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From Birmingham to Gaza, a same struggle

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ProgressiveMuslim Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-23-08 06:32 AM
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From Birmingham to Gaza, a same struggle


By Rami G. Khouri
Daily Star staff
Wednesday, January 23, 2008


I have two texts that I pull off my bookshelf every now and then for renewed stimulation and hope in times of conflict and pessimism. One is the Book of Isaiah in the Bible - that great work of Jewish warning, faith and hope during times of peril in exile; and the other is the collected works of Martin Luther King, Jr., the great American civil rights leader, whose annual commemoration day took place on Monday.

These texts are powerful and enduring because they are universal. They emanate from contexts of ancient Jews in exile in Babylon and African-Americans in a kind of exile in their own society, shut out from mainstream life and equal rights. Their common theme is that moral faith can overcome pain, injustice and oppression, if we allow God's and humankind's values to guide our actions in our daily life. It is not enough to be faithful to God's word; we must put into practice the dictates of those words, which are primarily about justice, equality, mercy, humility and compassion; and, above all, about human dignity and mutual respect.

The coincidence of Israel's siege and starvation of Gaza this week and the celebration of King's life reminded me of the universal sense of hope that allows people in such inhuman situations to get through their ordeal and look forward to a better day. Life seemed bleak for Jews forced into Babylonian exile in the middle of the 6th century BC, just as it did for African-Americans in the middle of the 20th century. Their conditions improved, however, partly due to their own faith and hard work, and partly due to fortuitous changes in prevailing political conditions.

I do not understand how the same Jewish ethos that permeates the Book of Isaiah can also define the Israeli government's decision to apply a total blockade on Gaza, to starve, squeeze and freeze several million Palestinians into submission. Is Israel testing the Palestinians in Isaiah's "furnace of adversity" in the same way that God tested the exiled Jews in Babylon? If so, why would Israelis expect Palestinians today to respond to their dehumanization any differently than the Jews in antiquity and more recent times responded to their bestial treatment by oppressors - with determination, faith, patience and, above all, steadfastness?

That was also King's message and that of the civil rights movement. King spoke of the "legitimate discontent" that drove African-Americans to throw off their chains and struggle for equal rights as American citizens. African-Americans, King said, were "fighting a degenerating sense of nobodiness," and felt as if they were in "exile in our own land."


The road of mass suffering from ancient Babylon to 1950s America to Gaza in 2008 is not a parallel path of a linear or common history. It is, however, a shared mirror of the strength of the human spirit and its indomitable will to live in freedom and dignity. Gazans today who have no electricity and fuel, and may soon have little food, medicine and clean water, feel exactly like the Jews of Babylon or the African-Americans in Birmingham, Alabama. All of them never gave up hope that God, their fellow human beings, and the prevailing political power of the day would one day acknowledge their humanity and the basic civil, personal and national rights that come with that humanity.

"Oppressed people cannot remain oppressed forever," King wrote in his letter from a Birmingham jail in April 1963. "The yearning for freedom eventually manifests itself ... if repressed emotions are not released in nonviolent ways, they will seek expression through violence," he warned, knowing that there is a limit to the capacity of the human body and spirit to endure dehumanizing treatment. African-Americans were fortunate to have an enlightened leadership that recognized, as early as the Montgomery bus boycott in 1955, that "there is a new Negro in the south with a new sense of dignity," tired of injustice and oppression, prepared to suffer, and even die, to achieve their rights as human beings.


http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=10&categ_id=5&article_id=88289

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