Dear friends,
Please find below my latest article published by Red Flag on the struggle in Nabi Saleh. I have written extensively before on Nabi Saleh, as I have been fortunate enough to spend time in the village and have come to know many of residents of the village, calling many of them friends.
You can check out my earlier posts on Nabi Saleh below:(hopefully they are in chronlogical order, but they may not be)
In solidarity, Kim
**
Please find below my latest article published by Red Flag on the struggle in Nabi Saleh. I have written extensively before on Nabi Saleh, as I have been fortunate enough to spend time in the village and have come to know many of residents of the village, calling many of them friends.
You can check out my earlier posts on Nabi Saleh below:(hopefully they are in chronlogical order, but they may not be)
Nabi Saleh: Palestinian women overpower Israeli soldier attempting to kidnap child
Nabi Saleh: "We are unbreakable, they can demolish our houses, we will rebuild until the last breath”
First West Bank Martyr in Demonstrations Against the Assault on Gaza
Sometime I'm afraid, Sometime I hit: Nabi Saleh's children speak about Israel's occupation & its impact on them
Palestinian activists stage BDS action against Israeli supermarket in Occupied West Bank - 4 arrested, many injured
Israeli Occupation Forces shoot Palestinan woman at close range in Nabi Saleh
Israeli Occupation Forces resume night raids against the village of An Nabi Saleh
B'Tselem & ACRI on the illegal suppression of protests in Nabi Saleh
Palestinian activists stage BDS action against Israeli supermarket in Occupied West Bank - 4 arrested, many injured
Nabi Saleh: Is this where the third intifada will start? Ben Ehrenreich's article in the New York Times
Occupation/Military Court Judgement in the matter of Nagi Tamimi (Translated from Hebrew)
Israel Occupation Forces arrest Bassem Tamimi, leader of non-violent struggle in An Nabi Saleh
Reality vs Propaganda: the truth about the An Nabi Saleh protests
Mustafa Tamimi: A murder captured on camera
Live Sniper-Fire Injures Protester in Nabi Saleh
Critically Injured Mustafa Tamimi of Nabi Saleh Dies of His Wounds
Palestinian protestor severely injured in Nabi Saleh: Israeli Occupation Forces shoot shoot protestor directly in the face with teargas canister
In solidarity, Kim
**
Every Friday since December 2009, the
residents of the small Palestinian village of Nabi Saleh have taken to
their streets to protest against Israel’s ongoing occupation.
Every Friday, they are met with violent repression from the Israeli military. On 28 August, an Israeli soldier once again attempted to arrest a child from the village. This time, however, the soldier’s actions were caught on film. The video, shot by Bilal Tamimi, shows the soldier grabbing 11-year-old Mohammed Tamimi, while the child’s 14-year-old sister Ahed, his mother Nariman and his aunt Nawal struggle with and finally overpower the heavily armed man.
Online, Bilal’s video amassed more than 1 million views in less than three days, before it was pulled by YouTube on 1 September – supposedly for violating “community guidelines”.
The events caught on camera in Nabi Saleh are not new. Similar stories of Palestinian women preventing the Israeli military arresting children, youth and men, have been documented by Palestinian, Israeli and international human rights organisations for decades.
However, during the first and second intifadas, images of resistance were not easily accessible because there wasn’t widespread access to cameras, and the social media of today were either non-existent or in their infancy.
In the last decade, that has changed. Armed with hand-held camcorders, cameras and smart phones, Palestinians are able to document their struggle against Israel’s occupation, as well as the human rights abuses they are subject to, and then distribute the unfiltered images almost immediately.
Ahed Tamimi, speaking with Middle East Eye on 30 August, said of the image of her biting the soldier’s hand: “I didn’t know what I was doing; I was just doing anything to get my brother free”.
Nariman said similarly: “I wasn’t thinking about anything but getting that soldier off of my son, no matter what”.
Ahed and Nariman have been at the forefront of village demonstrations since they started. Along with Ahed’s father, Bassem Tamimi, and other relatives in the village, both have played a leading role in the non-violent popular struggle.
In 2011, Bassem was declared an Amnesty International prisoner of conscience after he was jailed, along with another village activist, Naji Tamimi, for playing a leading role in the weekly protests. Nariman has also been arrested twice for her activism.
Increasing documentation of resistance by Palestinians engaged in struggle against Israel’s 48-year military occupation has resulted in backlash not only from Israel’s occupation forces and politicians but also from supporters of the Zionist state.
Following the incident, the Israeli military threatened to have the Tamimi women arrested. It has stepped up harassment in the village, carrying out night raids and arresting three young men on 8 September.
Israeli politicians, furious at the humiliation of one of their soldiers, have ordered a review of live-fire regulations, with an eye to giving the military more room to kill Palestinian youth. Zionist apologists have dubbed the video of the women as “Pallywood” – a virulent racist slur used within Zionist circles to discredit any Palestinian documentation of Israel’s human rights abuses.
These reactions to the video demonstrate an Israeli sense of entitlement as occupier and coloniser of Palestinian land, and ingrained Zionist racism against Palestinians.
Ahed Tamimi and her family have indeed become some of the most visible faces of resistance in Palestine, but not because what they are doing is staged. It is because the Tamimis and their extended kin refuse to be cowed by Israel’s occupation.
Speaking with Red Flag, Bassem Tamimi explained that his family would continue to protest and document their struggle: “The media is very important. The pictures say a lot. It gives us the opportunity to raise our voices to the free people all over the world and show the reality of the Palestinian people”.
Every Friday, they are met with violent repression from the Israeli military. On 28 August, an Israeli soldier once again attempted to arrest a child from the village. This time, however, the soldier’s actions were caught on film. The video, shot by Bilal Tamimi, shows the soldier grabbing 11-year-old Mohammed Tamimi, while the child’s 14-year-old sister Ahed, his mother Nariman and his aunt Nawal struggle with and finally overpower the heavily armed man.
Online, Bilal’s video amassed more than 1 million views in less than three days, before it was pulled by YouTube on 1 September – supposedly for violating “community guidelines”.
The events caught on camera in Nabi Saleh are not new. Similar stories of Palestinian women preventing the Israeli military arresting children, youth and men, have been documented by Palestinian, Israeli and international human rights organisations for decades.
However, during the first and second intifadas, images of resistance were not easily accessible because there wasn’t widespread access to cameras, and the social media of today were either non-existent or in their infancy.
In the last decade, that has changed. Armed with hand-held camcorders, cameras and smart phones, Palestinians are able to document their struggle against Israel’s occupation, as well as the human rights abuses they are subject to, and then distribute the unfiltered images almost immediately.
Ahed Tamimi, speaking with Middle East Eye on 30 August, said of the image of her biting the soldier’s hand: “I didn’t know what I was doing; I was just doing anything to get my brother free”.
Nariman said similarly: “I wasn’t thinking about anything but getting that soldier off of my son, no matter what”.
Ahed and Nariman have been at the forefront of village demonstrations since they started. Along with Ahed’s father, Bassem Tamimi, and other relatives in the village, both have played a leading role in the non-violent popular struggle.
In 2011, Bassem was declared an Amnesty International prisoner of conscience after he was jailed, along with another village activist, Naji Tamimi, for playing a leading role in the weekly protests. Nariman has also been arrested twice for her activism.
Increasing documentation of resistance by Palestinians engaged in struggle against Israel’s 48-year military occupation has resulted in backlash not only from Israel’s occupation forces and politicians but also from supporters of the Zionist state.
Following the incident, the Israeli military threatened to have the Tamimi women arrested. It has stepped up harassment in the village, carrying out night raids and arresting three young men on 8 September.
Israeli politicians, furious at the humiliation of one of their soldiers, have ordered a review of live-fire regulations, with an eye to giving the military more room to kill Palestinian youth. Zionist apologists have dubbed the video of the women as “Pallywood” – a virulent racist slur used within Zionist circles to discredit any Palestinian documentation of Israel’s human rights abuses.
These reactions to the video demonstrate an Israeli sense of entitlement as occupier and coloniser of Palestinian land, and ingrained Zionist racism against Palestinians.
Ahed Tamimi and her family have indeed become some of the most visible faces of resistance in Palestine, but not because what they are doing is staged. It is because the Tamimis and their extended kin refuse to be cowed by Israel’s occupation.
Speaking with Red Flag, Bassem Tamimi explained that his family would continue to protest and document their struggle: “The media is very important. The pictures say a lot. It gives us the opportunity to raise our voices to the free people all over the world and show the reality of the Palestinian people”.
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