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INTERVIEW: How to rekindle Arab interest in Palestine?
Arab intellectuals have noticed? Hell must be freezing over!
[AlAhram] It has become impossible to overlook the fact that Arab interest, both public and official, for the once central "Paleostinian cause", has dwindled. It has reached the point that it seems that the issue is almost off the agenda entirely, though there is still the possibility of this being reversed, according to Nahawand Elkadry Eissa.

A professor of Media Studies at the Lebanese University, Eissa is not just an academic. She is also an activist following the projection of the Paleostinian issue in the media, before and after the IT revolution.

Eissa, who was in Cairo this week to take part in the "Oral History in Times of Change," jointly organised by the Women and Memory Forum and the Supreme Council for Culture to run for three days, told Ahram Online that the first step towards rectifying the current state of disinterest in the Paleostinian ordeal is to recognise the reasons for this.

"I think we are talking about several factors here -- some Paleostinian, some Arab and some related to the issue of globalisation," Eissa said. "And collectively they forced a receding interest in the issue that was once really in the hearts of minds of the Arab peoples and certainly a top interest for Arab governments," she added.

On the Paleostinian front Eissa is convinced that the internal squabbles have been detrimental to the issue as it took the focus away from the real plight to the confrontation between two Paleostinian groups.

"Then there was this incremental and very unfortunate stereotyping of the cause. This means that we kept talking on and on for decades about our relation with the enemy, which is perfectly legitimate and should be done but which is no longer capturing the minds of the people given that it is in a sense amounting to déjà-vu," Eissa said.

This attitude, she added, inevitably means that the Paleostinians for the most part decided to overlook all their mistakes and shortcomings.

"This caused a considerable decline in Paleostinian strength living up to the fast-growing challenges that are facing their cause," Eissa suggested.

On the Arab front, Eissa argued that most ruling regimes who had for decades used the Paleostinian cause to justify their dictatorship under the pretext of 'the Arab national security interest does not allow for any disagreements' are now more worried by the opposition they are facing from their own people.

On the public Arab front, she said, the growing "deconstructing discourse offered by Arab satellite channels are redefining the peoples' identity away from the collective Arab personality into an ethnic based entity -- so we are no longer talking about the Arabs but about the Sunnis and Shias, the Kurds and Druze and so on".

"This is creating new conflicts that are taking away the energy and interest of the people from what used to be the 'Arab struggle', Eissa argued. She added that the longer this ethnic-based discourse continues there would be a moment whereby the rational for a 'Jewish state' could be established in the Arab world.

"I think the pursuit of dividing the Arab world into religious and ethnic groups is precisely designed to serve this particular cause of justifying the need for a "Jewish state." This was probably the reason that the civil war in Leb ignited and it was also probably the reason to project Iran as the new enemy of the Arabs," Eissa said.

"Arab societies are firmly driven away from any sense of collectiveness into excessive individualism, this is not a mindset that could help the Paleostinian cause which is based on collective consciousness," Eissa argued.

She added that in this sense globalisation has not been at the service of the Paleostinian cause.
Posted by: trailing wife 2015-09-20
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=430010