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55471


Date: September 13, 2024 at 04:23:31
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Woman, Life, Freedom: Rachel, Shireen, Mahsa and Ayşenur

URL: https://www.juancole.com/2024/09/freedom-shireen-aysenur.html


Woman, Life, Freedom: Rachel, Shireen, Mahsa and Ayşenur
FARIBA AMINI

09/13/2024

A person can only be born in one place. However, he may die several times
elsewhere: in the exiles and prisons, and in a homeland transformed by the
occupation and oppression into a nightmare. -Mahmoud Darwish

Newark, Del. (Special to Informed Comment; Feature) – A few days before the
invasion of Iraq by American forces under G.W. Bush, on March 16, 2003, a
young woman from Seattle, Washington, who had gone to Rafah, in Gaza to
help Palestinians halt the demolition of homes died under the bulldozer of the
Israeli army.

Her name was Rachel Corrie.

She was 23 years old. She was a member of the pro-Palestinian International
Solidarity Movement (ISM)

Her parents fought the judiciary system in Israel for two decades to no avail.
The court rejected their appeals, and no one was prosecuted. It is the usual
case in Israel, the only “democracy” in the Middle East.

On May 11, 2022, the renowned Palestinian American journalist Shireen Abu
Akleh, while reporting at the Jenin refugee camp and having reported from the
occupied territories for nearly 25 years, was shot in the neck by IDF while
reporting for Al Jazeera. It took more than a year for the Israeli officials to
admit that their army was responsible for her death. Was anyone put on trial
for her murder? No.

She was wearing a blue vest with the word Press on it. An Israeli solider shot
her just below her helmet. While her funeral was being held, all kinds of barriers
were set to prolong the procession. She was finally laid to rest in the Mount
Zion cemetery in Jerusalem where she was buried next to her parents. She
was a Roman Catholic.

On September 7, 2024, a young woman also from Seattle, this time a Turkish
American aged 26 had gone to the West Bank for the very same reasons. She
was shot in the head by the Israeli Army.

Her name was Ayşenur Eygi.

She was also a volunteer with the ISM and had recently graduated from the
University of Washington. She and others including many Jewish activists had
been demonstrating against an illegal outpost called Evyatar, an offshoot of the
settlement of Beita.

She had arrived there only two days before her untimely death by a gunfire of
an Israeli soldier. Jonathan Pollack, an Israeli peace activist, participating in
Friday’s protest was an eyewitness. He held her bleeding head before the
ambulance arrived. She died at the hospital.

She, like Rachel, had a full life ahead of her.

Not only did these women want a better world but they also put their
aspirations into action. They could have had a career like so many others but
instead they took a different route: To be instrumental in making a change in
this very unjust world of ours.

Rachel had been born into a middle class, peace-loving family.

Ayşenur was born into a Turkish American family. She resisted and struggled for
the right of a people whose livelihood and land were being stolen by settlers,
guarded by the most immoral army in the world.

She was shot to death like countless others since and before October 7.

The Americans and the Israelis did nothing to secure justice for any of these
women.

In another part of the Middle East, on 16 September 16, 2022, a young woman
named Mahsa Amini, also known by her Kurdish name Jina, went to Tehran with
her brother and friends to have a good time. She was twenty-two. She was
stopped by the morality police and taken to a van by force. She was
interrogated viciously for not having the right hijab and was hit hard on her
head. She was taken to the hospital and a few days later, after going into a
coma, she was pronounced dead. She was not political. Her only sin was that
her attire was not to the liking of the authorities. What followed later after her
shocking death was the largest uprising in Iran called Women Life Freedom,
perhaps the largest feminist movement in our time.

In the Middle East and elsewhere, women have proven that they will take to the
streets and encounter the oppressors to fight for freedom whether for others or
themselves.

It will not be the last time nor the only time.

Just like a century ago, Mary Harris Jones—aka “ Mother Jones ” who was also
called “the most dangerous woman in America”, walked miles to fight for
freedom and the rights of workers, these young women also took their fight to
the streets of Jerusalem, Rafah, the West Bank, Tehran and elsewhere to prove
that women will not be stopped — not by guns, by bulldozers nor intimidation.

Filed Under: Featured, Feminism, Iran, Israel/ Palestine, Palestine, Women

About the Author

Fariba Amini is a freelance writer and journalist. She has interviewed many
scholars of Iran and former U.S. diplomats throughout the years. Her research
on The Most Successful Iranian-Americans was published by the U.S.
Department of State. She is the editor of Letters from Ahmad Abad (in Persian).
Her father was the mayor of Tehran and personal attorney to Prime Minister
Mohammad Mossadegh.


Responses:
[55473]


55473


Date: September 13, 2024 at 09:32:19
From: pamela, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Woman, Life, Freedom: Rachel, Shireen, Mahsa and Ayşenur


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