Beyond Violence and Nonviolence: Resistance as a Culture
Sunday 08 August 2010
by: Ramzy Baroud, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed
Resistance is not a band of armed men hell-bent on wreaking havoc. It is not a cell of terrorists scheming to detonate buildings.
True resistance is a culture.
It is a collective retort to oppression.
Understanding the real nature of resistance, however, is not easy. No news bite could be thorough enough to explain why people, as a people, resist. Even if such an arduous task was possible, the news might not want to convey it, as it would directly clash with mainstream interpretations of violence and nonviolent resistance. The Afghanistan story must remain committed to the same language: al-Qaeda and the Taliban. Lebanon must be represented in terms of a menacing Iran-backed Hizbullah. Palestine's Hamas must be forever shown as a militant group sworn to the destruction of the Jewish state. Any attempt at offering an alternative reading is tantamount to sympathizing with terrorists and justifying violence.
The deliberate conflation and misuse of terminology has made it almost impossible to understand - and therefore resolve - bloody conflicts.
Even those who purport to sympathize with resisting nations often contribute to the confusion. Activists from Western countries tend to follow an academic comprehension of what is happening in Palestine, Iraq, Lebanon and Afghanistan. Thus, certain ideas are perpetuated: suicide bombings bad, nonviolent resistance good; Hamas rockets bad, slingshots good; armed resistance bad, vigils in front of Red Cross offices good. Many activists will quote Martin Luther King Jr., but not Malcolm X. They will infuse a selective understanding of Gandhi, but never of Guevara. This supposedly "strategic" discourse has robbed many of what could be a precious understanding of resistance - as both concept and culture.
Between the reductionist, mainstream understanding of resistance as violent and terrorist and the "alternative" defacing of an inspiring and compelling cultural experience, resistance as a culture is lost. The two overriding definitions offer no more than narrow depictions. Both render those attempting to relay the viewpoint of the resisting culture as almost always on the defensive. Thus, we repeatedly hear the same statements: no, we are not terrorists; no, we are not violent; we actually have a rich culture of nonviolent resistance; no, Hamas is not affiliated with al-Qaeda; no, Hizbullah is not an Iranian agent. Ironically, Israeli writers, intellectuals and academicians own up to much less than their Palestinian counterparts, although the former tend to defend aggression and the latter defend, or at least try to explain, their resistance to aggression. Also ironic is the fact that instead of seeking to understand why people resist, many wish to debate about how to suppress their resistance.
When I speak of resistance as a culture, I am referring to Edward Said's elucidation of "culture (as) a way of fighting against extinction and obliteration." When cultures resist, they don't scheme and play politics, nor do they sadistically brutalize. Their decisions - as to whether to engage in armed struggle or to employ nonviolent methods, whether to target civilians or not, whether to conspire with foreign elements or not - are all purely strategic. They are hardly of direct relevance to the concept of resistance, or to resistance itself. Mixing between the two is manipulative or plain ignorant.
If resistance is "the action of opposing something that you disapprove or disagree with," then a culture of resistance is what occurs when an entire culture reaches this collective decision to oppose that disagreeable element, which is often a foreign occupation. The decision is not a calculated one. It is engendered through a long process in which self-awareness, self-assertion, tradition, collective experiences and symbols, among other factors, interact in specific ways. This might be new to the wealth of that culture's past experiences, but it is very much an internal process.
It's almost like a chemical reaction, but even more complex since it isn't always easy to separate its elements. Thus, it is also not easy to fully comprehend and, in the case of an invading army, it is not easily suppressed. In my book "My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story," this is how I tried to explain the first Palestinian uprising of 1987, which I lived in its entirely in Gaza:
"It's not easy to isolate specific dates and events that spark popular revolutions. Genuine collective rebellion cannot be rationalized though a coherent line of logic that elapses time and space; its rather a culmination of experiences that unite the individual to the collective, their conscious and subconscious, their relationships with their immediate surroundings and with that which is not so immediate, all colliding and exploding into a fury that cannot be suppressed."
Foreign occupiers tend to fight popular resistance through several means. One includes a varied amount of violence aiming to disorient, destroy and rebuild a nation to any desired image (read Naomi Klein's "The Shock Doctrine"). Another strategy is to weaken the very components that give a culture its unique identity and inner strengths - and, thus, defuse the culture's ability to resist. The former requires firepower, while the latter can be achieved through soft means of control. Many "third world" nations that boast of their sovereignty and independence might in fact be very much occupied, but due to the fragmentation and overpowering of their cultures - through globalization, for example - they are unable to comprehend the extent of their tragedy and dependency. Others, who might effectively be occupied, often possess a culture of resistance that makes it impossible for their occupiers to achieve any of their desired objectives.
In Gaza, Palestine, while the media speaks endlessly of rockets and Israeli security and debates who is really responsible for holding Palestinians in the strip hostage, no heed is paid to the little children living in tents by the ruins of homes they lost in the latest Israeli onslaught. These kids participate in the same culture of resistance that Gaza has witnessed over the course of six decades. In their notebooks, they draw fighters with guns, kids with slingshots, women with flags, as well as menacing Israeli tanks and warplanes, graves dotted with the word "martyr," and destroyed homes. The word "victory" appears consistently.
When I was in Iraq, I witnessed a local version of these kids' drawings. And while I have yet to see Afghani children's scrapbooks, I can easily imagine their content, too.

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Comments
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The meaning of any political
Sun, 08/08/2010 - 12:37 — Milton P. Knopf (not verified)The meaning of any political discourse based on "culture" is bound to be equivocal.
In the soft-Left world of Identity Politics, "culture" means "the ineffable spiritual essence of anybody who isn't of North European origin." It's for sale in Superior shopping venues everywhere.
You sniff the incense, hug yourself with a concerned little frown (although it isn't cold) and swan off to Whore Foods with the other entry-level millionaires (and wannabes) to celebrate your Superior Morality by buying more stuff.
No political stance based on Culture is of any value. In the long run, all such approaches converge on fascism.
In the meantime, they serve to obfuscate the realities of social class and class warfare.
To Mr. Knopf: And what,
Sun, 08/08/2010 - 15:56 — gladbag (not verified)To Mr. Knopf:
And what, pray, is the hard-Right world of Identity Politics?
It appears your frame of reference retains the very American essence of consumerism and status. Does this not apply to the reality you wish me to assume by contrast?
Fascism becomes a rose by any name at all, be it flag, country, commune, so long as there is unity?
Anarchy is the only freedom-of-choice issue, and it, like atheism, is comprehensible in English only by assuming the presence of its opposite.
Read the above to see how
Sun, 08/08/2010 - 16:10 — davichon (not verified)Read the above to see how easy it is to go from mechanical embrace of ideology (class analysis is everything)to condescending foolishness. The intellectual mistake that follows is Identity Politics =Culture -->some proto-fascist blood/land based organizing principle.
Of course Palestinians like everyone else have a culture, not an excuse for ranting about anti-Western essentialism. Even an American can imagine something of the primary reality of growing up in a refugee camp -- and seeing your own children growing up there. Children are always a revealing starting-point for understanding.
Judging by his article, Ramzy's book might be a place to absorb a little of a culture of resistance --if we are open to that.The sketchbooks he mentioned are also consonant what you can find in the "Arna's Children" DVD and the work of the culture-bridging Jenin Freedom Theater.
Mahmoud Darwish brilliantly expresses Palestinian experience and resistance in his poetry, merging two common meanings of the word culture. Not tw0-dimensional reductions into identity politics, but a way of life, a mode of thinking, a foundation for struggle. With all their inconsistencies.
Thus, anyway, says one Jewish brother who hopes to live long enough to see the end of the Israeli occupation. Will it then be Paradise there? Go with Darwish: It already is... unfortunately.
This piece brought to mind a
Sun, 08/08/2010 - 18:21 — ari (not verified)This piece brought to mind a mosaic of thoughts about resistance. In the mid-1770s there was popular but far from universal resistance to British rule in the Colonies.
In some US states just 150 years ago -- perhaps within the lifespan of your great grandfather -- giving a talk in your own parlor advocating a peaceful end to slavery was a crime punishable by execution.
Native Americans resisted encroachment and then systematic extermination, physically and culturally. (Not that many years ago, in reservation schools, you could get your mouth scrubbed with lye soap for speaking even a few words in your birth language. Your tax dollars at work.)
There was the 1943 Warsaw Ghetto Uprising against Nazi extermination of the last 55,000 Jews living in Warsaw, Poland -- after roughly 300,000 there had already been deported to death camps and murdered.
Popular resistance to an earlier US-manufactured war -- Vietnam -- tore apart American families apart and brought millions of people into the streets, eventually forcing an end to that disgrace, too late to save more than 3 million Vietnamese, two-thirds of them civilians. Can you even wrap your mind around that number?
Now here we are again, a generation later, saving the world for "democracy", and oil, and corporate profits. Iraq. Afghanistan. If these peoples are resisting, then surely there must be something wrong with them and not us.
As Ramzy Baroud points out,
Sun, 08/08/2010 - 18:25 — ari (not verified)As Ramzy Baroud points out, resistance is a response to oppression. Corollaries:
#1: If you don't want resistance, eliminate oppression.
#2: If you are experiencing resistance, then something you are doing must look and feel like oppression to someone on the receiving end.
(Bush II: "Why do they hate us?" Duh. Yet many Americans were so clueless that they were genuinely puzzled by this war criminal's disingenuous question. And continue to be!)
#3: Resistance is your truth mirror. If you (as oppressor) don't like the truth, you'll probably smash the mirror, or try to.
Who is a "terrorist"? Who is
Sun, 08/08/2010 - 18:46 — ari (not verified)Who is a "terrorist"? Who is a "freedom fighter"? It's only a matter of which side you happen to choose. A guy (or gal) in a suicide vest is obviously a terrorist from the American standpoint. But what about the terror spread by Americans piloting "Predator" drone aircraft firing rockets into Afghan wedding parties and funeral processions?
What about the whole American occupation force? How would you feel about armored troops from a faraway land and alien culture rumbling through the streets of *your* neighborhood -- not for weeks but for years?
How would your children feel, as they grew through all their formative years figuratively and perhaps literally at the point of a gun? Who do you think their heroes might be -- the oppressors? Want to lay any bets?
If you and your family, your
Sun, 08/08/2010 - 18:55 — ari (not verified)If you and your family, your village and society are steeped in religion, your feelings of resistance may come clothed in religious garb. That can mean nonviolent action. Prayer vigils.
Or it can mean taking up arms in the name of your god. "Onward Christian Soldiers", anyone? What terrorist or freedom fighter doesn't believe "God's on our side," as if a supreme diety actually takes sides in human conflicts.
Kill for Jesus, kill for Allah!
Does anyone remember that
Sun, 08/08/2010 - 19:00 — ari (not verified)Does anyone remember that Osama bin Laden didn't start out fighting for Islam? Rather, he and many other Saudis hated the fact that US troops were (and still are) garrisoned on Saudi land. So his bloody and unforgivable act of resistance started out as nationalistic, not religious.
By the way: since fifteen of the nineteen 9/11 hijackers were Saudis, how come the US didn't invade Saudi Arabia? Can you spell "oil"? "Corporate profits"?
Instead, we predictably find ourselves enmeshed as oppressors in a mountainous tribal land that chewed up and spit out the Russian Army for 10 years (late 1979 to early 1989).
How could we learn the lesson of popular resistance from "Russia's Vietnam" when we failed to learn from our own original Vietnam War?
I cringe at the blank stupidity of my nation, my people. The incalculable suffering that results. . . How can we keep doing this to the peoples of the world and to ourselves?
No, don't answer that. If you read Truthout, you already know. And so do I.