I was recently approached by Foreign Policy magazine and asked to write an article about the reaction on the Palestinian street to the turmoil in Iran. While I initially expected to find some people who saw a link between the Iranian’s calls for freedom and the Palestinian fight for independence, the reality of this perspective was much less than one would think. I talked to many people from a broad slice of society and found some indifference, much support for Iran and Ahmadinejad because of the support of the Palestinian cause, and some intellectual analysis among the general population.
Ignoring the Green Revolution by Lubna Takruri
With so much at stake, why don’t Palestinians care about Iran?
BY LUBNA TAKRURI | JUNE 29, 2009
Foreign Policy Magazine
Last Friday in the West Bank city of Ramallah, where old men sat at sidewalk coffee shops with cards and hookahs, and the city’s upper crust sipped cappuccinos to trance music in upscale eateries, Palestinians spoke of the dollar’s fluctuations, Israel’s latest military activities, and even Michael Jackson’s passing. They touched on nearly everything – with one notable exception: the volcanic protests in Iran. Whereas the drama on the streets of Tehran has captivated the world, here, the news was hardly noticed. “We have bigger problems of our own,” was the collective reply from one cafe.
Palestinians are accustomed to their double curses of occupation and corruption, and they’re used to watching an unending routine of election protests elsewhere in the Middle East. This time, however, their indifference is harder to explain. Although Israelis see Iran as their greatest threat, Palestinians tend to view it as their best international protector. Power shifts in Tehran, whether through war or internal unrest, could have reverberations in Palestine. A weakened Iran, for example, might offer less support for Hamas in Gaza and the West Bank, thereby tipping the balance of power in favor of its Western-backed rival faction, Fatah.



