In the movie 5 Broken Cameras, I noticed that the men
were the stars of the film, leading the way for with their sons close behind,
to the wall , to the outpost, to the resistance. I saw the women singing in
celebration but keeping themselves behind the scenes, behind the camera, behind
the wall. I saw them mourn for the 7 year old who was killed by a sniper,
gathered together weeping and praying.
I knew that the
women were not as complicit as they seemed. Emad’s wife was a force to be
reckoned with in the film, reiterating to her children time and time again that
they must resist and that they had a right to exist in the land they were born
to. So I searched the internet to find information in the ways I which women
were resisting under these conditions and found Al Jazeera’s article “How
Palestinian Women Defy Israel’s Occupation”
The article
features three women- a mother, an artist, and a woman who refuses to leave.
Lidia Rimawi’s husband, after being married for only 4 months, was arrested and
convicted as a political prisoner and will be 50 before he is released. The
couple still wanted children so they smuggled his sperm out of prison and
months later their son Majd was born. The guards refuse to allow their son in,
knowing that he is a sign of resistance and a victory embodied. Rimawi says “I
did this to challenge the occupation.” Her husband suffered the consequences
further in an extension of his sentence by 2 months and a 5,000 shekel fine
($1,300). The couple has vowed to have more children and continue what they
view as resistance to the occupation- “Women like Lidia make up the backbone of
the resistance movement in Palestine. As givers of life, keepers of family
tradition, and culture bearers, they continue to resist in often under-reported
and under-acknowledged ways.”
Fulla Jallad
actively participates in the resistance, throwing rocks while surrounded by
tear gas, she says “The role of woman as resistor is a vital role," she
says. "I believe woman is the mother of a martyr. She is the sister of a
fighter. She's the daughter of a hunger striker." Jallad painted the
portrait of a man who was starving himself for being held on no charge by
Israelis, and that portrait has circulated since she posed with it next to the
Red Cross- “Hungry for Dignity”. She also works as a tour guide at the Natar
Resort, the largest museum on the West Bank, saying, "I get to show the
world that Palestine has always existed. In the war of existence, to exist is
to resist."
The article
ends with the story of Wadid, a Palestinian woman who refuses to leave her home
despite threats and offers of money. She is situated with three other homes
right outside East Jerusalem, and tourists pass by daily, creating a spectacle
of her life. Her son was murdered by an Israeli minor who served almost no time
for the crime and whose family lives a few houses away. She claims her husband’s
dying wish was for her to always remain in the home and to never take money for
it. She is 78 years old and says she isn’t going anywhere- “I stay here because it is our land. It's
Palestinian land."
The ways in which resistance surfaces and forms is
unpredictable. Everyone comes to the table with various privileges and
positions, but I believe that the ways in which Palestinian women resist may be
some of the most covert and creative tactics I have learned about. These women
have to tread lightly around their very strict gender roles, religiously
reinforced, but continue living in an occupied state that denies their very right
to exist. I think the occupation has done what many acts of oppression have
done in the past, and made rebels out of the trampled. These women refuse to be
silent and refuse to be overlooked. They continue to liberate themselves and
their loved ones through the physical act of creating life, to reminding
everyone of the historical right and past of Palestine’s existence.
SIDENOTE: I happened to stumble across this movie this
weekend (very weird coincidence) and watched it and it was SO good, and
relevant to the class. It’s fiction, but it’s superb and depicts the struggle well I think
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v5dSeBD-qiY
Once again, you deliver a solid connection between course conversation, textual readings, and an often-silenced narrative. I'm going to have to check out that documentary. You should check out the documentary attached to mine.
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