In the name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful
Palestine, the land of the three monotheistic faiths, is where the Palestinian
Arab people was born, on which it grew, developed and excelled. Thus the
Palestinian Arab people ensured for itself an everlasting union between
itself, its land, and its history.
Resolute throughout that history, the Palestinian Arab people forged
its national identity, rising even to unimagined levels in its
defense, as invasion, the design of others, and the appeal special
to Palestine's ancient and luminous place on the eminence where powers
and civilizations are joined. All this intervened thereby to deprive the
people of its political independence. Yet the undying connection between
Palestine and its people secured for the land its character, and for the
people its national genius.
Nourished by an unfolding series of civilizations and cultures, inspired
by a heritage rich in variety and kind, the Palestinian Arab people added
to its stature by consolidating a union between itself and its patrimonial
Land. The call went out from Temple, Church, and Mosque that to praise
the Creator, to celebrate compassion and peace was indeed the message of
Palestine. And in generation after generation, the Palestinian Arab people
gave of itself unsparingly in the valiant battle for liberation and homeland.
For what has been the unbroken chain of our people's rebellions but
the heroic embodiment of our will for national independence. And so the
people was sustained in the struggle to stay and to prevail.
When in the course of modern times a new order of values was declared
with norms and values fair for all, it was the Palestinian Arab people
that had been excluded from the destiny of all other peoples by a hostile
array of local and foreign powers. Yet again had unaided justice been revealed
as insufficient to drive the world's history along its preferred course.
And it was the Palestinian people, already wounded in its body, that
was submitted to yet another type of occupation over which floated that
falsehood that "Palestine was a land without people." This notion was foisted
upon some in the world, whereas in Article 22 of the Covenant of the League
of Nations (1919) and in the Treaty of Lausanne (1923), the community of
nations had recognized that all the Arab territories, including Palestine,
of the formerly Ottoman provinces, were to have granted to them their freedom
as provisionally independent nations.
Despite the historical injustice inflicted on the Palestinian Arab people
resulting in their dispersion and depriving them of their right to self-determination,
following upon U.N. General Assembly Resolution 181 (1947), which partitioned
Palestine into two states, one Arab, one Jewish, yet it is this Resolution
that still provides those conditions of international legitimacy that ensure
the right of the Palestinian Arab people to sovereignty.
By stages, the occupation of Palestine and parts of other Arab territories
by Israeli forces, the willed dispossession and expulsion from their ancestral
homes of the majority of Palestine's civilian inhabitants, was achieved
by organized terror; those Palestinians who remained, as a vestige subjugated
in its homeland, were persecuted and forced to endure the destruction of
their national life.
Thus were principles of international legitimacy violated. Thus were
the Charter of the United Nations and its Resolutions disfigured, for they
had recognized the Palestinian Arab people's national rights, including
the right of Return, the right to independence, the right to sovereignty
over territory and homeland.
In Palestine and on its perimeters, in exile distant and near, the Palestinian
Arab people never faltered and never abandoned its conviction in its rights
of Return and independence. Occupation, massacres and dispersion achieved
no gain in the unabated Palestinian consciousness of self and political
identity, as Palestinians went forward with their destiny, undeterred and
unbowed. And from out of the long years of trial in ever-mounting struggle,
the Palestinian political identity emerged further consolidated and confirmed.
And the collective Palestinian national will forged for itself a political
embodiment, the Palestine Liberation Organization, its sole, legitimate
representative recognized by the world community as a whole, as well as
by related regional and international institutions. Standing on the very
rock of conviction in the Palestinian people's inalienable rights, and
on the ground of Arab national consensus and of international legitimacy,
the PLO led the campaigns f its great people, molded into unity and powerful
resolve, one and indivisible in its triumphs, even as it suffered massacres
and confinement within and without its home.
And so Palestinian resistance was clarified and raised into the forefront
of Arab and world awareness, as the struggle of the Palestinian Arab people
achieved unique prominence among the world's liberation movements in the
modern era.
The massive national uprising, the intifada, now intensifying in cumulative
scope and power on occupied Palestinian territories, as well as the unflinching
resistance of the refugee camps outside the homeland, have elevated awareness
of the Palestinian truth and right into still higher realms of comprehension
and actuality. Now at last the curtain has been dropped around a whole
epoch of prevarication and negation. The intifada has set siege to the
mind of official Israel, which has for too long relied exclusively upon
myth and terror to deny Palestinian existence altogether. Because of the
intifada and its revolutionary irreversible impulse, the history of Palestine
has therefore arrived at a decisive juncture.
Whereas the Palestinian people reaffirms most definitively its inalienable
rights in the land of its patrimony:
Now by virtue of natural, historical and legal rights, and the sacrifices
of successive generations who gave of themselves in defense of the freedom
and independence of their homeland;
In pursuance of Resolutions adopted by Arab Summit Conferences and relying
on the authority bestowed by international legitimacy as embodied in the
Resolutions of the United Nations Organization since 947;
And in exercise by the Palestinian Arab people of its rights to self-determination,
political independence and sovereignty over its territory,
The Palestine National Council, in the name of God, and in the name
of the Palestinian Arab people, hereby proclaims the establishment of the
State of Palestine on our Palestinian territory with its capital Jerusalem
(Al-Quds Ash-Sharif).
The State of Palestine is the state of Palestinians wherever they may
be. The state is for them to enjoy in it their collective national and
cultural identity, theirs to pursue in it a complete equality of rights.
In it will be safeguarded their political and religious convictions and
their human dignity by means of a parliamentary democratic system of governance,
itself based on freedom of expression and the freedom to form parties.
The rights of minorities will duly be respected by the majority, as minorities
must abide by decisions of the majority. Governance will be based on principles
of social justice, equality and non-discrimination in public rights of
men or women, on grounds of race, religion, color or sex, and the aegis
of a constitution which ensures the rule of law and an independent judiciary.
Thus shall these principles allow no departure from Palestine's age-old
spiritual and civilizational heritage of tolerance and religious coexistence.
The State of Palestine is an Arab state, an integral and indivisible
part of the Arab nation, at one with that nation in heritage and civilization,
with it also in its aspiration for liberation, progress, democracy and
unity. The State of Palestine affirms its obligation to abide by the Charter
of the League of Arab States, whereby the coordination of the Arab states
with each other shall be strengthened. It calls upon Arab compatriots to
consolidate and enhance the emein reality of state, to mobilize potential,
and to intensify efforts whose goal is to end Israeli occupation.
The State of Palestine proclaims its commitment to the principles and
purposes of the United Nations, and to the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights. It proclaims its commitment as well to the principles and policies
of the Non-Aligned Movement.
It further announces itself to be a peace-loving State, in adherence
to the principles of peaceful co-existence. It will join with all states
and peoples in order to assure a permanent peace based upon justice and
the respect of rights so that humanity's potential for well-being may be
assured, an earnest competition for excellence may be maintained, and in
which confidence in the future will eliminate fear for those who are just
and for whom justice is the only recourse.
In the context of its struggle for peace in the land of Love and Peace,
the State of Palestine calls upon the United Nations to bear special responsibility
for the Palestinian Arab people and its homeland. It calls upon all peace-and
freedom-loving peoples and states to assist it in the attainment of its
objectives, to provide it with security, to alleviate the tragedy of its
people, and to help it terminate Israel's occupation of the Palestinian
territories.
The State of Palestine herewith declares that it believes in the settlement
of regional and international disputes by peaceful
means, in accordance with the U.N. Charter and resolutions. With prejudice
to its natural right to defend its territorial integrity
and independence, it therefore rejects the threat or use of force,
violence and terrorism against its territorial integrity or political
independence, as it also rejects their use against territorial integrity
of other states.
Therefore, on this day unlike all others, November 15, 1988, as we stand
at the threshold of a new dawn, in all honor and modesty we humbly bow
to the sacred spirits of our fallen ones, Palestinian and Arab, by the
purity of whose sacrifice for the homeland our sky has been illuminated
and our Land given life. Our hearts are lifted up and irradiated by the
light emanating from the much blessed intifada, from those who have endured
and have fought the fight of the camps, of dispersion, of exile, from those
who have borne the standard for freedom, our children, our aged, our youth,
our prisoners, detainees and wounded, all those ties to our sacred soil
are confirmed in camp, village, and town. We render special tribute to
that brave Palestinian Woman, guardian of sustenance and Life, keeper of
our people's perennial flame. To the souls of our sainted martyrs, the
whole of our Palestinian Arab people that our struggle shall be continued
until the occupation ends, and the foundation of our sovereignty and independence
shall be fortified accordingly.
Therefore, we call upon our great people to rally to the banner of Palestine,
to cherish and defend it, so that it may forever be the symbol of our freedom
and dignity in that homeland, which is a homeland for the free, now and
always.
In the name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful:
"Say: 'O God, Master of the Kingdom, Thou givest the Kingdom to whom
Thou wilt, and seizes the Kingdom from whom Thou wilt, Thou exalted whom
Thou wilt, and Thou abasest whom Thou wilt; in Thy hand is
the good; Thou are powerful over everything.