Beirut: There are many ways to contribute to the stigma surrounding a group of people. But the most impactful seems to be a direct IV injection, inserted directly into people’s minds, to perpetuate a stereotypical image of Palestinians in Lebanon.
Picture this – a Palestinian says a word or phrase that reveals their dialect, prompting a response of “Are you really Palestinian?” or “But you don't look Palestinian.”
It’s almost as though there’s a checklist that one must crosscheck to determine a Palestinian’s identity.
"When someone expresses surprise like that, I ask, ‘How many Palestinians have you had contact with or met?’ and the answer is, ‘Only you.’ That’s when I understand the mental grip that the projected image of Palestinians has in Lebanon, where even ‘positive’ discrimination against a single Palestinian reveals hidden racism against the Palestinian community,” says Mohammad Daher, a young Palestinian who lives in Saadiyat, south of Beirut, and works as a programme director in public libraries.
In Lebanon, there is a notion that the Palestinian identity is fragmented.
Varying Palestinian dialects feed into this idea, as well as outward appearances, including the donning of the headscarf. But, contrary to popular belief, not all Palestinian women wear headscarves.
Sara Al-Said, a resident of a Beirut suburb, carries her identity like a "wound," which is seen as a pile of contradictions by the Lebanese.
"Questions surround my identity, whether I am Palestinian or not,” she says. “Questions surround how this affects the way people interact with me, my professional opportunities, my social development, and every aspect of my life.”
In Al-Said’s eyes, however, her identity is an amalgamation of biological and emotional connections to Palestine. Others fail to understand this.
"If I am Palestinian, it means I cannot be myself,” she says. “I am a refugee who does not live in a camp, a young Muslim woman who does not wear a headscarf, I am interested in fashion and go to the gym regularly, I’m good at applying makeup and I’m financially stable. It’s tiring to live and have to justify who you are just because you're Palestinian.”
While dialect, clothing, and housing are popular causes for discrimination, they are less insidious than the “weapon” assumption – that all Palestinians carry arms. This paints them as responsible for consequences such as wars, crimes, and security breaches.