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Israel/Palestine
Showing Original Post only (View all)Ahed Tamimi: The Mandela of Palestine? [View all]
http://www.tikkun.org/nextgen/ahed-tamimi-the-mandela-of-palestineAhed Tamimi is now a statistic. Just one of thousands of Palestinians illegally imprisoned by Israel as it crosses the half way point of its fifty-first year of Occupation 6154 to be exact. 59 of them women, 250 of them children, and now one more. Ahed is in jail because she slapped an Israeli soldier who was occupying her house not long after he or another soldier in his squad shot her cousin in the head with a rubber bullet, forcing him into a coma. Ahed, along with her cousin and then her mother, came out and started shouting at the soldier to leave, and pushed him. He seemed to push back. She kept shouting and push-hit him several more times, continuing to yell even more. Her mother filmed and then uploaded the scene.
Apparently, Ahed is an existential threat to the state of Israel, and perhaps theyre right. Israeli commentators went ballistic at the viral video, lamenting how she emasculated the soldiers who showed such remarkable restraint in not beating her with the butt of their guns, or just shooting her like her cousin. Not long after, she was seized by security forces, and has since been charged with assault, and her detention extended. No word yet on what the soldier who shot her cousin will be charged with (nor will it ever come).
The first time I met Ahed Tamimi was about five years ago when she was around 11 years old. She wasnt yet famous (or infamous, depending on your point of view); it was before the video of her threatening an Israeli soldier with her tiny fists, fearless and filled with fury, hit the internet. But it was already clear what she would become: a fighter. She was a hero-in-the-making; a star at the early stages of going nova. Not quite exploding yet but only a matter of time and nothing could stop her. Not her parents, not the rest of her family, not the Israelis unless they killed her.
Like everyone else who meets Ahed I was in her village, Nabi Saleh, to witness weekly demonstrations against the Occupation. Nabi Saleh is a small and picturesque village in the central West Bank overlooking a valley with an important spring. In a normal world, or at least a better one, Id be visiting with my kids, hiking in the hills, swimming in the spring before settling down to a nice dinner in a family-run restaurantmost of the West Bank is so stunningly beautiful it could compete with Switzerland for both the vistas and the food. But the world and certainly the West Bank are far from normal; and I wouldnt take my kids there now, not yet anyway. Theyre too young to experience what Ahed and the other kids of the village, and every other square meter of the West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem (not to mention too many refugee camps, from Tripoli to Yarmouk) have lived through for over half a century.
Apparently, Ahed is an existential threat to the state of Israel, and perhaps theyre right. Israeli commentators went ballistic at the viral video, lamenting how she emasculated the soldiers who showed such remarkable restraint in not beating her with the butt of their guns, or just shooting her like her cousin. Not long after, she was seized by security forces, and has since been charged with assault, and her detention extended. No word yet on what the soldier who shot her cousin will be charged with (nor will it ever come).
The first time I met Ahed Tamimi was about five years ago when she was around 11 years old. She wasnt yet famous (or infamous, depending on your point of view); it was before the video of her threatening an Israeli soldier with her tiny fists, fearless and filled with fury, hit the internet. But it was already clear what she would become: a fighter. She was a hero-in-the-making; a star at the early stages of going nova. Not quite exploding yet but only a matter of time and nothing could stop her. Not her parents, not the rest of her family, not the Israelis unless they killed her.
Like everyone else who meets Ahed I was in her village, Nabi Saleh, to witness weekly demonstrations against the Occupation. Nabi Saleh is a small and picturesque village in the central West Bank overlooking a valley with an important spring. In a normal world, or at least a better one, Id be visiting with my kids, hiking in the hills, swimming in the spring before settling down to a nice dinner in a family-run restaurantmost of the West Bank is so stunningly beautiful it could compete with Switzerland for both the vistas and the food. But the world and certainly the West Bank are far from normal; and I wouldnt take my kids there now, not yet anyway. Theyre too young to experience what Ahed and the other kids of the village, and every other square meter of the West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem (not to mention too many refugee camps, from Tripoli to Yarmouk) have lived through for over half a century.
For those who don't know, Ahed Tamimi is the Palestinian teenager who is facing a possible twenty year sentence in an Israeli prison for slapping(not even hitting, just slapping) the IDF soldiers who had just shot her cousin in the head, after invading her family's property.
Twenty years, for a reaction pretty much any human being would have to something like that being done to a member of their family.
It's going to be interesting to hear the arguments for why slapping a soldier who just put your cousin in a coma by shooting him in the head is somehow a threat to Israeli security.
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In the universe when it's aimed at the heavily-armed soldier who just shot your cousin in the head
Ken Burch
Jan 2018
#2
Do you take issue with posters that have #BlackLivesMatter as their signature line, too?
grossproffit
Jan 2018
#5