Author's Note: I originally withdrew this piece because I was
concerned that this piece glorifies women who use
violence. But it doesn't help anyone to keep our
heads in the sand. It is certainly not the way to
greater understanding, of which there has been a great
lack of for many decades, to pretend that victims of
violence are not going to react violently. That would
be naiveté at its best, and completely un-American
since we ourselves used unspeakable violence to beat
British tyranny.
IRA volunteer, Mairead Farrell, who was shot dead by
the SAS in Gibraltar in 1988, once said, "I'm
oppressed as a woman, but I'm also oppressed because
I'm Irish . . . We can't successfully end our
oppression as women until we first end the oppression
of our country."
Palestinian women can identify with Mairead Farrell.
In fact, throughout Palestinian history, there have
been many Maireads.
In the late Sixties and early Seventies, there was the
Palestinian hijacker, Leila Khaled, also known as the
Deadly Beauty. She hijacked her first plane in 1969,
and then had no less than six cosmetic surgeries so
that she could do it again. In 1970, she and her
Latin-American compatriot, Patrick Arguello, went
undetected at the Amsterdam Airport, and hijacked
Israel's El Al plane. No passengers were to be killed
or were killed on either flight, per the orders of the
Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. Today,
Khaled is a mother of two and says that not only does
she have no regrets for her actions, but that she
would do it again.
Khaled was a novelty among international hijackers
because of her gender. But her story prior to the
hijackings was actually quite ordinary for
Palestinians. Khaled was born in Haifa and at age
four, she was forced to leave Palestine in 1948 with
her mother and 12 siblings -- during Israel's
creation. They fled to Lebanon, like so many other
families from the north of Palestine. She still
remembers being told by her mother not to pick oranges
because they were in Lebanon and it was not their
fruit to pick. She ultimately committed herself
full-time to armed struggle at the tender age of 15.
Israel's subsequent Occupation of the West Bank, Gaza,
and East Jerusalem in 1967 also inspired a number of
women to join the armed struggle, especially in the
Occupied Territories. Many of these women were
trained in military camps in Jordan for guerilla
operations.
Fast forward about 35 years. Meet Wafa Idris, the
first Palestinian female suicide bomber. Idris
recently killed herself and an Israeli man. More than
100 were wounded. Idris, who was a nurse, grew up in
the Amari refugee camp outside of Ramallah, West Bank.
"She came home from work every day and told us what
she saw: a wounded child, a youth whose brains were
spilled by a bullet, a young man with a bullet in his
heart, eyes that were red from tear gas," said a
friend of Idris.
"Why go through all that, and for no pay?" her mother
said she once asked her daughter. Idris responded,
"For our country and our people."
More Palestinian women are expected to follow Idris's
footsteps, as Israelis are given the green light to
continue bombing, to further tighten a devastating
economic siege, to prevent people from obtaining
medical care, and to kill Palestinians for competition
-- according to an Israeli officer who now refuses to
serve in the Israeli Defense Force. Palestinian
women have not only been victims, but they have had to
step in and fill the missing voids left by the
imprisonment, maiming, or killing of their male loved
ones.
There are Palestinian women who have chosen less
dramatic routes in the pursuit of freedom, such as the
articulate chief spokesperson, Hanan Ashrawi. But the
common thread is freedom. Israel's refusal to treat
their neighbors as equals with dignity is sadly adding
to the desperation that many Palestinian women feel,
as well as the acts that follow.
And so I reflect on a memorable lecture during my
years at Michigan State University. It was given by
a Palestinian female professor. When she discussed
the fact that Palestinian women were among the first
in the Third World to ever demand equal rights, an
American student asked, "Well, do they have equal
rights now?"
The professor quietly responded that if Palestinian
men don't even have the most basic of human rights,
what was the point of pushing forth a feminist
movement?
Mairead, are you nodding?
Sherri Muzher is a Palestinian-American activist,
lawyer, and freelance journalist.
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