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| english.daralhayat.com 2008/09/07 17:20 GMT | ||||||||
| The Current Case For Palestinian Non-violent Direct ActionWilliam J. Thomson Al-Hayat 2003/07/6Based on widespread and lengthy interactions with parties on both sides of the conflict in Israel/Palestine, I am convinced that massive, confrontational, nonviolent direct action (NVDA) is the optimal, and perhaps the only method that will lead to a just and equitable resolution. This is an extraordinarily controversial view, within both the Palestinian and Israeli publics, because each side has been conditioned to believe that violence will ultimately lead to victory, despite almost a century of data disproving that belief. Particularly for the Palestinians, violence is a high-risk alternative. It stands a significant chance of providing a "justification" for even greater violence or possibly a population transfer by the Israeli government, and it is clear that the current government of Israel would be quite capable of such actions. For many years, the Israeli government (perhaps fearing the power of NVDA) has taken extreme measures to make sure that such actions do not take widespread root among Palestinians, including recent deportations and refusal-of-entry of nonviolent activists. This, in itself, should capture the attention of Palestinian strategists. What is nonviolent direct action? Gene Sharp, perhaps the best-known current NVDA theorist, describes NVDA as a technique for applying power in a conflict without the use of physical violence. It produces change in three possible ways: 1) by conversion, in which an opponent comes around to positively accepting the point of view of the actionists; 2) by accommodation, in which an opponent chooses to grant demands without changing their viewpoint; and What are the advantages of nonviolent direct action? Refusing to respond as expected changes the psychological "playing field" and creates conditions in which creative NVDA can prevail. Also, NVDA tends to win more sympathy and support, both within the camp of the opponent and with third parties. NVDA causes the violence of the opponent's repression to be exposed in the worst possible light, which in turn leads to shifts in opinion and consequent shifts in power What is the current status of nonviolent direct action in Palestine? In a situation determined by violence, the party with greater violence at its disposal will prevail. That party is, of course, Israel. In a situation determined by nonviolence, the party with greater nonviolence at its disposal will prevail. NVDA can defeat violent force; history is filled with such examples. I would submit that NVDA is the best, and perhaps the only way in which the Palestinian people can achieve their destiny. * William J. "Bill" Thomson, Ph.D. teaches clinical psychology and nonviolence/violence at the University of Michigan-Dearborn. He has also been an anti-war and nonviolence activist since the Vietnam War era. * This article is part of a series of views on "Nonviolence" published in partnership with the Common Ground News Service (CGNews). | |||||||
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