifada. In its own way it too became a defining image. The 12-year boy in that earlier picture was also called Muhammad. It was on September 30, barely days after the start of the Second Intifada that Mohammed al-Durra was killed as his father tried to shield him after being caught in Israeli crossfire at Gaza's Netzarim Junction. Caught on live television the youngster's horrific death was broadcast around the world. In Baghdad, they would subsequently name a street after this little boy. In Morocco, a public park. In Jordan, the Tai Kwon Do Association gave his name to their annual championship. In other Arab countries, postage stamps were issued carrying his picture. The TV pictures of his death became a rallying cry for international action and to this day the circumstances surrounding Mohammed al-Durra's killing remain the subject of anger, controversy and debate. Some Israeli officials even insisted at the time that it was 'staged' by the Palestinians, while one pro-Israeli American academic derisorily called the pictures nothing more than 'Pallywood cinema'. Even in death it seemed, little Mohammed al-Durra continued to be a target in this, a conflict where there must always be two stories. As a journalist covering the Intifada at that time, I like others, wondered just for a moment whether maybe, just maybe, something good might come from such a tragedy. Perhaps at long last, from the haunted look on the face of this little boy, the realisation might dawn that the eye-for an-eye score settling between Israelis and Palestinians could not continue forever. NO REMORSE? IN a recent article of his own, Raja Shehadeh asked two important questions. How is it that most Israelis do not acknowledge their humanity. How are they able to show no remorse for what their army is carrying out in their name? Back during the time of the both First and Second Intifadas, many Israelis then too seemed able to live with the atrocities they heard and read about daily. For some Israelis - sheltering just beyond the shadow of such bloodshed – the self-deception required to do so was made easier by the fact that the carnage was largely confined to the occupied territories and rarely trickled onto their own streets. The attacks of October 7, 2023, by Hamas on Israeli communities subsequently put paid to that of course and today both Israelis and Palestinians are living with the terrible consequences. But even back during those early Intifada times not every Israeli – as is the case today - turned the other way though. In the autumn of 1988 shortly after the start of the first uprising, the Israeli novelist, A B Yehoshua, was so disgusted by the complacency of his fellow citizens that he said he now understood how so many Germans after World War Two could say they had never seen or heard of the Holocaust concentration camps. It goes without saying of course that Yehoshua's comments went straight to the heart of the Israeli psyche and generated a bitter backlash. But whether Israelis liked it or not, the irrefutable evidence of widespread human rights abuses against ordinary Palestinians was there to see for anyone who took the time to go and look for themselves. In today's digital world of course there is no need to do that, for images like those of Muhammad Zakariya Ayyoub al-Matouq, inevitably manage to seep out into our consciences. This happens in part thanks to the courage of Palestinian journalists. It happens also despite an Israeli ban on international reporters having access to Gaza. It means too that we cannot ignore the mass starvation before our eyes. As I write this, one in three Gazans goes multiple days without eating. Malnourished mothers can no longer produce milk to breastfeed their children, the injured are unable to heal and hospitals have run out of nutritional supplements to treat countless emaciated infants like Muhammad Zakariya Ayyoub al-Matouq. Just a few days ago, countries including Britain and many member states of the European Union (EU) condemned the 'drip feeding' of aid. But let's call this man-made starvation for what it really is given that any inadequate provision of aid to civilians on terrain that is, in effect, under occupation is a war crime. In response Israel says such criticisms are 'disconnected from reality.' But for so long now - going back decades - it has been Israel that has chosen to block out the uncomfortable reality of what it was becoming. Those journalists like myself and others, who have watched this perverse metamorphosis began witnessing the tell-tale signs years ago. Once again by way of example, I need only cast my mind back to one of many instances during the Second Intifada. 'DEFENSIVE SHIELD' IT was April 2002, during what the Israelis - using a characteristic misnomer - had dubbed 'Operation Defensive Shield' that I watched hundreds of Palestinian men herded together under guard by soldiers in armoured personnel carriers in the al-Amari refugee camp in Ramallah. Blindfolded, their hands still bound behind their back, myself and a colleague watched as Israeli soldiers wrote a number on each of the prisoners' forearms before the men were then forced to sit silently in the baking sun with guns trained on them, each waiting their turn for interrogation. Such methods repeated time and again in the following days outraged some Israelis, which they felt were reminiscent of the Nazis during World War Two. As increasing evidence emerged, many Israelis were compelled to speak out. Yosef (Tommy) Lapid, a member of the Israeli parliament, leader of the Shinui Party and a former concentration camp victim, confronted Israeli General, Shaul Mofaz, during a meeting of the Foreign Affairs and Defence Committee, saying that as a Holocaust survivor he found the IDF methods intolerable and shocking. In a letter to Dr Shevah Weiss, the chairman of Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum, Mohammed Barakeh, an Arab–Israeli Knesset member, put into words the thoughts of many over Israel's tactics during the ongoing invasion of the West Bank at that time. 'In these wretched days, I've asked myself more than once how, within such a short period of history, the victim has become the murderer, and a people who, perhaps, suffered more than any other from arbitrary repression and refugee status, is capable of meting out the same fate to others,' Barakeh grimly noted. From what I witnessed in Ramallah and elsewhere during those days, it was evident that the Israeli army's 'tactics' made a mockery of its claim to believe in 'purity of arms'. More recently in Gaza this contradiction has been borne out time and again. This weekend as France prepares to declare its recognition of a Palestinian state and British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer comes under increasing pressure to do the same, his [[Israel]]i counterpart Benyamin Netanyahu and his coalition government appears undeterred. Speaking recently about French president Emmanuel Macron's insistence that recognising Palestine was a 'moral duty', [[Israel]]'s defence minister, [[Israel]] Katz, pledged [[Israel]] would further tighten its grip on the West Bank.. 'They will recognise a Palestinian state on paper - and we will build the Jewish-Israeli state on the ground,' he said. 'The paper will be thrown in the trash can of history and the State of Israel will flourish and prosper,' Katz attested. Bold words, but ones that as a long term observer of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, I believe have an increasingly hollow ring. Instead, I'm of the view that we are fast approaching a critical juncture in this seemingly interminable battle of wills. Read more Tears and trauma: David Pratt in Ukraine DAVID PRATT ON THE WORLD: Whatever happens in Brazil's resentful and rancorous election, the result will have major repercussions for us all David Pratt in Ukraine: It's hard to comprehend this level of destruction David Pratt: Kremlin's protestations have a hollow ring as atrocities mount up 'IRRESISTIBLE FORCE' YES, I know talk of a 'turning point' has been mooted many times in the past, but there is just an inkling that the political ground is shifting on both sides of what the Israeli writer Amos Elon once described as an 'irresistible force colliding with an immovable body'. Forget the River Jordan, for it's the Rubicon that is being crossed here for both Palestinians and Israelis alike. Given what has unfolded in Gaza, there is no going back to the way things were for either side and that in itself could lead to a tectonic political shift. Much of the world now sees through Israel's victimhood veil and Netanyahu's use of war to keep himself in power has all but run its course. As for the Palestinians, they must seize the opportunity to capitalise on any growing goodwill like never before and endeavour to do what they have failed to achieve for the past thirty years - unity. As for the international community, to repeat Raja Shehadeh words, 'it will be our humanity, not international law' that will in the end win the day. All these remarks might seem out of step with the political moment, but the irrefutable fact is that there will be no peace until there is a Palestinian state. To that end I for one can't help but sense a whiff of change in the air. Insubstantial yet perhaps, but undeniable, nonetheless.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store