He
told a crowd of hundreds of supporters in the Ramallah presidential
headquarters, where he has been confined by Israeli forces for near two
years, that he would never leave his homeland.
“With
our blood and our souls we will support you Palestine,” Arafat chanted
with thousands of his people who gathered around the battered compound.
But
memories of similar threats and fixes were surely recalled by many as
part of rich and informative history.
Mohamed
Abdel-Raouf Al-Husseini was born in Cairo August 24, 1929, to a
Palestinian father working as a textile merchant and a mother from an
old Palestinian family in Al-Quds (now occupied Jerusalem), then under
the British rule.
As
his mother died when he was five, Yasser, as he was called, was sent by
his father to Al-Quds, where the seemingly intelligent boy witnessed the
1936 revolution.
Yasser
Arafat has revealed little about his childhood, but one of his earliest
memories is of British soldiers breaking into his uncle's house after
midnight, beating members of the family and smashing furniture.
After
eight years in Al-Quds, Arafat’s father brought him back to Cairo,
where an older sister took care of him and his siblings.
Arafat
began his studies at the University of Fouad 1 (later Cairo University)
where he majored in engineering and spent most of his time as leader of
the Palestinian students.
He
set up the Palestinian graduates society, which attracted the focus of
Egyptian media attention as its members joined the army against the
Tripartite Aggression of 1956.
The
defeat of the Arabs and the establishment of the state of Israel left
Yasser Arafat in such despair and fury over the ensuing Diaspora and a
loss of homeland long associated in the Arab and Muslim mindset with
Al-Aqsa mosque, one of Islam’s holiest sites.
Recovering
his spirits and retaining his dream of an independent Palestinian
homeland, Arafat found what turned out to be a lifelong journey of
independence.
In
1958, Arafat traveled to Kuwait to work as an engineer, where he and a
close friend named Khalil Al-Qazir (Abu Jihad) established a
revolutionary cell called the Palestinian Liberation Movement or Fatah.
He
published a magazine on the woes of the Palestinian cause, with no more
appropriate name than “Our Palestine”, and he was at pains to
legitimatize his resistance movement.
The
efforts proved no futile, and the Fatah established its first office in
1965 where it made its diplomatic activities.
But
Arafat’s name came to the forefront when he led a number of resistance
attacks from Jordanian lands after the 1967 Middle East war.
One
year later, then Egyptian President Gamal Abdel-Nasser admitted Arafat
as a representative of the Palestinian people.
Merger
The
Fatah merged into the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) which was
established in 1964, allowing Arafat to later be the chairman of the
group’s executive committee in 1969.
One
year later, Palestinian resistance fighters clashed with the Jordanian
army, leaving many victims of both sides in what was called the Black
September.
With
Arab mediation efforts, the Palestinian resistance leaders decided to
move positions to Lebanon on a temporary basis.
On
November 13, 1974, the Palestinian leader had given a historic speech
before the United Nations, in which he affirmed the Palestinian cause is
one of the just issues sought by people grappling with colonization,
persecution and aggressions.
Appealing
for support to the Palestinian right of self-determination and return to
homeland, Arafat called on the members of the world body to consider the
olive branch he said he had come with.
In
1978-1982, the Israeli army launched fierce aggressions against the
Palestinian resistance bases, leaving some of them destroyed and setting
up a “security belt” running for 4-6 kilometers long.
In
1982, the Israeli massive aggression on Lebanon took its heavy toll on
the Palestinian resistance.
Arafat
was forced to get out of Lebanon under international protection, setting
out for his third station, Tunisia.
Despite
the far distance between Tunis and the Palestinian territories, the
Israeli intelligence managed to assassinate leading figures of the PLO,
including Abu Jihad (the latter literary means holy struggle) and Salah
Khalaf (Abu Iyad).
Palestinian
State Declared
In
1988, the Palestinian Legislative Council decided to establish a
Palestinian state with eastern Al-Quds as its capital on historical and
geographic rights of Palestine, a step that coincided with forming an
interim government in the Algerian capital.
The
1980s saw great changes in the PLO’s thoughts, where Arafat gave
another speech before the U.N. General Assembly in 1988 condemning
terrorism in all shapes and making a recognition of Israel.
He
also declared a Palestinian peace initiative, calling on the Middle East
countries, including Israel and the Palestinians, to live in peace.
A
chorus of recognition of an independent Palestinian state followed suit,
and Arafat was entrusted to take over its presidency.
Further
to push forward the peace process, Arafat declared that he is making
secret contacts with Palestinian leaders in this respect.
One
year later, the Palestinian cause was deeply affected by what was
interpreted Arafat’s support of the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait.
The
highly-touted situation on the Iraqi aggression had grave repercussions
for Palestinians working in the Gulf, and consequently for the
Palestinian Intifada against Israeli occupation which was breaking out
in full swing in 1987.
Oslo
Agreement
After
the end of the gulf War and the Madrid peace conference, Arafat and then
Israeli Prime Minister Isaac Rabin signed a peace deal in the Norwegian
capital Oslo in 1993.
The
deal brought out a new Palestinian entity called the Palestinian
National Authority, with Arafat at its helm, and a recognition of the
Israeli state set up on Palestine’s historical borders.
Triggering
a new road to settlement pinning to bilateral talks rather than relevant
international resolutions, the deal guaranteed Arafat and Rabin a Nobel
peace prize “for their efforts to create peace in the Middle East”
in 1994.
In
the same year, the two men signed the Cairo Declaration allowing
self-rule governance in Gaza and Ariha (Jericho).
Back
To Gaza
Some
27 years of exile in Arab countries, Arafat returned to Gaza in 1994 to
lead the National Palestinian Authority.
One
year later, he signed a new agreement allowing enlargement of self-rule
areas in the West Bank and Gaza Strip in the Egyptian border city of
Taba.
On
June 1996, In January 1996, Arafat was elected in a landslide victory
for the presidency. Results of the ballots gave the Palestinian leader
88.1 percent to challenger Samiha Khalil's 9.3 percent, with the
remainder of ballots ruled invalid.
Despite
the intransigence of then Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, the
champion of settlement activities on Palestinian areas regardless of the
international community’s opposition, Arafat signed the Wye River
peace agreement in the United States in October 1998.
Arafat
also met with following Prime Minister Ihud Barak, and in attendance of
then U.S. President Bill Clinton, for the second Camp David talks.
The
talks, on the suspending issues of Al-Quds, settlements and refugees,
were a complete failure, nipping a bud in all prospects for a peaceful
solution to the protracted crisis.
Al-Aqsa
Intifada