“For me, Palestine is Paradise” – Conversation with Leila Khaled
Recorded 03/04/2014
LMaDO talks to Leila Khaled, Palestinian icon and Chief of the Department of Refugees and Right of return in the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP).
Frank Barat for LMADO: How are you Leila? What are you doing nowadays in Amman?
Leila
Khaled: I am fine as long as I am a part of the struggle for freedom,
for our right of return and for an independent State with Jerusalem as
capital. I know it is not going to happen in the near future, but I am
fighting nevertheless. Here in Amman, I am the chief of the department
of refugees and Right of Return in the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (P.F.L.P).
LMADO:
You are a Palestinian refugee, one of six million. Do you still think
that you will return one day? And what do you make of the conditions of
the Palestinian refugees in Lebanon, who are denied their most basic
rights and yet, are sometimes criticized for trying to improve their
lives in Lebanon as this might affect their right of return to
Palestine?
LK: The
Palestinians were distributed to different countries. Each country has
had an impact on the people living there. Those in Lebanon, in the 70s
and 80s, until 1982, were the ones that helped the armed struggle, that
helped defend the revolution. Israel was attacking and invading all the
time and occupying parts of the country as well. After 1982, the main
mission of the Palestinians was to achieve their rights, their civil and
social rights, which they are deprived o in Lebanon. This will enable
them to be involved in the struggle for the right of return. The
Palestinians in general take the Right of Return as a concept and as a
culture. Any Palestinian will tell you that he fights for his social and
civil rights, but this means that he is preparing himself for his
return. The two are inseparable.
LMADO:
The question of the refugees, in the negotiations, has, in the last
decade, become more and more obsolete, something that is no longer an
inalienable right but something that can be negotiated. The same applies
to the last round, the “Kerry negotiations”. What do you make of this?
And what do you think is going to happen after April 29th when the negotiations are supposed to end?
LK: The PFLP
and myself personally have been against the negotiations since 1991.
The problem is that the two parties are sticking to their guns. The
Israelis think that Palestine is the land for the Jews all over the
world. The Palestinians are sure that the land belongs to them and that
they were forced out in 1947/1948. When this conflict moves from one
stage to the next the two sides are considered as even in their power
but the fact is that we are not (this is just an illusion). The
leadership chose to go for the Oslo accords, thinking that this was a
step forward in achieving the main rights of the Palestinians. Some
people believed this, but they discovered, after twenty years, that it
was nonsense. It brought catastrophe on us. There are more settlements
than ever, twice more than before Oslo, the number of settlers has
doubled, more land is being confiscated, and, of course, the Wall has
been built. The apartheid wall. Israel is an apartheid state. These
negotiations, now, are meant to help Israel and not the Palestinians. We
have already experienced what Israel means by negotiate.
Israel never respects its promises, its obligations, and simply
continues its project of making Palestinians’ lives hell. My party and I
are against this last round of negotiations too, of course. Especially
now. The Americans are supporting an Israeli project that will only help
Israel. There was an agreement, sponsored by the Americans, which said
that you had to stop settlements in the West Bank and that 104 prisoners
should be released on three different dates. Now, the Israelis have
said no, we will not abide by this agreement and we will not release the
last batch of prisoners. By the way, those people who are released, are
often put back in jail shortly after anyway. This is what the Israelis
refer to as the rotating door policy. The politicians say that the
prisoners should be released but they are then rearrested. Many of them
are already back in jail. It is very clear from this that the Israelis
are not ready to make peace with the Palestinians. They are also taking
advantage of the fact that the Arabs are occupied with many other
issues, and do not support the Palestinians. Nobody is therefore going
to condemn Israel when they flout the agreements they sign.
Also, what
does Kerry want? What is his plan? Nobody knows. It’s all verbal.
Nothing is written. The leadership should refuse what Kerry offers. By
the way, Kerry did not go back to Ramallah with another offer. Which
means that the Palestinian Authority (is going to use its second option
and go back to the U.N Then, today, in the news, the US has again said
that it will object to such a move. What does this all mean?
I do think
that we need first to consider the nature of the State of Israel.
Secondly, we have to understand more about their projects and plans.
Thirdly, we know that the Israelis are much more powerful than us in
some respects. But we are also powerful. It all depends on our people.
We have the will to face the challenges that the Israelis are putting in
front of us. There is an English saying that says: “When there is a
will, there is a way”. We still believe that this is our right and that
we have to struggle for it. We have struggled, we are struggling, and we
will struggle. From one generation to another. Freedom needs strong
people to go and fight for their dreams. That is why I do not think that
there will be a settlement now. The Americans always want to prolong
the negotiations. This will not help.
LMADO: If negotiations do not bring peace to the Palestinians, what will? What should the leadership do?
LK: Resist!
That’s how you achieve your rights as a People. History has shown us
that. No People achieved their freedom without a struggle. Where there
is occupation, there is resistance. It is not a Palestinian invention.
We are actually going to call for a conference to be held under the
auspices of the U.N, just to implement the resolutions taken by this
body on the Palestinian question. Resolution 194 calls on Israel to
accept the return of the refugees. Fine, let’s put the U.N on the spot.
Let’s have a conference reminding people of this. The problem is that
the references to any negotiations that have taken place were drafted by
the Americans, which we know are biased towards Israel.
LMADO: P.L.O stands for Palestine Liberation Organization. Do you think it has lost its true meaning? Bassam Shaka in 2008 told me that the P.L.O, before anything, needed to go back to its roots as a liberation movement.
LK: No
liberation is achieved without resistance. My party has not changed. It
has stuck to its original program. We are calling to escalate the
resistance. People talk about popular resistance. It does not only mean
demonstrations. Using arms is also popular. We have people who are ready
to fight.
LMADO:
What does peaceful and non-violent resistance means for someone like
yourself, who chose armed resistance as a mean for liberation?
LK:
Resistance takes more than one face. It can be all kinds of resistance.
Non violent and violent. I am ok with those who choose non-violence. We
are not going to liberate our country by armed struggle only. Other
kinds of resistance are necessary. The political one, diplomatic one,
the non violent one. We need to use whatever we have got. For more than
10 years now, people have been demonstrating in Bil’in, in Nabi
Saleh….protesting the wall and the annexation of the land. How is Israel
dealing with it? Violence, tear gas, bombs… Do you think it is
acceptable to have an army with a huge arsenal, against people holding
banners? I am ok with using all means of resistance. We cannot say that
non-violent resistance alone will achieve our rights. We are facing an
apartheid State, Zionism as a movement, the Americans, and in general,
the West, which supports Israel. When the balance of forces changes,
then we can start thinking about negotiating.
LMADO:
It is always easier to advocate for armed resistance when the general
public knows who is the oppressor and who is the oppressed. Your actions
in 69 and 70 were about that, correct? To put Palestine on the map. Do
you think the educational process of showing another face of Palestine,
showing that the Palestinians have legitimacy and are in the right, has
been done enough since the 70s?
LK: Let’s
take the example of Vietnam. Or of Algeria and South Africa. People
needed time to convince the whole world of the just cause of their
struggle. It took time. In the end, the world realized that those who
are oppressed have the right to resist the way they want to. Nobody can
impose a form of resistance on us. We chose armed struggle. We did not
achieve our goals. Then the intifada broke out and the whole world took
us seriously. We gained the support of people all over the world. Still,
we did not reach our goals because the leadership was not brave enough
at that time to escalate the intifada, to take it to another level.
Israel was ready to accept to withdraw from the West Bank and the Gaza
Strip. But our leadership failed us. The intifada was the choice of the
people. If you go back to the beginning of the resistance and holding
arms. It was a necessity for the Palestinians after 1967. We depended on
the Arab countries to restore our homeland. But they failed us too.
Israel occupied more of Palestine. So we decided to take our destiny
into our hands. By waging an armed struggle. Nowadays people are waiting
but they realize that these negotiations will get us nowhere. Our past
experiences with Israel have shown us that they cannot be trusted. They
do not respect their words. Threaten us all the time. Abu Mazen is not a
partner for peace? Who is? Sharon? Netanyahu? This right-wing
government? This is not a government, it is a gang, essentially, which
represents the settlers, the fascists, the racists. The lie began last
century. That this was the land of the Jews. The bible gave it to them.
Is this democratic? The world in 1948 accepted this lie. God promised us
the land! As if God was an estate agent. This is a colonial project.
This is the main issue of the conflict.
LMADO:
The struggle is about ending Israel’s settler colonial project, then,
ending apartheid. What will happen, in your opinion, the day after? The
day after victory? An Algerian like solution, or a South African one?
LK: We have
always offered the more human solution. A place where everybody lives on
an equal basis. Jewish, Muslims, I do not care about the religion of
the person. I believe in the human being itself. Human beings can sit
together and can decide together the future of this land. But I cannot
accept that I do not have the right, now, to go back to my city. Like
six million Palestinians. We are not allowed to go there. We are
offering a human and democratic solution. Nobody can tell me that we
cannot decide the fate of our country because we are refugees. What
happened to us is a first in history, as far as I know. People being
chased away from their homes and another people, coming from very far
away, taking their places. The Israelis were citizens of other
countries. Israel, thanks to various organizations, before 1948, built
an army, Okay, but there was no society. They brought people from
outside. Even now, there are huge contradictions in this country and
this society. People come from different cultures, some do not even
speak Hebrew. We do not want more blood, but are obliged to resist. We
have the right to live in our homeland. When the Israelis realize that
as long as they do not budge this conflict will be endless, they should
accept our solution. Some Israelis have already understood that. That
you cannot go on fighting forever. What for?
LMADO:
Can you talk to us about the role of women in the resistance. And do you
think your actions, the hijackings in 69 and 70, did more for
Palestine, or for women around the world, or both?
LK: The
hijackings were a tactic only. We wanted to release our prisoners and
were obliged to make a very strong statement. We also had to ring a
bell, for the whole world, that we the Palestinians are not only
refugees. We are a people that has a political and a human goal. The
world gave us tents, used- clothes and food. They built camps for us.
But we were more than that. Nowadays there are plans to end the camps,
because they are a witness of 1948. Women, are part of our people, they
feel the same injustices. So they get involved. Women give life. So they
feel the danger even more than men. When they are involved, they are
more faithful to the revolution because they defend the lives of their
children too. When I gave birth to two children, I became more and more
convinced that I had to do my best to defend them and build a better
future for them. I felt for women who had lost their children. So I
think my actions had an impact on both, to answer your question. The
popular front slogan was: “Men and Women together in the struggle for
the liberation of our homeland”. The P.F.L.P implemented that by giving a
place to women in the military. At the same time, women also played a
big role in defending the interior front, the families. Thousands of
Palestinian women are now responsible for their families. After all the
wars, the massacres, the arrests, the killings by Israel, these women
protected their families from being dispersed. Also, women are now
educated, they work, they travel, go to university and so on. Before the
revolution, it was not like that. Now it is. And it is a must. You can
see that women are involved in many aspects of the struggle and society.
Whether it is inside or outside Palestine.
LMADO:
Lina Makboul who directed the film “Leila Khaled; Hijacker” implies in
her last question in the film that your actions did more harm than
anything to the Palestinian people. The film stops right after the
question. What did you answer?
LK: She told
me she did this for cinematic purposes. But I did not like that. The
fact that people could not hear my answer. My answer was no, of course!
My actions were my contribution to my people, to the struggle. We did
not hurt anyone. We declared to the whole world that we are a people,
living through an injustice, and that the world had to help us to reach
our goal. I sat with Lina for hours and hours you know, telling her the
whole story. She told me afterwards that Swedish TV only wanted the
question.
LMADO:
Do you sometimes reflect on the past? What was done, what could have
been done, what could have been done differently, when you see the
current state of affairs? What went wrong?
LK: Recently
my party has held its seventh conference and reviewed its positions. We
then made a program to widen our relations with the progressive forces
around the world, especially on the Arab level. We also decided to
strengthen our interior structure. I also learned that I had to review
my own positions, my own thinking. Every year, around December, I look
back at the past year and then decide to do something for the coming
year. This year, I decided to quit smoking, so I did.
LMADO: Mabruck!
LK: I made this decision and it was easy for me to implement it.
LMADO: Why has Palestine, in your opinion, become such a symbol for the solidarity movement?
LK: Palestine for me is Paradise. Religions talk about paradise. For me, Palestine is paradise. It deserves our sacrifices.
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