Mya Guarnieri
Ma'an News Agency (Opinion)
October 27, 2011 - 12:00am
http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=432763


The PLO's UN bid for statehood is divisive. It has furthered America’s and Israel’s drift from the international community as well as confirming, yet again, the United States’ deep bias toward Israel.

The request is also controversial within Palestinian circles. Even if it is successful, will it create meaningful change on the ground? Can it end the occupation? What about equal rights for Palestinian citizens of Israel?

What about the refugees and their right to return, enshrined in UN resolution 194? And what is the PA’s source of legitimacy, when none of the 10 million Palestinians it claims to represent have been given the chance to endorse it?

Interviews I conducted in Ramallah reveal no clear consensus. But President Mahmoud Abbas’s recent speech to the UN was enthusiastically received in cities across the West Bank. For some, it represented, perhaps, a small victory -- a moment when the voiceless were given a voice. But that begs the question: which voices are we still not hearing? What are their stories? What unites -- and divides -- the sometimes mutually antagonistic voices across their society as a whole? Who are these people, the Palestinians?

Arthur Neslen’s groundbreaking new book, In Your Eyes a Sandstorm: Ways of Being Palestinian, has some answers.

A collection of 51 in-depth interviews of Palestinians from all walks of life, In Your Eyes introduces readers to everyone from ministers in the Hamas government to ministers in the Israeli government, from sisters who were born and raised in Beirut’s Shatila camp, to a drug dealer in East Jerusalem, from a Salafi Jihadist web manager to a West Bank zoo curator. Candid, colorful, and sometimes surprising, the portraits remind us that Palestinians aren’t the monolithic group that the Western media depict them as.

Neslen points his attention to Palestinians in the West Bank, Gaza, Israel, Lebanon, and Jordan. While these areas are crawling with journalists, Neslen brings us the stories that go overlooked -- like that of Neriman al-Jabari, a 26-year-old widow of an Islamic Jihad leader who was assassinated by Israel in 2004 -- forcing the reader to interrogate preconceived notions about Palestinians.

Neslen’s focus on interviewees in Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories serves another purpose. As he points out, location affects both experience and one’s sense of self. The Palestinians nearest to Israel seem to best know “the terror that conflict brings.” Those inside of Israel -- an oft-ignored group -- wrestle with “identity contradictions that especially afflict Palestinians living close to Israeli Jews.” They also offer a glimpse of the racism and segregation that plague Israeli society.

Nuri al-Ukbi, a 66-year-old Bedouin man, describes the state’s demolition of his village, al-Arakib. Nabila Espanyoli, a 53-year-old NGO director in Nazareth, recalls the difficulties she faced enrolling in university, due to discrimination. Tawfiq Jabharin, a lawyer in Umm al-Fahem, discusses the state’s policy of denying building permits to Palestinian citizens of Israel.

Tamer Nafar, a 29-year-old Palestinian citizen of Israel and founder of the rap group DAM, describes how all these impulses come together in his hometown of Lyd, just south of Tel Aviv.

“If you buy a map of Lyd, you won’t find the Arabic neighborhoods on it … There are cops here all the time. You have no street lights, unemployment, drugs, and a (four)-meter-high separation wall between Arab and Jewish areas. You know when someone does something very ugly, and he doesn’t want to look in the mirror? That’s the wall.”

In Your Eyes also serves as a primer of Palestinian politics, history, and culture, grouping the interviewees by their generation and, thus, the events they have lived through. It’s sophisticated enough to hold the attentions of those already involved in the issues but accessible to those who have just begun to explore the Israeli-Palestinian conflict too. This is a difficult balance to strike and Neslen does so gracefully.

There was, for me, a slight stumble. In the introduction, Neslen describes himself as the son of “left-wing and anti-Zionist Jewish parents.” He also mentions that “trust was often difficult to establish” with his Palestinian interviewees. It’s a catch-22: Neslen can’t not mention these details; but, naturally, some readers might wonder if Neslen’s Jewish background was ever an issue. Was there tension with his interviewees? Why was trust difficult to establish?

One interaction was particularly intriguing. Reflecting upon his interview with an 82-year-old fisherman in Gaza, Neslen remarks, “Strangely and unexpectedly, I felt at home.” This moment seemed worth exploring.

But this is a minor complaint. And Neslen made the right decision. His book isn’t a memoir. If he’d introduced too much of himself, he would have run the danger of his story swallowing up those of his interviewees. (A Jew in Gaza! A Jew in Palestinian refugee camps! How does he feel? There’s no room for that but, still, it’s a book I’d like to read).

In Your Eyes is a gripping look at a society and people who are misrepresented by the mainstream media and misunderstood by much of the Western world. “The Palestinian question” -- never the “Jewish question” anymore -- is generally posed in a way that omits Palestinians' own experiences from consideration. Through these carefully crafted portraits, Neslen gives Palestinians the space to begin to answer it for themselves.




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