[News] Gaza's women stand up to Trump and Israel

Anti-Imperialist News news at freedomarchives.org
Mon Feb 5 17:51:27 EST 2018


https://electronicintifada.net/content/gazas-women-stand-trump-and-israel/23211 



  Gaza's women stand up to Trump and Israel

Sarah Algherbawi 
<https://electronicintifada.net/people/sarah-algherbawi> - 5 February 2018

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Randa Harara is adamant that she will stand up to Israel’s forces of 
occupation again – once she has made a recovery.

On 11 December, Randa – aged 21 – was shot by a sniper hiding at Nahal 
Oz, a military checkpoint separating Gaza from Israel. She was taking 
part in a protest 
<http://alsaa8.net/post/5028/%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%B5%D8%AD%D8%A9-12-%D8%A5%D8%B5%D8%A7%D8%A8%D8%A9-%D8%A8%D9%85%D9%88%D8%A7%D8%AC%D9%87%D8%A7%D8%AA-%D9%85%D8%B9-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%A7%D8%AD%D8%AA%D9%84%D8%A7%D9%84-%D8%B4%D8%B1%D9%82-%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%82%D8%B7%D8%A7%D8%B9> 
against the announcement by Donald Trump 
<https://electronicintifada.net/tags/donald-trump>, the US president, 
that he recognizes Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.

“My injury will not prevent me from taking part in further clashes [with 
Israel],” said Randa, who was wounded in the left leg. “This is our duty 
towards Jerusalem.”

An accountancy student at Al-Azhar University and a campaigner with the 
Progressive Student Action Front in Gaza, Randa knows that the cost of 
confronting Israel can be high. “But that doesn’t mean that women should 
be absent from the battlefield – especially when it comes to the issue 
of Jerusalem.”

Randa has the backing of her family.


    “Cause headaches for Israel”

“I have given my daughter full freedom to do what she believes in,” said 
her father Kamal, who has accompanied Randa to some of the protests at 
the boundary area between Gaza and Israel. “We can’t give up our land. 
It is important to put pressure on and cause headaches for Israel.”

Ahed Tamimi <https://electronicintifada.net/tags/ahed-tamimi>, who 
turned 17 on 31 January, has come to epitomize the courage of women and 
girls who challenge the Israeli military. Here in Gaza, many people 
admire Tamimi for demonstrating her anger at soldiers who suffocate her 
home village, Nabi Saleh 
<https://electronicintifada.net/tags/nabi-saleh> in the occupied West 
Bank, by slapping one of them.

Leila, a 14-year-old from Jabaliya 
<https://electronicintifada.net/tags/jabaliya> refugee camp in northern 
Gaza, used to mainly check social media websites for fashion tips. More 
recently, she has been searching the Internet for updates on the 
detention of Tamimi and her trial in an Israeli military court. She has 
also begun to read more widely about Palestinian politics.

“Ahed is my hero,” Leila – not her real name – said. “I wish I could be 
like her – an influential person in our struggle with Israel.”

Leila wishes to take part in the protests held along Gaza’s boundary 
with Israel each Friday. Yet she does not have parental permission to do 
so. “My mother says it [protesting] is like suicide,” Leila added.

With Israeli forces frequently opening fire on protesters, confronting 
the occupier can be fatal. Eight protesters from Gaza were killed 
<https://electronicintifada.net/content/palestine-pictures-december-2017/22846> 
by Israel along the boundary area in December 2017 alone. More than 480 
were injured <http://pchrgaza.org/en/?p=10288> during that month, 
according to the Palestinian Center for Human Rights.

It would be wrong to claim that people in Gaza are generally 
enthusiastic about the idea of women and girls confronting the Israeli 
military.

I asked a sample of 26 people – equally divided between men and women – 
their views on female participation in such confrontations. Around 80 
percent of respondents were opposed to women taking such direct action.

“These women are mothers, wives, daughters and sisters,” one person 
responded. “We don’t want to lose more people for nothing.”

Others pointed to the conservative and patriarchal nature of society in 
Gaza.

“There’s no need for female participation in clashes with Israel,” said 
Mahmoud Abu al-Eish, a 56-year-old Gaza resident. “This should be 
limited to men who can handle such tough situations. Female 
participation [in protests] is outside our customs and traditions.”


    “Motherland for everyone”

That view is disputed. Iman al-Haj, a journalist, recently pointed out 
that women have long been involved in the Palestinian struggle. “Female 
participation is a national duty at a time like this,” al-Haj said.

Al-Haj noted that she had “shared my anger” with other protesters by 
directly confronting the Israeli military on a few occasions. “I will 
participate again and again,” she added.

Mariam Abu Daqqa, a prominent figure in the Popular Front for the 
Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), argued that “women have stood side by 
side with men” since the Nakba, the 1948 ethnic cleansing of Palestine. 
“The motherland is for everyone,” she said.

Abu Daqqa has suffered hugely for her political activities.

She was the first woman living in Gaza to be forced out by Israel 
because of her involvement with armed resistance.

After being arrested in 1969, she was detained for two years and then 
exiled to Jordan. In 1975, she moved to Lebanon, where she joined the PFLP.

It would be 1995 before she could return to Gaza. By then, her parents 
were dead.

“I had not been able to see them since 1969,” she said. “I only had my 
sister left. And she was sick with cancer and died after about two years.”

More recently, Abu Daqqa has set up a studies and training program 
<http://pdwsa.ps/> for former female prisoners.

She notes that women who confront Israel have to overcome a number of 
barriers. Such barriers have become higher due to the siege Israel has 
imposed on Gaza, as well as the three major Israeli bombardments the 
coastal strip has suffered within the past decade.

The losses incurred by each of those attacks all place “an extra burden 
on women and this burden restricts their ability to take part in 
confrontations and have a vital role,” she said.


    Daring

Women played an important role in the first intifada, which began in 
Gaza 30 years ago.

Hania Aqel, a 64-year-old woman from Rafah, near Gaza’s border with 
Egypt, made a number of daring attempts to rescue Palestinians after 
they had been captured by Israel.

Each time 25 to 30 women would assemble “like a human fence,” she said, 
“and grab the men who had been arrested” from Israeli vehicles.

The efforts were sometimes successful, albeit at a price. Once, Hania 
managed to help her son Talaat – then aged 18 – to escape.

“I poured hot water on the soldiers who were arresting him,” Hania said. 
“I was able to save him but I was shot in my leg by another soldier.”

Samira Mousa, a resident of Jabaliya camp, was active in the Union of 
Health Work Committees during that rebellion.

Along with many other women, Mousa provided practical support to 
families of people imprisoned or killed by Israel. That included giving 
food to families in need.

One of the first people killed by Israeli troops in that intifada, Hatim 
Abu Sisi <https://electronicintifada.net/tags/hatim-abu-sisi> “died in 
front of my house,” Mousa – now aged 57 – recalled.

“His blood filled the entrance of my house,” she said. “That scene 
affected me a lot and motivated me to provide any help I can to my 
neighborhood. I planted a tree at the place he was killed. And I’m still 
taking care of this tree.”

/Sarah Algherbawi is a freelance writer and translator from Gaza./


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