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	Mothers' day in Palestine  
	By Mazin Qumsiyeh 
	Al-Jazeerah, ccun.org, March 22, 2010 
	  
	Today was mother's day in Palestine.  It was not a good day for my 
	mother. 
	In the morning my sister took her to an eye doctor in Hebron as her sight 
	is affected by her diabetes.  On the way back, my sister was slapped by 
	an Israeli policeman with a ticket of 500 NIS (roughly $120) for making what 
	he considers an illegal turn.  The stress made my mother forget a pot 
	of syrup on the stove and it burned through with smoke all over the house as 
	she was visiting with my brother in law who has cancer.  I felt bad 
	because instead of being with them most of the day, I was in two popular 
	resistance events in Beit Jala and Beit Sahour.  
	 The demonstration in Beit Jala, birth place of St. Nicholas, got a 
	delayed start as we negotiated with Palestinian security forces to let us 
	through.  It was a commemoration of the murder of Rachel Corrie and it 
	was coincidental with Mother's day. After several phone calls and 
	conversations, the baton holding Palestinian security forces retreated and 
	we were allowed to proceed down the hill towards where the Israeli soldiers 
	were stationed.  In this regards we felt fortunate.  But we also 
	noted a new Israeli procedure this week as opposed to last week  here: 
	a barbed wire was strung across the road to prevent people from trying to 
	continue down the hill to their lands. The demonstration proceeded 
	peacefully and several people spoke including Jewish Israelis (see video at
	
	http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RNDPfkS5RmU  ).  We left before 
	the demonstration ended because we wanted to get to the even in Beit Sahour. 
	   On the way we heard that Israeli forces shot dead two young 
	Palestinians who were working in their own lands because as they claim they 
	were carrying deadly tools with intend to harm (one was carrying a shovel 
	and digging in his land).  The two 19 year old farmers Muhammad Faysal 
	Qawariq and Salah Muhammad Qawariq) were shot in their village of Awarta 
	near Nablus.  We also heard that the other 16 year old kid shot in the 
	head yesterday died; the two 16 year olds are Mohammed and Useid Qadus from 
	Iraq Burin village.  This brings the casualty figure in 30 hours to 4 
	Palestinians murdered and over 100 injured.  An ISM volunteer was among 
	those injured (see 
	http://palsolidarity.org/2010/03/11832 ).  Many were arrested. 
	Huwaida Arraf of ISM was arrested and released 31 hours later but two 
	Palestinian young men who were with her in detention in an illegal colonial 
	settlement were abused worse and are likely to face further repercussions 
	for demonstrating against the illegal colonial apartheid soldiers on their 
	lands of Nabi Saleh.  It appears that Israel is upping the pressure on 
	popular protests. They also bombed Gaza injuring 12 Palestinians. 
	   At Ush Ghrab, we had a small number of people (15) who volunteered 
	to do some cleaning in the area (photos at
	
	http://www.flickr.com/photos/activestills/4451077896/ ) .  We could 
	not proceed beyond superficial cleaning of a staging area and some of the 
	land around it because land owners were not there for us to build stone 
	hedges etc.  I wondered if they are with their mothers and wives. But I 
	kept thinking of those in Israeli jails (over 10,000 of them) and of their 
	families.  Here are excerpts from Fatma Abu Rahima whose husband is in 
	jail:   "I am grief-stricken since Adeeb's imprisonment. However, I 
	cannot allow myself to lament my husband's loss as I have a family of nine 
	to take care of. Since Adeeb has been away, I have to be both mother and 
	father to my children. We shared the care over the children, this is now my 
	sole responsibility. We miss him very much.  Batuh, the youngest 
	daughter, has caught on the topic of the conversation, stops playing, and 
	stresses the tensity by softly, but firmly addressing her mother: "I want to 
	go with you, to see 'baba'!"   We have only been allowed one visit 
	since Adeeb's arrest [four months ago]. Batuh was there to see her father, 
	but she was afraid of the pale and sad figure that her lively father had 
	turned into. She did not even recognize Adeeb and refused to talk to him. 
	Since this visit, no one from the family has been allowed to visit. We are 
	all considered to be "security threats". It has been even harder on an 
	emotional level. Two months ago, Alaah, my daughter of 17, was very sick and 
	was even hospitalized twice. She could not walk or move, as if she was 
	paralyzed. The doctors could not find anything wrong with her and decided it 
	was psychosomatic..."   I thought about these mothers and wives of 
	prisoners (and over 300 women prisoners) and the mothers of the many 
	murdered Palestinians, thousands over the past 20 years alone, tens of 
	thousands injured.  How will they spend their mother's day? When I 
	talked to my mother this afternoon over a cup of mint tea, she wondered when 
	the death and killing end will and she seemed very sad.  I wondered 
	what I can say that comforts her or any of the millions of Palestinian 
	mothers worried sick about "the situation". I wondered this and many other 
	things silently. I wondered when we in Palestine will celebrate a mothers' 
	day in freedom.  I wondered what happened to Cindy Sheehan, mother of 
	American marine who was killed in Iraq and who was arrested yesterday in 
	Washington in an anti-war demonstration. 
	I wondered how much longer we will suffer of colonial occupation, ethnic 
	cleansing, and oppression after 62 years.  I wonder why people are so 
	patient on injustice.  I wondered why politicians can't think of 
	themselves as fellow human beings.  I wondered who will visit the 
	mothers of the dead Palestinians. Will the Palestinian President or the 
	Israeli Prime Minister go visit some day and try to comfort the grieving 
	mothers.  I wondered for how long my US taxes will still go to fund all 
	of this. I wondered when I will stop wondering about these and many things. 
	I tell myself to take a deep breath and meditate to regain hope and energy. 
	  There is much to be hopeful about. Yesterday there were many other 
	popular resistance actions throughout the West Bank as more and more people 
	take matters into their own hands.  See for example these reports: 
	Bethlehem district: al Ma'sara and al Walaja defend their lands and homes 
	
	http://stopthewall.org/latestnews/2205.shtml    Ramallah 
	district: anti-Wall protests spread to five villages
	
	http://stopthewall.org/latestnews/2204.shtml     (to remember 
	Rachel Corrie) Video: Gaza the killing Zone watched by over 3.3 million 
	viewers on youtube and 140,000 comments! 
	
	http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l0aEo59c7zU <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l0aEo59c7zU&feature=fvw> 
	&feature=fvw    I end with a Greek song for Palestine (English 
	subtitles)! 
	http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OtQtQfA4yzs    Mazin Qumsiyeh, PhD 
	Popular Committee to Resist the Apartheid Wall and Settlements-Beit Sahour A 
	Bedouin in Cyberspace, a villager at home 
	http://www.qumsiyeh.org  
	 http://www.pcr.ps 
       
       
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