"Twelve men, led by a woman called Dalal Al-Mughrabi, managed to establish the State of Palestine, after the whole world had denied them their right to do so," declared Al-Jazeera TV host Ghassan Bin-Jiddo in a 2008 retrospective of the four-hour 'State of Palestine' in 1978.
Not just themselves, unfortuanately.
"For the first time in the history of revolutions, a passenger bus became a fully sovereign independent republic for four hours," Bin-Jiddo gushed. "It does not matter how long this Palestinian republic lasted. The only thing that matters is that this republic was established, and that its first president was Dalal Al-Mughrabi."
Why all this focus on Al-Mughrabi this month? Because her body was among the 190 bodies transferred to the Hizbullah in Lebanon last week, as part of the ransom for the bodies of IDF soldiers Eldad Regev and Ehud Goldwasser.
In view of all this, I am forced to agree with Bin-Jiddo. Al-Mughrabi's State of Palestine perfectly foreshadows the character of any potential State of Palestine today.
Al-Mughrabi's State of Palestine, as it has been endlessly praised in the Arab world, was based on hijacking Israeli property, hostage-taking, terrorizing and murdering innocents, especially Jews, the celebration of indiscriminate death and destruction, and ultimately self-annihilation. Her State of Palestine was not a vehicle for attaining national aspirations or freedom; it was a vehicle of terrorism, murder and wanton destruction. It was a vehicle for killing anything Jewish, as much as was possible given the tools and time the "President" of that State of Palestine had at her disposal.
In December of 2001, Fatah published an editorial marking the 37th anniversary of its first terrorist act (on January 1, the group claimed credit for a December attack). In that communique, Fatah (currently headed by Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas and presented as a "moderate" alternative) explained what it is fighting for - a Palestinian State. And according to their celebratory 2001 editorial, Fatah "believes that a legitimate Palestinian entity forms the most important weapon that Arabs have against Israel, the outpost of the imperialist powers."
To view the video of the Al-Jazeera segment, visit http://www.memritv.org/clip/en/1805.htm.