Sunday, 30 April 2017

Personal reflections of the recent women's visit to Palestine


I have recently returned from a visit to Palestine. It was both shocking and enlightening. The trip was organised by CADFA (Camden Abu Dis Friendship Association) to strengthen links and build understanding between women living in the UK and Palestine. It involved going to different parts of the West Bank and meeting with women’s groups involved in different aspects of Palestinian life and we met many inspiring people.

For three months in 2009 I was a volunteer in Abu Dis working with women’s groups and teaching in some of the schools. It was a great shock to see how life for Palestinians had deteriorated in the intervening years.
Abu Dis is a university town which had previously been a suburb of Jerusalem but since 2001 it was divided by a 8 metre concrete wall thus separating its inhabitants from close family, work and hospital healthcare. Jerusalem is no longer a short walk away but involves special permits and a circuitous route passing through an Israeli army check point. In recent years Al Quds University as well as schools have been constantly bombarded by the Israeli army who shoot tear gas and rubber bullets indiscriminately and make random arrests at night time of boys as young as fourteen years old. This kind of harassment has intensified since I was there eight years ago.
Some of the tear gas and rubber bullet canisters collected in Abu Did
I was deeply upset by the takeover of property within the cities of Hebron and Jerusalem. The number of road closures in Hebron has so increased that life for Palestinians in the old city has become near impossible. The army presence is everywhere and I learned that, for “security”, there are twelve soldiers for every Israeli settler in this city.

 
Streets closed to Palestinians in Hebron
The number of settlements in the West Bank is greatly increasing. Jewish people from all over the world are lured by the gift of a new house and  Israeli support to settle in this area.
We met with a Bedouin community who had purchased some land to build a settled environment for themselves only to find later that Israeli settlers moved onto their land to build their own homes with the support of their government. Not only were the settlers building houses but they had also established a chicken farm factory on the land. If the Bedouins even built a small house it was immediately bulldozed. The settlement had electricity and water supply whereas the Bedouins were denied these basic services.

 Bedouin homes next to a new Israeli settlement
I left very confused. This land was all part of the “West Bank” and therefore Palestinian land. However the West Bank is divided into areas A, B and C; A being under the Palestinian Authority control; B controlled by Israeli military and C designated as “empty Land”. The Bedouins had bought and therefore owned their land in Area C and yet the settlers claimed the right to build on their land. This does not make sense!

I left Palestine with a sad heart but at the same time with a warm glow lit by the positivity of the people I met, particularly the young, who still have hope for their future lives in a free society which can only be achieved with the support of the international community.

Annika Miller Jones

WOMEN'S FOOTBALL TOURNAMENT!

#CADFA women's cup 2017 CHAMPIONS!!  What a beautiful evening. Many thanks to #Calthorpe Project, good luck to their women's league and thanks for your help raising money for our Palestinian girls' football visit #Football4Freedom

Women's Links at K2K Radio

Thanks Maha for making it possible again for CADFA women's links to contribute to your "Maha's Music" programme today. Lots of the women's visit in that programme, with Maha, Annika and Nandita in the studio, recordings of Sheila and Jane interviewing some of the young women from Dar Assadaqa and Hiyam on the phone. Listen to it for the music as well...

https://m.mixcloud.com/ktokradio/mahas-music-ft-cadfa-cafe-april-2017/

Saturday, 29 April 2017

Setting up the women's stall

Every Saturday in Central London (Brunswick Centre) #CADFA women's links run a stall full of Palestinian produce - a chance to talk to people about human rights in Palestine

Sunday, 23 April 2017

Lets take a stand (Palestinian Prisoners )

Sunday
23rd April 2017
4:10

1500 prisoners are fighting for their freedom from Israeli jails everyday .
For seven days Prisoners till the date are going through food strike in demand of the normal human rights , any person is aloud to have.



Today this was the matter of our discussion , How we can make a difference ?
How we can create a change in this matter ?

A discussion between 8 girls in our women's Media group concluded a decision to write an-article  about the matter expressing three side of the story , Facts , expectations and feelings .

An article that awe hope to spread locally and internationally and we hope it will find listeners and make a difference .



This will be step one for us towards creating the change we hope for .
but it won''t be the last , simply because we believe in our prisoner's right to be free , and a descent lifestyle anyone in the entire world should have.

Step two is something greater we're storing in mind for the right time for it to come and we hope it will make the change we wish for .

we believe in the Idea of that if we don't tell our stories no one will therefore we are making sure that we do ..... and more is yet to come

Listen to your heart (what does it say ) ?

Sunday 9/4/ 2017
4:10
It's Quite remarkable how we Palestinian youth are attached to our stories ( Stories Told by our parents or our grandparents ) .
How our generation is attached to the history we had much more than we think .
Today with 7 girls of us we went back in Time to those days when everything had a different taste , when life had a wider aspects .



Talking about the time Palestine was Free , when freedom was felt not said .
It was truly a time for us to think and listen to our hearts and what it tells us to do , regarding our country .And what's the difference we can make ?
From there our ideas joined to come up with something bigger and greater .
our next step is to start filming our stories through our parents and grandparents ,, and let the world hear , and set our voices to be free.