Resistance 101: Palestine and the Global Awakening Masterclass
Episode 1 asked whether you can use the master's tools. Episode 2 asks the harder question: what happens when people stop resisting — not because they are defeated, but because they are persuaded that resistance is irrational? This episode opens with a ghost story: 1. Tefik Enesans — an old man dying in a Turkish village in 1992. He turns on a tape recorder and starts talking. 2. The Maori revival — in the 1970s, Te Reo Maori was statistically dead. Screaming in Maori. About colonisation. 3. The Peace Bands, Palestine 1938 — Palestinian militias funded by the British military and the Jewish Agency to hunt Palestinian rebels. TIMELINE 1900s — Native American boarding schools. "Kill the Indian, save the man." An individual act of survival becomes a collective act of cultural death.1916 — The Easter Rising, Dublin. The Irish public hates the rebels — until the British strap a dying man to a chair to execute him. James Connolly's leg is shattered. He cannot stand. They shoot him sitting.1936–1939 — The Arab Revolt in Palestine. Nationwide uprising against British rule and Zionist settlement.1938 — The Peace Bands. Approximately 1,200 Palestinians killed in internal violence. The revolt collapses from within.1941 — Fakhri al-Nashashibi, leader of the collaborationist faction, assassinated in Baghdad. The collaboration bought nothing.1948 — The Nakba. The fragmentation the Peace Bands caused left Palestinian society too weak to resist partition.1992 — Tefik Enesans, last speaker of Ubikh, dies. 2022 — Alien Weaponry hits number one in New Zealand. KEY TERMS Restructuring Desire — The process by which a colonised population is convinced that the only path to dignity is to stop being who they are. Not forced assimilation — seductive assimilation. The Analytical Error of the Collaborator — Confusing a tactical accommodation for a genuine relationship. Assuming that if you play by the coloniser's rules, the rules will protect you. Asset vs. Ally — An ally shares a mutual future. An asset is a tool you discard when the job is done. The coloniser does not have allies. Only interests. Sumud — Arabic. Steadfastness. The active, willed refusal to disappear — physically, psychologically, spiritually. Fitra — In Episode 2, the Fitra is what makes the Maori language nests possible — the refusal, at a level deeper than strategy, to accept that erasure is inevitable. Resistance 101: Palestine and the Global Awakening Masterclass
4 episodes
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