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Opening
Speech by the Palestinian Delegation at the Madrid Conference
October 31, 1991
In the name
of God, the merciful, the compassionate. 0 esteemed audience. Allow me
first to extend greetings of thanks and appreciation to the State of
Spain, King, government, and people, for hosting this historic
conference. 1 would also like to extend greetings of pride and
appreciation for the sons of the Palestinian people who are still
struggling for freedom and independence. 1 will now speak on their
behalf to you and the various democratic powers in the world in English.
Mr. Baker, Mr. Pankin, ladies and gentlemen: On behalf of the
Palestinian delegation, we meet in Madrid, a city with a rich texture of
history, to weave together the fabric which joins our past with future,
to reaffirm a wholeness of vision which once brought about a reverse of
civilization and a world order based on harmony in diversity. Once
again, Christian, Muslim, and Jew face the challenge of heralding a new
era enshrined in global values of democracy, human rights, freedom,
justice, and security. From Madrid, we launch this quest for peace, a
quest to place the sanctity of human life at the center of our world,
and to redirect our energies and resources from the pursuit of mutual
destruction to the pursuit of joint prosperity, progress, and happiness.
We, the people of Palestine, stand before you in the fullness of our
pain, our pride, and our anticipation, for we long harbored a yearning
for peace and a dream of justice and freedom. For too long, the
Palestinian people have gone unheeded, silenced and denied. Our identity
negated by political expediency; our right for struggle against
injustice maligned; and our present existence subdued by the past
tragedy of another people. For the greater part of this century we have
been victimized by the myth of a land without a people and described
with impunity as the invisible Palestinians. Before such willful
blindness, we refused to disappear or to accept a distorted identity.
Our Intifada is a testimony to our perseverance and resilience waged in
a just struggle to regain our rights. It is time for us to narrate our
own story, to stand witness as advocates of truth which has long lain
buried in the consciousness and conscience of the world. We do not stand
before you as supplicants, but rather as the torch-bearers who know
that, in our world of today; ignorance can never be an excuse. We seek
neither an admission of guilt after the fact, nor vengeance for past
inequities, but rather an act of will that would make a just peace a
reality.
We speak out, ladies and gentlemen, from the full conviction of the
rightness of our cause, the verity of our history, and the depth of our
commitment. Therein lies the strength of the Palestinian people today,
for we have scaled walls of fear and reticence, and we wish to speak out
with the courage and integrity that our narrative and history deserve.
The cosponsors have invited us here today to present our case and to
reach on the land of Palestine. But even in the invitation to this peace
conference, our narrative was distorted and our truth only partially
acknowledged.
The Palestinian people are one, fused by centuries of history in
Palestine, bound together by a collective memory of shared sorrows and
joys, and sharing a unity of purpose and vision. Our songs and ballads,
full of tales and children's stories, the dialect of our jokes, the
image of our poems, that hint of melancholy which colors even our
happiest moments, are as important to us as the blood ties which link
our families and clans. Yet, an invitation to discuss peace, the peace
we all desire and need, comes to only a portion of our people. It
ignores our national, historical, and organic unity. We come here
wrenched from our sisters and brothers in exile to stand before you as
the Palestinian under occupation, although we maintain that each of us
represents the rights and interests of the whole.
We have been denied the right to publicly acknowledge our loyalty to our
leadership and system of government. But allegiance and loyalty cannot
be censored or severed. Our acknowledged leadership is more than [the]
justly democratically chosen leadership of all the Palestinian people.
It is the symbol of our national unity and identity, the guardian of our
past, the protector of our present and the hope of our future. Our
people have chosen to entrust it with their history and the preservation
of our precious legacy. This leadership has been clearly and
unequivocally recognized by the community of nations, with only a few
exceptions who had chosen for so many years shadow over substance.
Regardless of the nature and conditions of our oppression, whether the
disposition and dispersion of exile or the brutality and repression of
the occupation, the Palestinian people cannot be tom asunder. They
remain united - a nation wherever they are, or are forced to be.
And Jerusalem, ladies and gentlemen, that city which is not only the
soul of Palestine, but the cradle of three world religions, is tangible
even in its claimed absence from our midst at this stage. It is
apparent, through artificial exclusion from this conference, that this
is a denial of its right to seek peace and redemption. For it, too, has
suffered from war and occupation. Jerusalem, the city of peace, has been
barred from a peace conference and deprived of its calling. Palestinian
Jerusalem, the capital of our homeland and future state, defines
Palestinian existence, past, present, and future, but itself has been
denied a voice and an identity. Jerusalem defies exclusive
possessiveness or bondage. Israel's annexation of Arab Jerusalem remains
both clearly illegal in the eyes of the world community, and an affront
to the peace that this city deserves.
We come to you from a tortured land and a proud, though captive people,
having been asked to negotiate with our occupiers, but leaving behind
the children of the Intifada, and a people under occupation and under
curfew who enjoined us not to surrender or forget. As we speak,
thousands of our brothers and sisters are languishing in Israeli prisons
and detention camps, most detained without evidence, charge, or trial,
many cruelly mistreated and tortured in interrogation, guilty only of
seeking freedom or daring to defy the occupation. We speak in their name
and we say: Set them free. As we speak, the tens of thousands who have
been wounded or permanently disabled are in pain. Let peace heal their
wounds. As we speak, the eyes of thousands of Palestinian refugees,
deportees, and displaced persons since 1967 are haunting us, for exile
is a cruel fate. Bring them home. They have the right to return. As we
speak, the silence of demolished homes echoes through the halls and in
our minds. We must rebuild our homes in our free state.
And what do we tell the loved ones of those killed by army bullets? How
do we answer the questions and the fear in our children's eyes? For one
out of three Palestinian children under occupation has been killed,
injured, or detained in the past four years. How can we explain to our
children that they are denied education, for schools are so often closed
by the army? Or why their life is in danger for raising a flag in a land
where even children are killed or jailed? What requiem can be sung for
trees uprooted by army bulldozers? And most of all, who can explain to
those whose lands are confiscated and clear waters stolen, a message of
peace? Remove the barbed wire. Restored the land and its life-giving
water. The settlements must stop now. Peace cannot be waged while
Palestinian land confiscated in myriad ways and the status of the
occupied territories is being decided each day by Israeli bulldozers and
barbed wire. This is not simply a position. It is an irrefutable
reality. Territory for peace is a travesty when territory for illegal
settlement is official Israeli policy and practice. The settlements must
stop now.
In the name of the Palestinian people, we wish to directly address the
Israeli people with whom we have had a prolonged exchange of pain: Let
us share hope, instead. We are willing to live side by side on the land
and the promise of the future. Sharing, however, requires two partners,
willing to share as equals. Mutuality and reciprocity must replace
domination and hostility for genuine reconciliation and coexistence
under international legality. Your security and ours are mutually
dependent, as entwined as the fears and nightmares of our children. We
have seen some of you at your best and at your worst. For the occupier
can hide no secrets from the occupied, and we are witness to the toll
that occupation has exacted from you and yours.
We have seen you agonize over the transformation of your sons and
daughters into instruments of a blind and violent occupation. And we are
sure that at no time did you envisage such a role for the children whom
you thought would forge your future. We have seen you look back in
deepest sorrow at the tragedy of your past, and look on in horror at the
disfigurement of the victim-turned-oppressor. Not for this have you
nurtured your hopes dreams, and your off-spring. This is why we have
responded with solemn appreciation to those of you who came to offer
consolation to our bereaved, to give support to those whose homes were
being demolished and to extend encouragement and counsel to those
detained behind barbed wire and iron bars. And we have marched together,
often choking together in the nondiscriminatory tear gas or crying out
in pain as the clubs descended on both Palestinian and Israeli alike,
for pain knows no national boundaries, and no one can claim a monopoly
on suffering. We once formed a human chain around Jerusalem, joining
hands and calling for peace. Let us today form a moral chain around
Madrid and continue that noble effort for peace and a promise of freedom
for our sons and daughters. Break through the barriers of mistrust and
manipulated fears. Let us look forward in magnanimity and in hope.
To our Arab brothers and sisters, most of whom are represented here in
this historic occasion, we express our loyalty and gratitude for their
life-long support and solidarity. We are here together seeking a just
and lasting peace, whose cornerstone is freedom for Palestine, justice
for the Palestinians, and an end to the occupation of all Palestinian
and Arab lands. Only then can we really enjoy together the fruits of
peace, prosperity, security, and human dignity and freedom.
In particular, we address our Jordanian colleagues in our joint
delegation: Our two peoples have a very special historic and geographic
relationship. Together, we shall strive to achieve peace. We will
continue to strive for our sovereignty, while proceeding freely and
willingly to prepare the grounds for a confederation between the two
states of Palestine and Jordan, which can be a cornerstone for our
security and prosperity.
To the community of nations on our fragile planet, to the nations of
Africa and Asia, to the Muslim world, and particularly to Europe, on
whose southern and neighborly shores we meet today, from the heart of
our collective struggle for peace, we greet you and acknowledge your
support and recognition. You have recognized our rights and our
government, and have given us real support and protection. You have
penetrated the distorting mist of racism, stereotyping, and ignorance,
and committed the act of seeing the invisible and listening to the voice
of the silenced. Palestinians under occupation and in exile have become
a reality in your eyes, and with courage and determination, you have
affirmed the truth of our narrative. You have taken up our cause and our
case, and we have brought you into our hearts. We thank you for caring
and daring to know the truth, the truth which must set us all free.
To the cosponsors and participants in this occasion of awe and
challenge, we pledge our commitment to the principle of justice, peace,
and reconciliation based on international legitimacy and uniform
standards. We shall persist in our quest for peace to place before you
the substance and determination of our people, often victimized but
never defeated. We shall pursue our people's right to self-determination
to the exhilaration of freedom and to the warmth of the sun as a nation
among equals.
This is the moment of truth. You must have the courage to recognize it
and the will to implement it, for our truth can no longer be hidden away
in the dark recesses of inadvertency or neglect. People of Palestine
look at you with a straightforward, direct gaze, seeking to touch your
heart, for you have dared to stir up hopes that cannot be abandoned. You
cannot afford to let us down, for we have lived up to the values you
espouse, and we have remained true to our cause.
We, the Palestinian people, made the imaginative leap in the Palestinian
National Council of November 1988, during which the Palestine Liberation
Organization launched its peace initiative based on Security Council
Resolution 242 and 338, and declared Palestinian independence based on
Resolution 181 of the United Nation, which gave birth to two states in
1948, Israel and Palestine. December 1988, a historic speech before the
United Nations in Geneva led directly to the launching of the
Palestinian-American dialogue. Ever since then, our people have respond
positively to every serious peace initiative and have done the utmost to
ensure the success of this process. Israel, on the other hand, has
placed many obstacles and barriers in the path of peace to negate the
very validity of the process. Its illegal and frenzied settlement
activity is the most glaring evidence of its rejectionism, the latest
settlement being erected just two days ago. There historic decisions of
the Palestine National Council wrench the course of history from
inevitable confrontation and conflict towards peace and mutual
recognition. With our own hands and in an act of sheer will, we have
molded the shape of the future of our people. Our parliament has
articulated the message of the people, with the courage to say
"yes'5 to the challenge of history, just as it provided the
reference in its resolutions last month in Algiers and in the Central
Council meeting this month in Tunis to go forward to this historic
conference. We cannot be made to bear the brunt of other people's
"no's." We must have reciprocity. We must have peace.
Ladies and gentlemen: In the Middle East, there is no superfluous people
outside time and place, but rather a state sorely missed by time and
place. The state of Palestine must be born on the land of Palestine to
redeem the injustice of the destruction of its historical reality and to
free the people of Palestine from the shackles of their victimization.
Our homeland has never ceased to exist in our minds and hearts, but it
has to exist as a state on all the territories occupied by Israel in the
war of 1967 with Arab Jerusalem as its capital in the context of that
city's special status and its nonexclusive character.
This state, in a condition of emergence, has already been a subject of
anticipation for too long, should take Place today rather than tomorrow.
However, we are willing to accept the proposal for a transitional stage
Provided interim arrangements are not transformed into permanent status.
The time frame must be condensed to respond to the dispossessed
Palestinians' urgent need for sanctuary and to the occupied
Palestinians' right to gain relief from oppression and to win
recognition of their authentic will.
During this phase, international protection for our people is most
urgently needed. And the de jure application of the Fourth Geneva
Convention is a necessary condition. The phases must not prejudice the
outcome. Rather, they require an internal momentum and motivation to
lead sequentially to sovereignty. Bilateral negotiations on the
withdrawal of Israeli forces, the dissolution of Israeli administration,
and the transfer of authority to the Palestinian people cannot proceed
under coercion or threat in the current asymmetry of power. Israel must
demonstrate its willingness to negotiate in good faith by immediately
halting all settlement activity and land confiscation while implementing
meaningful confidence-building measures.
Without genuine progress, tangible constructive changes and just
agreements during the bilateral talks, multilateral negotiations will be
meaningless. Regional stability, security, and development are the
logical outcome of an equitable and just solution to the Palestinian
question, which remains the key to the resolution of wider conflict and
concerns.
In its confrontation of wills between the legitimacy of the people and
the illegality of the occupation, the Intifada's message has been
consistent: to embody the Palestinian state and to build its
institutions and infrastructure. We seek recognition for this creative
impulse which nurtures within the potential nascent state.
We have paid a heavy price for daring to substantiate our authenticity
and to practice popular democracy in spite of the cruelty of occupation.
It was a sheer act of will that brought us here; the same will which
asserted itself in the essence of the Intifada as the cry for freedom,
an act of civil resistance and people's participation and empowerment.
The Intifada is our drive towards nation-building and social
transformation. We are here today with the support of our people, who
have given itself the right to hope and to make a stand for peace. We
must recognize as well that some of our people harbor serious doubts and
skepticism about this process. Within our democratic, social, and
political structures, we have evolved a respect for pluralism and
diversity and we shall guard the opposition's right to differ within the
parameters of mutual respect and national unity.
The process launched here must lead us to the light at the end of the
tunnel. And this light is the promise of a new Palestine-free,
democratic, and respectful of human rights and the integrity of nature.
Self-determination, ladies and gentlemen, can neither be granted nor
withheld at the will of the political self-interest of others. For it is
enshrined in all international charters and humanitarian law. We claim
this right; we firmly assert it here before you and in the eyes of the
rest of the world. For it is a sacred and inviolable right which we
shall relentlessly pursue and exercise with dedication and
self-confidence and pride.
Let's end the Palestinian-Israeli fatal proximity In this unnatural
condition of occupation, which has already claimed too many lives. No
dream of expansion or glory can justify the taking of a single life. Set
us free to re-engage as neighbors and as equals on our holy land.
To our people in exile and under occupation, who have sent us to this
appointment, laden with their trust, love, and aspirations, we say that
the load is heavy and the task is great, but we shall be true. In the
words of our great national poet Mahmud Darwish: My homeland is not a
suitcase, and I am no traveler.
To the exiled and the occupied we say you shall return and you shall
remain and we will prevail, for our cause is just. We will put our
embroidered robes and kafiyehs in the sight of the world and celebrate
together on the day of liberation.
Refugee camps are not fit for people who were raised on the land of
Palestine in the warmth of the sun and freedom. The hail of Israeli
bombs almost daily pouring down on our defenseless civilian population
in the refugee camps of Lebanon is no substitute for the healing rain of
the homeland. Yet the international will had ensured their return in
United Nations Resolution 194 - a fact willfully ignored and unenacted.
Similarly, all other resolutions pertinent to the Palestinian question
beginning with resolution 18 1, through resolutions 242 and 338, and
ending with Security Council resolution 681, have until now been
relegated to the domain of public debate rather than real
implementation. They formed a larger body of legality, including all
relevant provisions of international law within which any peaceful
settlement must proceed. If international legitimacy and the rule of law
are to prevail and govern relations among nations, they must be
respected and impartially and uniformly implemented. We as Palestinians
require nothing less than justice.
Palestinians everywhere: Today we bear in our hands the precious gift of
your love and your pain, and we shall set it down gently here before the
eyes of the world and say there is a right here which must be
acknowledged - the right to self-determination and statehood. There is
strength and there is the scent of sacred incense in the air. Jerusalem,
the heart of our homeland and the cradle of the soul, is shimmering
through the barriers of occupation and deceit. The deliberate violation
of its sanctities is also an act of violence against the collective
human, cultural, and spiritual memory and an aggression against its
enduring symbols of tolerance, magnanimity, and respect for cultural and
religious authenticity.
The cobbled streets of the old city must not echo with the discordant
beat of Israeli military boots. We must restore to them the chant of the
muezzin, the chimes of the church, the call of the ram, and the prayers
of all the faithful calling for peace in the city of peace.
From Madrid let's light the candle of peace and let the olive branch
blossom. Let's celebrate the rituals of justice and rejoice in the hymns
of truth, for the awe of the moment is a promise to the future, which we
all must redeem.
Palestinians will be free and will stand tall among the community of
nations in the fullness of the pride and dignity which, by right,
belongs to all people. Today, our people under occupation are holding
high the olive branch of peace. In the words of Chairman Arafat in 1974
before the UN General Assembly: Let not the olive branch of peace fall
from my hands. Let not the olive branch of peace fall from the hands of
the Palestinian people. May God's mercy, peace, and blessings be upon
you.
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