VISIT PALESTINE  - Transcript

 

Bold type = Voice over

Italics = Sub-titles

Standard = Interviews to camera.

 

 

10:02:52:16     Jenin refugee camp, the camp of endurance, has become a symbol                    of resistance across the Middle East.

 

10:03:33:20     In the aftermath of the massacre, people tried to reclaim some                          stability in their lives, but there was no respite.

 

10:03:42:22     The Israeli military returned with an aggression and recklessness                     born out of a heightened sense of impunity. The curfews,                                assassinations and causal killings continued.

 

Voice in the hospital ward:

 

10:04:52:00    Where was she wounded, doctor?

 

10:04:54:00     Here, in her left arm.

 

10:04:57:07     There’s another bullet in her chest…

 

10:05:00:05     Close to her heart.

 

10:05:05:00     I grappled with how to respond.

 

10:05:08;18     I decided to use my physical presence to try to minimize some of                       the brutality.

 

10:05:13:15     The ability of activists to do this is possible only because of                                inherent racism. Our blood as foreigners is deemed less                                         expendable than that of Palestinians and we are less likely to get                shot engaging in  interventionist actions.

 

10:05:27:45     It was an uncomfortable dynamic to work with but I used it to                          intervene and to negotiate with Israeli soldiers and to be present as                       a witness during invasions.

 

10:05:40:44     When viewed from a comfortable context in the West, footage of                      activists standing in front of tanks can seem crazy and possibly                suicidal. But it’s a natural reaction to an unnatural situation.

 

10:05:52:46     When you’re surrounded by violence, it’s a very human reaction                      to try to struggle for people to be allowed basic human rights. It’s                       the only response ultimately that allowed me to retain my own                                   humanity too.

Young man in the street:

 

10:06:11:00     Caoimhe often risked her life…

 

10:06:16:22     …putting herself in front of the army.

 

10:06:21:20     I often advised her to be more careful.

 

10:06:26:16     Especially after what happened to the American girl in Gaza.

                       

10:06:29:23     She would say. “No. I am no better than you…

 

10:06:33:01     …we are all human beings, all the same.”

 

10:06:35:14     There is no difference between Palestinians, foreigners, Christians                         or Muslims.

 

10:06:38:20     No one did as much for us as she did.

 

10:06:41:09     She took real risks.

 

10:06:43:07     She often faced the army…

 

10:06:47:00     When they came to shoot at us.

 

10:06:50:16     She would stand up to them and face them.

 

10:06:54:01     When there was a curfew she helped people to…

 

10:06:58:02     …keep safe while getting bread and moving around.

 

10:07:01:13     Once there was a small boy who had…

 

10:07:04:21     …fallen in front of an approaching tank.

 

10:07:06:04     She ran, grabbed the boy and brought him to safety.

 

10:07:12:15     She wasn’t afraid of anything.

 

10:07:38:00     One has a responsibility to stand by, not necessarily to stand up, not to                   be removed from the people that you are trying to protect or trying to                 minimise the brutality that they suffer on a day-to-day basis in any way               that you can.

 

10:07:52:00     But to stand with them, to co-exist, to live, to breathe, to exalt in                             their strength and to try and comfort them in the times that we are all                    living through now in which people are suffering a level of pain that I                         think most human beings would break underneath.

 

10:08:44:00     You know if you watch any situation like that tank moving up the hill,                   you see immediately that those children knew how to duck. They know                   how to get down and this is what is keeping them alive. This self-                         preservation instinct.

 

10:08:56:09     Even when the tanks are not here it is the uncertainty of                                           when they will come back into town, it’s the uncertainty of                                           should you let your child go to school. Because you don’t know                                whether he or she will come back home again alive.

 

10:09:06:09     It’s the uncertainty that every time you say goodbye to somebody in the                 morning of whether they are going to come back to you walking                                    or come back to you in an ambulance or come back to you dead.

 

School teachers Voice:

 

10:09:39:00     The tanks are coming, sit down!

 

10:09:46:07     The tanks!

 

10:09:48:20     Palestinian school children are under continual siege.

 

10:10:01:00     Over the past four years, over two thousand, eight-hundred school                   children have been wounded on their journeys to and from school.

 

10:10:08:04     Five children have been killed in their classrooms by Israeli gun                       fire.

 

Ali Samoudi- Camera man:

 

10:10:23:05     We want the freedom, we want the life.

 

10:10:25:11     I want my children to go to the school free and go back to the house                       free.

 

10:10:31:18     But you see everything in here dangerous, everything in here                                  dangerous.

 

10:10:42:22     Ali Samoudi is a local journalist and father of three.

 

10:10:46:02     He has been seriously wounded twice whilst trying to document                        the daily human rights violations committed by Israeli soldiers.

 

10:10:53:13     Ali challenges the occupation with his camera deconstructing                            myths with the power and truth of his images.

 

10:11:26:00     I walked  children to and from school to try and keep them a little                    bit safer.

 

10:11:29:10     Gaining an education in occupied Palestine is an act of                                       resistance in itself.

 

Caoimhe talking outside:

 

10:11:37:00     My time here, a very small proportion of it involved direct action and                     getting in between when Israeli soldiers entered into Jenin.

 

10:11:45:11     A far greater part - and I regard this as much a direct action -was the                       sitting and the listening and the trying to assume some of the pain and              the burden of people who are living around me.

 

10:12:14:15     They say they are happy because there is no school. Like any other kid                   in the world.

 

Young girl:

 

10:12:22:00     That’s  her father.

 

10:12:24:13     Her father was killed. 

 

Young girl:

 

10:12:26:00     Her father was martyred.

 

10:12:31:10     In these months of living in the camps, of sitting with people and                      hearing their stories, I began to understand why there is a                                   deliberate policy of excluding their narratives in the mainstream                         media.

 

10:12:42:07     The criminalisation and dehumanisation of Palestinians,                                    relies on our ignorance.

 

10:12:47:28     Reaching across the divides of misinformation and forming our                        own relationships with Palestinians is itself a threat to the                              occupation.

 

10:12:15:10     The family of Sheikh Bassam Alssadi, a political leader of Islamic                     Jihad, has been exposed to continual persecution.

 

10:12:25:00     Sheikh Bassam was wanted by the Israelis and his family targeted                    as a means of putting pressure on him to turn himself in.

 

10:13:33:20     His children have been deeply traumatised by what they have                           witnessed.

 

 

 

 

Doha - young girl:

 

10:13:37:00     Sometimes when we go to school there are tanks that come and shoot                     at us.

 

10:13:41:17     They gather us all on the lower floor. We have two floors at school…

 

10:13:46:06     …but they get us to go to the lower floor.

 

                       

10:13:50:5       The tanks start shooting and they tell us to put our hands behind our                      heads and to keep our mouths open, so that we can keep on                                               breathing.

 

10:14:03:00     We also have people with first-aid training so that if a girl faints they                     can help her.

 

10:14:12:15     When the shooting starts, they hide us under the desks.

 

10:14:18:05     About a year ago, they taught us how to lie on the floor when the                            shelling starts.

 

10:14:30:16     They taught us to put our hands behind our heads and lie on the                              floor so we don’t get hurt.

 

10:14:41:02     They told us that when random shelling starts we should not cry,                             especially during curfews…

 

10:14:47:04     …because if the army find out that pupils are at school, they will be                        firing even more.

 

10:14:52:12     At school we are often told that we will grow up as an ignorant                               generation…

 

10:15:03:00     …because these tanks are really distracting.

 

10:15:07:01     But I hope that we will carry on resisting, and they tell us that                                 learning is a form of Jihad.

 

10:15:15:05     The tanks come to our school because they want us to grow up as an                      ignorant generation.

 

10:15:21:00     But we are determined to resist, so when the tanks attack, we just                            carry on studying as usual.

 

10:15:28:05     They don’t shut the schools. We carry on studying and I hope we get                      good grades.

 

10:15:38:10     I lost my cousin and my brother and my grand-mother

                       

10;15:43:15     but we Palestinians are united.

 

10:15:48:17     I hope that we can stay steadfast that way.

 

10:15:57:20     No matter how many martyrs we lose and how many of us get                                 injured, we will still resist.

 

10:16:06:12     We will remain steadfast and rooted here in Palestine.

 

Ya-yah - young boy:

 

10:16:11:15     It’s my turn!

 

10:16:13:09     It’s my turn! It’s my turn!

 

Doha - young girl:

 

10:16:15:17     This is my brother, my beloved brother.

 

10:16:20:16     He was killed by Sharon.

 

10:16:23:02     This is my brother. He was killed by Sharon.

 

10:16:26:22     I am going to kill Sharon.

 

10:16:29:05     Ya-Yah is a seven year old child and his understanding of Sharon                    and the occupation is from what he witnesses everyday.

 

10:16:36:06     He has witnessed things no child should ever see and lived and                          breathed the occupation his entire life.

 

10:16:44:16     Though his passion and anger are genuine, he mimics a rhetoric he                  hears around him.

 

Az - teenage boy:

 

10:16:59:05     I was going to buy some things for my parents when the shooting                            started.

 

10:17:06:09     It was random fire, so I was hit.

 

10:17:10:20     The bullet entered my neck here, and exited here.

 

 

10:17:13:14     I could easily have died or been paralysed.

 

10: 17:16:10    So this Jewish man who was shooting…

 

10:17:19:00     …does he have any humanity?

 

10:17:21:08     He is willing to kill  a soul.

 

10:17:24:19     Isn’t a soul precious?

 

 

Doha - young girl:

 

10:17:40:03     This is my brother.

 

10:17:43:00     My brother who was killed.

 

10:17:52:00     He fought with guns and stones.

 

10:17:54:12     He used to jump on top of tanks to try and dismantle…

 

10:17:58:23     …some of the pieces attached to the tank but it was difficult because                       they are fixed.

 

10:18:02:21     One time, though, he did manage to dismantle a speaker from the tank.

 

10:18:10:09     He used to throw stones at the tanks.

 

10:18:17:00     Is it true that a stone can do nothing to a tank.

 

10:18:23:11     But it is part of resistance, a very important part.

 

10:18:28:19     I hope one day we will have tanks and heavy machinery so we can fight                  them …

 

10:18:34:13     the same way they are fighting us.

 

 

Young man looking at poster:

 

10:19:33:20     Look, a twelve year old child is challenging a seventy ton tank with a                     stone.

 

10:19:41:00     Why only a stone?

 

10:19:44:00     This is not just a show!

 

10:19:47:19     It’s a symbol of the greatness - of our will to resist.

 

10:19:54:03     The kid threw a stone at the tank…

 

10:19:58:10     …and the soldier shot him, splitting his head open.

 

10:20:02:19     It was a devastating scene.

 

10: 20:06:07    These two guys, Diy’aa and Hakim, may God rest their souls.

                        I really cherished them.

 

10:20:16:12     This guy, Nidal Kastoni, was also martyred, he was shot by a sniper on                  his way to school.

 

10:20:26:14     He was only on his way to school. No one can deny it, I saw it with my                   own eyes.

 

10:20:31:16     He was shot by a round of bullets and bled to death before we could                       get him to hospital.

 

10:20:44:07     God rest their souls, all of them.

 

 

10:21:09:18     There is no genuine space for childhood in Jenin.

                       

10:21:12:24     The occupation brings with it a culture of imposed death.

 

10:21:16:14     Children witness the brutality of Israeli soldiers on a daily basis.         

10:21:20:14     They see their parents humiliated and their homes desecrated.

 

10:21:23:20     They know that there are no sacred spaces, that there is no refuge                    for their vulnerable little bodies.

 

10:21:31:20     Though forced to become fearless in order to survive,

 

10:21:34:00     the majority of Palestinian children are traumatised by what they                    have been through.

                       

 

Caoimhe outside at night:

 

10:22:14:10     You are all crazy!

 

Woman on roof:

 

10:22:17:19     Come in and rest for a while.

 

Caoimhe outside at night:

 

10:22:19:20     Thank you but don’t worry, it’s late and we’d better be going.

 

 

 

 

Caoimhe outside at night:

 

10:22:23:16     Were those real bullets?

 

Woman on the roof:

 

10:22:25:17     No, just the children playing.

 

Caomihe outside at night:

 

10:22:28:00     There is already enough shooting around here from the army!

 

Caoimhe voice over:

 

10:22:38:00     It is when the often chaotic, violence-filled days fold into night,                         here can be felt.

10:22:50:14     It was often during the night as I sat with families that they spoke                    of their loss and loneliness and fear and hope.

 

Young girl at night:

 

10:23:03:11     The invasion was very difficult.

 

10:23:10:07     The other invasions had not been as bad as this one.

 

10: 23:18:00    We never imagined that they would demolish so many homes and kill                     so many people.

 

10:23:27:00     Before, in other invasions, the tanks would come and do damage, but                     his time…

 

10:23:32:09     they killed so many of our families and friends. People that we                            loved.

 

10:23:41:19     The soldiers entered the camp near my neighbour’s house.

 

10:23:47:00     They started to throw smoke grenades at them and lots of yellow                             smoke came out.

 

10:23:51:02     They shouted at us to get out of our homes. But where could we go?

 

10:23:58:08     The tanks came in and demolished the houses.

 

10:24:05:05     But they didn’t give people time to escape.

 

10:24:14:00     No. They demolished their houses on top of them.

 

10:24:19:20     The bulldozers didn’t care what they ran over or how many people                         they killed.

 

Woman on the veranda at night.:

 

10:24:42:21     Our life is not a life. I wish to God that the occupation would          disappear.

 

10:24:47:03     I don’t mean that all the Jews disappear but, God willing, if it         happened we wouldn’t mind!

 

10:24:53:12     But we really want peace, we are tired of this situation.

 

10:24:57:13     We want to live like people in any other country. Nobody really      supports us.

 

10:25:03:20     They go on television shows and talk about us but they don’t take any         action.

 

10:25:12:21     We need solidarity. We want peace. We can live with the Jews - them in     their state, us in ours.

 

10:25:21:00     We are afraid for our children, just as they are afraid for their        children.

 

10:25:25:18     It is not necessary for them to come into the camp everyday to arrest,         shoot and kill us.

 

10:25:31:09     The Israelis die too when our people carry out attacks in Israel.

 

10:25:36:00     Sharon thinks by killing and arresting people he will suppress the

                        Intifada.

 

10:25:42:18     But it has had the opposite effect. It’s just strengthening it.

 

10:25:46:02     If someone you love is martyred wouldn’t you want to avenge them?

 

10:25:50:20     Our neighbour, for example, was martyred leaving seven children.

 

10:25:56:00     Of course they will grow up wanting to avenge their Father.

 

10:26:01:19     If someone you love is martyred wouldn’t you want to avenge them.

 

10:26:05:04     The Israelis need to treat us with dignity and return our prisoners, then      there will be peace.

 

10:26:15:17     God willing, we will have some peace and experience some freedom.

 

10:26:24:05     God willing.

 

 

 

10:26:47:00     Ferial is a thirty year old widow, her husband was arrested and                        then executed during the massacre. She struggles to provide for                    her six children and to cope with the loneliness without him.

 

Ferrial talks in her home:

 

10:27:00:00     Where is your dad? Where’s daddy? Send your dad a kiss.

 

10:27:13:00     We were all together in my uncle’s house with his neighbours when the                  soldiers came.

 

10:27:21:00     The son of my neighbour wore a black belt, he did manual work and                       had a bad back.

 

10:27:31:00     The soldiers put us women into a room and took the men outside.

 

10:27:35:00     They ordered the men to lift up their shirts, searched my husband and                    found nothing on him.

 

10:27:39:00     My neighbour’s son lifted up his shirt, the soldiers saw the back belt                       and opened fire on them.

 

10:27:44:00     They fired so many bullets at them.

 

10:27:49:01     When we collected the casings later, they filled the tray.

 

10:27:51:00     They killed them for no reason.

 

10:27:55:00     The soldiers had thought that he was wearing an explosive belt.

 

10:27:58:20     My husband was holding our baby son and my neighbour’s son was                       holding his baby niece.

 

10:28:04:00     Do you think men holding babies in their arms would blow themselves                    up?

 

10:28:09:20     The soldiers were afraid. They were killing any Palestinian they saw,                     without cause.

 

10:28:16:00     My husband was holding our small son, the one that you just saw.

 

10:28:19:00     They took the babies from their arms, opened fire and shot my husband                  and the others dead.

 

10:28:27:00     Can you imagine, you in one room, your husband outside and you can                    do nothing?

 

10:28:32:00     This was the situation we live through. It was the most difficult time in                    my life.

 

10:28:40:00     If you are dead, at least you rest. But we die a hundred deaths every                       day.

 

10:28:44:20     We fear that the soldiers will come back, the everyday shootings,                            arrests and horror.

 

10:28:48:20     The soldiers came into the camp through your neighbourhood.

 

10:28:54:00     They went around Abu Samer’s house and then down into the camp.

 

10:28:58:00     With patience and faith we will get through. My friends give me a lot of                  support.

 

10:29:05:20     They don’t let me feel alone.

 

10:29:09:24     But of course my life is still a bit difficult.

 

10:29:21:00     Ferial, come and see your son!

 

10:29:24:00     He is wiping the dust off his Father’s photograph.

 

10:29:33:00     Kiss him. Kiss your father.

 

Caoimhe Narration

 

10:29:50:00     A lot of people who I have spoken to about the invasion,                                     particularly younger people, kept on saying again and again how                   very beautiful the sky looked for the first few days of the invasion.

 

10:30:01:00     And the missiles and the flares the flares going up and the missiles                   going down, how they looked lit up the whole sky as if it were Eid.

 

10:30:13:00     And then a few seconds later it would destroy a home or a life.

 

10:30:18:20     And that they found it hard to reconcile the two. Beauty one                             second and tragedy the next.

 

10:30:51:00     Whilst living in the camp I worked as a volunteer with the                                 local ambulance service. Along with incredibly brave, committed                  paramedics.

 

10:30:59:00     It was heartbreaking picking up the broken bodies Israeli soldiers                    left in their wake.

 

10:31:06:00     I tried to provide some emotional support to families as they                             grieved their dead, and to be there for friends and their pain.

 

 

Maha - Lady talking to camera about Caoimhe:

 

 

10:31:13:20     When my mother was killed…

 

10:31:18:00     Caoimhe was the only one who stood with me, listened and helped.

 

10:31:24:00     She introduced me to other foreign volunteers, her friends.

 

10:31:29:00     I don’t want anything practical, I know they can’t bring back my                            mother, my brother or my house.

 

10:31:37:00     But it is beautiful when someone stands by you and your voice is being                   heard outside.

 

10:31:41:00     Caoimhe is my sister, she is my friend.

 

 

Palestinian man talks about Caiomhe:

 

10:32:49:20     The first time Caoimhe came to stay in our home, she was a stranger to                  us.

 

10:33:00:00     But after a short while she became one of our household, one of the                        family.

 

10:33:06:20     She has lived with us for a long time now and we all consider her as                       part of the family.

 

10:33:13:00     She comes and goes, eats meals with us, sleeps here sometimes and is                     part of family life.

 

 

Palestinian girl talks about Caoimhe:

 

10:33:20:00     Caoimhe is like our sister and we love her a lot.

 

10:33:24:20     She walked the girls to school during curfew.

 

10:33:28:20     When they were afraid, she made them brave.

 

10:33:34:00     She’s our sister and we love her a lot.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10:33:47:00     As the months went on and I integrated into the camp,

                        The people around me became like family.

 

10:33:54:00     I internalised a lot of the pain and trauma I was witnessing.

 

10:33:58:00     Leaving was no longer an option for me.

 

10:34:00:00     I felt a responsibility and need to stay.

 

10:34:05:00     Jenin had become my home but it was a dangerous one.

 

 

Caoimhe to camera:

 

10:34:18:00     And I think as the soldiers and the Israeli police who frequent Jenin,

                        Who come in and out for operations, who come in and out for                                 enforcement of curfew with live ammunition, who come in and out to                 teargas young children in the school courtyard.

 

10:34:33:00     Who come in and out to open fire on crowded market places

 

10:34:36:00     Increasingly, more so as they see my face on an everyday basis,

                        As they get to know me by name and nationality and presence…

 

10:34:47:00     I think that  gradient of protection that was keeping me safe for so                           many months by virtue of being a foreigner, by virtue of being a                           woman, is fading a little bit.

 

10:35:01:20     And I’ve seen that in their increasing brutality towards me personally.

 

10:35:05:00     The fact that they are not afraid to beat me at this stage.

 

10:35:09:18     In the very symbolic act such as throwing stones at me.

 

10:35:12:00     In the name calling and the threats. The death threats that are voiced to                   me on a continual basis.

 

10:35:18:00     Or the shooting, sometimes a few metres, a few centimetres above                          my head.

 

 

TV News Voice over:

 

10:35:33:00     A 24yr old Irish woman was also hit in the fighting.

                        The Israeli Army said it will investigate both incidents.

                        But Caoimhe Butterly a pro-Palestinian peace activist has no doubt that                 it was the Israelis who shot her.

 

Caoimhe talks from her hospital bed:

 

10:35:46:00     The tank could see me very clearly, it opened fire and I was hit a close                   range.

 

10:35:52:00     I was comparatively lucky, the bullet had passed through my leg and I                    could walk again within a month.

 

10:35:59:00     On the same day as I was shot, UN consultant, Ian Hook and eleven                       year old Mohammed Bilalo were both shot dead.

 

10:36:07:00     Seven other children were seriously wounded.

 

10:36:09:10     The amount of press attention I received impressed upon me the racism      `           of the mainstream media.

 

10:36:15:00     That a bullet in my leg elicited more coverage than a death of an eleven                 year old child.

                       

10:36:21:00     I was overwhelmed with the number of visitors I received.

 

10:36:23:17     I had spent so much time visiting others in hospital and now I was the                    patient.

 

Maha speaks about Caoimhe:

 

10:36:28:20     When Caoimhe was shot many people came to visit her, even from                          villages outside Jenin.

 

10:36:40:00     You can’t imagine how popular she is…

 

10:36:44:10     …how much people love her.

 

10:36:49:12     So many people came to the hospital…

 

10:36:53:16     …school students gathered to see her.

 

10:36:58:20     People wanted to meet her, they had heard so much about how much                      she had helped people.

 

 

 

Caoimhe speaking at night:

 

10:37:22:06     Getting shot really taught me to evaluate my own direction,

                        That I have to respect the human rights of my own family in

                        terms of them having to live in continual terror for my security                        and physical wellbeing.

 

10:37:38:08     But also the fact that, because of what I witnessed here, that it is                       very important to be an advocate here for people who have been                   made voiceless.

 

10:37:48:21     Its very important to do the talks and the campaign work on the                       outside and I cannot do that dead.

 

 

Caoimhe Voice over:

 

10: 37:56:03    Reluctantly I left Palestine for a while to recuperate and to spend                     some time with my family.

 

10:38:00:10     Although I missed Jenin terribly I soon realised that I could be

                        effective giving talks about Palestine and what I had witnessed                          there.

 

10:38:07:23     Over the following months I spoke at over two-hundred schools,                       universities and public meetings in Europe.

 

10:38:13:17     I tried to do justice to the resilience and endurance of Palestinians.

                        And urged people to match their determination with a                                       determination of our own.

 

 

Caoimhe speaking at night:

 

10:38:40:18     What I have seen, what I have lived here has burned a very deep                      impression upon my psyche, upon my soul, upon my heart.

 

10:38:47:15     And it has become a very deep living, breathing accompaniment to                  every moment that I’ve lived since.

 

Caoimhe voice over:

 

10:38:53:20     My journeys continued, I was invited to India to speak at                                   universities and meet with trade unions to talk about the need for                 grass-roots solidarity with Palestinians.

 

10:39:08:17     During this time I also had the dubious honour of being named a                      ‘European Hero  by Time Magazine, the same magazine that                                  named George Bush Man of the year.

 

10:39:16:14     I decided to accept the award in order to use the night as a                                platform.

 

10:39:21:20     I accepted in the name of Miriam Alushahi, my friend’s mother                        who was killed in the massacre.

 

 

Caoimhe speaking at night:

 

10:39:27:20     Being labelled a European Hero for me was intensely humiliating

                        Because I’m not.

 

10:39:34:14     Because I think that there are millions of heroes or non-heroes, resilient                 human beings who grace the face of this planet who will never be                           honoured with such an award.

 

10:39:46:20     I didn’t see it as an honour coming from TIME being labelled a hero,

                        and I certainly don’t see myself as one.

 

10:39:53:20     I think that the whole label is counter-productive, it puts acts that are                      very basic and very necessary and very simple on unattainable                         platforms for a lot of people.

 

10:40:06:20     If it’s deemed heroism, it seems almost sub-human, it doesn’t seem                        normal.

 

10:40:12:00     I felt that in accepting it, on behalf on Miriam Alushahi, Maha’s                             mother, because she was a friend first of all that I was                                               honouring her life and her death and her narrative that had been                                   silenced in the Western media, in a very personal way.

 

10:40:27:20     I also felt that she was emblematic of so many deaths, of casual                              killings, of intended killings that go on, on an everyday basis in                                     Palestine.

 

10:40:40:00     The fact that she bled to death. The fact that I haven’t read of her name                  outside of human rights reports in any international publication since               her death.

 

10:40:47:00     I felt that I was bringing a part of Jenin with me that night, with                              her photo.

 

10:40:51:07     In the midst of a lot of champagne and high-living, it was for me,                           bringing a sober reminder of why I was there. Which was                                             her death, her life. What she’s left behind. Maha’s pain.

 

10:41:09:02     While giving these talks, the invasion of Iraq started.

 

10:41:13:00     Before travelling back to Palestine I decided to go to Baghdad to                            become a witness on the ground, and spent the next six month working                       with Iraqi human rights groups.

 

10:41:23:00     There are thousands of Palestinian refugees also living in Iraq.

10:41:27:02     It was through working in these camps and listening to people’s stories                  of exile that my own desire to return to Jenin was reinforced.

 

10:41:35:05     But getting back into Palestine was not going to be easy.

 

10:41:38:06     The Israelis had continued to target activists killing Rachel Corrie                   and Tom Hurndle, and were denying many activists entry to the               Occupied Territories.

 

10:41:47:22     I decided to try anyway and managed to get in through Jordan.

 

10:41:52:07     A month later, Handi Jaradat, a 29 year old lawyer from Jenin,                        blew herself up in a restaurant in Haifa killing herself and twenty                  others.

 

10:42:02:03     This was the second death in the Jaradat family that year.

 

10:42:05:02     Hanadi’s brother was shot through the head by Israeli                                       commandoes four months earlier.

 

10:42:10:02     Reports were quickly coming in that Hanadi had never got over                       his death and that this was one of the reasons that had provoked               her to do it.

 

10:42:18:09     Hanadi’s family, hours after receiving news of the bombing, had to                  pack up their belongings and move everything out of their home in                     anticipation of Israeli soldiers coming to demolish it.

 

10:42:34:07     I went to offer my condolences to her family and to stay with them                   as they waited for the bulldozers to arrive.

 

 

Hanadi’s Mum in her house:

 

10:42:46:00     Hanadi did this by herself.

 

10:43:02:00     They shouldn’t punish the whole family for what she did.

                       

10:42:04:20     No one would willingly sacrifice their child.

 

10:42:08:05     Are you married?

 

Caiomhe:

 

10:43:09:20     No.

 

Hanadi’s Mum in her house:

 

10:43:10:20     If you had a child and somebody said they’d give you Palestine in                           exchange for his life…

 

10:43:16:06     You would say: ‘ I don’t want Palestine, kill me before you kill my                          child.’

 

10:43:19:09     There is nothing more precious than your child.

 

10:43:22:11     You suffer so much to raise your  children.

 

10:43:25:08     You can’t wait to see your child grow up.

 

10:43:28:01     My son was engaged. We were in Jordan preparing for his wedding                       when he was killed.

 

10:43:33:28     We got the call and rushed back.

 

10:43:37:03     He wasn’t wanted, they killed him for no reason.

 

 

Caoimhe speaking at night:

 

10:43:45:08     The tragedy of her family being left behind, of her mother that first                                     night  before she slipped into the rhetoric of praising her as a hero,

                        saying that more than nationalism she’d trade it all to hold her again in                   her arms.

 

10:44:00:06     And the tragedy of the twenty people killed in Haifa.

 

10:44:09:28     The one thing that became very clear to me after Hanadi’s bombing                        was the lack of contextualisation of these bombings.

 

10:44:19:05     It’s not the promise of however many virgins in heaven that drives                         people to do it, I think it is desperation and it’s also a political act.          

 

10:44:27:03     The fact maybe that she was a woman and educated and I’ve seen it or                   heard it described on the outside as that she had her whole life ahead of                   her.

 

10:44:37:12     She didn’t really have her whole life ahead of her. She was beautiful                      and educated and had already lost an eighteen year old brother who                   was killed in front of her.

 

10:44:45:05     Had already witnessed things that would probably break the strongest                     of hearts and psyches in any other country.

 

10:44:53:00     And what future did she have? She had a suffocating occupation, she                      had another however many years to live witnessing brutality and                                    violent death after violent death around her.

 

10:45:07:08     The Israelis hold the key to their own liberation of fear in their back                       pockets.

 

10:45:10:12     It’s a very simple solution, it’s an immediate end to the occupation.

 

10:45:13:10     And that’s something that I think is distorted in the narrative when it’s                   referred to as a conflict or a war as if two equal sides, two equal                                   partners were engaged in warfare.

 

10:45:27:01     Its myth-making.

 

Caoimhe Voice over:

 

10:45:29:07     That night, Israeli soldiers arrived at three in the morning and                                     bulldozed the Jaradat’s family home.

 

10:45:34:19     House demolitions are a form of collective punishment and are                         illegal under international law.

 

10:45:41:13     The Israeli Army has demolished thousands of homes during the                      past four years.

 

10:45:45:15     The Jaradat family were now left homeless.

 

 

Hanadi’s Mother sitting at demolished home:

 

10:45:52:23     We have no other house.

 

10:45:54:00     We only have God and we thank him.

 

10:45:58:00     He created us and he will take care of us, the same way he is taking                        care of everyone.

 

Man (who is  out of sight ) asking her questions:

 

10:46:03:00     Why would she choose to become a martyr when she was so s                                 successful?

 

Hanadi’ Mother sitting at demolished home:

 

10:46:08:20     Because of  her brother Fadi.

 

10:46:11:12     We have seven girls in our family and Fadi.

 

10:46:16:01     We couldn’t wait for him to grow up.

 

10:46:19:14     When she saw the scene of the killing, she lost her mind.

 

10:46:22:00     She was a broken person after that.

 

10:46:26:14     Life and death stopped meaning anything to her.

 

10:46:30:10     I pray to God that he considers her a martyr and that she is a pledge                      for us all.

 

Man (who is out of sight) asking her questions:

 

10:46:39:20     Who is responsible?

 

Hanadi’s mother sitting at demolished home:

 

10:46:41:20     Israel.

 

10:46:44:00     They do not want a solution between themselves and the Palestinian                       people.

 

10:46:48:18     When they start killing our children, what’s left?

 

Man (who is out of sight) asking her questions:

 

The Israelis always say to the West that you send your children to die?

 

Hanadi’ mother sitting at demolished home:

 

10:47:09:00     No.

 

10:47:13:10     No one would accept the death of their children.

 

10:47:16:00     What is more precious than one’s child?

 

 

Caoimhe Voice over:

 

10:47:58:10     A few days later we went to visit Hanadi’s sisters.

                        Though devastated they put on a brave face for us.

 

 

Hanadi’s sisters in a room together:

 

10:48:09:00     A lot of children growing up now in the Intifada, spending their time

                        throwing stones…

 

10:48:19:00     …will be willing to carry out more operations when they grow up.

 

10:48:24:10     The Intifada will make people more determined and, God willing, one                    day we will be free.

 

10:48:39:15:    I hope that our future is better than this and that our children will not                    see what we have seen.

 

10:48:46:16     I hope the future will be better.

 

10:48:51:00     My sister and others had to do things which now mean that I do not                       have a sister.

 

10:48:57:00     I can only hope that this does not happen to other people.

 

10:49:01:10     We dream of a better future and an end to the occupation.

 

10:49:05:05     Who would accept a life like this?

                        No one can accept being occupied.

 

10:49:08:10     God willing we will have a better life in the future.

 

Man asking questions ( out of sight ):

 

10:49:11:00     What about women suicide bombers?

                        There are more and more recently.

 

10:49:10:00     What do you think about that?

 

Hanadi’s sisters in a room together:

 

10:49:20:00     Our women are strong.

                        They have the same rights as men in this society.

 

10:49:25:20     When a woman chooses to do something she is not different from a                         man.

 

10:49:31:00     Women have the same rights as men to take part in the Intifada.

 

Handi’s sisters showing a picture of Handi:

 

10:49:51:02     This picture of Hanadi is two years old so she must have been 27 or                       26.

 

Caoimhe Voice over:

 

10:50:07:18     The following day curfew was re-imposed. Under curfew, life                            grinds to a halt. With people being kept prisoner in their own                                  homes for fear of being shot if they venture out, the most basic                              aspects of life become impossibly difficult.

 

10:50:20:16     Schools and universities are closed and the market shuts down.

                        Curfews sometimes drag out for weeks without respite and Jenin                     becomes a ghost town.

 

 

 

10:51:10:00     Jenin is a captive population, with the possibility of re-invasion at                    any time, basic acts of existence become incredibly dangerous.

 

10:51:23:00     People frequently risk their lives even going out to buy food.

 

 

10:51:27:00     On this occasion, Umsamar, her daughter and I were walking                           home from the market  when we had to seek refuge because of                                  approaching tanks.

 

 

Umsamar talks inside her home:

 

10:51:46:00     There’s no work here, no life.

                        Death has become normalized for people.

 

10:51:52:00     Do we take tanks and go into their land?

 

10:51:55:00     Originally it was our land anyway.

 

10:51:58:13     Give us back some land and our rights.

 

10:52:03:00     They bring in the tanks and call us the terrorists?

 

10:52:07:07     We have to risk our lives just to go out to get food for our children.

 

10:52:11:10     The vendors risk their lives selling that food so they can support their f                   families too.

 

10:52:17:00     Tell me, who’s the terrorist?

 

10:52:20:00     In Israel their lives go on, they can still move about.

 

10:52:23:00     Do we inflict curfew on them?

 

10:52:25:05     Do we send tanks into their towns to shoot at them?

 

10:52:29:00     Children respond with stones because they live amongst this situation.

 

10:52:34:00     Stones become their toys.

 

10:52:40:00     It’s what they’ve seen.

 

10:52:43:00     It’s what they have lived.

 

10:52:45:10     Children are a product of their environment.

 

10:52:51:10     What can a stone do to a tank?

 

10:52:54:19     They can’t even hear it inside a tank.

 

10:52:57:08     The soldiers respond with random fire, whenever the kids throw stones                   or not.

 

10:53:02:00     Listen to the shooting - from here, from there.

 

10:53:04:19     Every day we prepare ourselves for death.

 

10:53:07:19     For the possibility for your child, husband or yourself getting killed.

 

10:53:12:00     You prepare yourself for this possibility so you are not shocked by it.

 

10:53:18:10     Can you imagine preparing yourself constantly for dealing with your                     child’s death?

 

10:53:25:00     Can you imagine what this does to a mother?

 

10:53:34:19     They are scared for their children and of course their children should                    live…

 

10:53:40:00     But let our children live too.

 

10:53:42:10     Make peace.

 

10:53:43:15     We want peace.

 

10:53:45:10     We need peace.

 

10:53:46:15     But it has to be a just peace.  

 

 

Woman sitting and talking about Caoimhe:                          

 

10:54:08:00     Caoimhe, from the moment she came to Jenin, became one of the                            camp, like family.

 

10:54:15:00     If it was up to me, Caoimhe would receive Palestinian citizenship and                    live here.

 

10:54:21:10     Palestine is very important to her.

 

10:54:25:00     Despite her parents’ fear for her safety she stayed.

 

10:54:29:00     She was then shot.

 

10:54:31:10     And who was she defending?

 

10:54:33:10     She was defending the Palestinian people.

 

10:54:36:00     She was in hospital recovering when my son Ala’ was killed.

 

10:54:41:00     She left the hospital to be with us.

 

10:54:44:17     Nobody did more for people in Palestine and in Jenin camp than                            Caoimhe.

 

10:54:52:00     She went to visit the prisoners in Majiddo prison, and she would walk                    all the way there!

 

10:54:57:10     When she would hear of anything happening in Nablus, she’d walk all                    the way there too.

 

10:55:02:00     She’d come back to us three or four days later exhausted from the                           journey.

 

10:55:06:10     When Caoimhe left Jenin we were all very sad.

 

10:55:11:22     But when she returned we were delighted.

 

10:55:15:00     Because we love Caoimhe.

 

 

 

Caiomhe talks to camera at night:

 

10:55:42:10     Palestinians have been demonised and I think that for people,                                  particularly activists who choose to stand in solidarity with                                             Palestinians, there’s a risk of demonisation.

 

Caoimhe Voice over:

 

10:55:52:00     I lived with the family of Sheikh Bassam Alsadi, a political leader                     of Islamic Jihad. I did this because families of wanted activists are             subjected to raids, detention and home demolitions.

 

10:56:02:20     Sometimes the presence of a foreigner during the raids restrains                      that brutality a little bit.

 

10:56:09:00     Sheikh Bassam was arrested weeks after I got back to Jenin.

 

10:56:12:10     His twin seventeen year old sons had been killed within months of                    each other.

 

10:56:15:10     And his family lives with constant harassment by soldiers.

 

 

Nawal:Shake Basam’s wife - talking to Caoimhe in her home:

 

10:56:22:00     Life is difficult, Caoimhe.

 

Caoimhe asks a question to Nawal:

 

10:56:26:10     How do you see your future?

 

Nawal:Shake Basam’s wife - talking to Caoimhe in her home:

 

10:56:27:15     What future?

 

10:56:29:00     There is no future.

 

10:56:30:00     Life is unliveable after your children die.

 

10:56:33:00     And now my husband is in prison.

 

10:56:35:00     He probably gets tortured.

 

10:56:36:19     Life is really bitter.

 

10:56:38:18     Life is really plain.

 

10:56:41:05     I have to stay in the house and look after my children.

 

10:56:47:19     I have no choice.

 

10:56:52:00     They have nobody left.

 

10:57: 00:00    I thank God that my faith is strong.

 

10:57:04:15     God gives me patience.

 

10:57:08:08     Two of my sons were killed.

 

10:57:11:00     I loved them a lot.

 

10:57:14:00     I love all my children.

 

10:57:16:15     What can I do?

 

10:57:20:00     Our lives are difficult.

 

10:57:23:19     Very difficult.

 

10:57:32:00     We are alone in all this.

 

10:57:38:00     Our lives are difficult.

 

Young girl talks to camera:

 

10:58:02:00     If  I could give a message to the outside world…

 

10:58:06:10     …or this message is from me to me in the future.

 

10:58:11:05     In my own heart there is no more future.

 

10:58:15:12     No more future at all.

 

10:58:18:00     Why?

 

10:58:19:12     Because each generation here just gets killed.

 

10:58:23:10     I would paint Sharon surrounded by skulls.

 

10:58:27:00     I am not an artist but if I could paint a picture…

 

10:58:32:10     …I would draw Sharon surrounded by a pile of skulls.

 

10:58:40:15     He has killed and slaughtered so many people.

 

10:58:45:00     What future do I have?

 

10:58:47:00     None.  

 

10:58:50:10     And if I were to say that I have a future…

 

10:58:53:00     I would call it the future of death.

 

10:58:57:10     I would also like to say something to the world.

 

10:59:02:08     You probably see us on the news…

 

10:59:07:10     …and you think you know things about us.

 

10:59:10:10     But you can never imagine the situation here.

 

10:59:16:00     We have so much death.

 

10:59:19:00     So many dead people.

 

10:59:21:19     I’ve stopped  counting.

 

 

 

 

 

Little boy talking to little girl:

 

10:59:26:10     Say: ‘I want to kill Sharon, the donkey.’

 

Little girl speaks to the camera:

 

10:59:43:08     I don’t want to.

 

Young girl talks to camera:

 

10:59:46:00     Sharon says that he is for democracy.

 

10:59:48:10     He say’s he’s for democracy.

 

10:59:51:00     If he really knew what democracy meant…

 

10:59:55:00     If he knew what democracy meant…

 

10:59:57:10     …he would not be killing so many people.

 

10:59:59:10     Democracy is about giving people their rights.

 

11:00:03:17     Man is born free.

 

11:00:06:00     But here in Palestine…

 

11:00:08:04     …we are living in a jail.

 

11:00:12:00     We are in a bird cage.

 

11:00:14:00     Sharon carries the cage in his hands.

 

11:00:16:00     If he releases it…

 

11:00:18:00     Palestine will be free.

 

Little girl speaks to the camera:

 

11:00:21:00     I want to kill Sharon.

 

Mother of little girl speaks - semi out of shot:

 

11:00:23:16     Look!

 

11:00:24:15     My children say they want to kill Sharon.

 

11:00:26:19     Why?

 

11:00:28:06     Because their father’s been taken away.

Caoimhe Voice over:

 

11:00:41:19     That night Nawal’s sixteen year old son showed me a book                                containing the names and photos of political prisoners from Jenin.

 

11:00:48:10     He pointed out family and friends he knew from the camp.

 

11:00:52:15     A few hours later the army came for him.

 

11:00:55:19     He was arrested without charge, probably to put pressure on his                      father who was still in interrogation.     

 

11:00:03:10     Ez joined the over eight thousand Palestinian political prisoners                       being held in Israeli prisons.

 

11:01:10:00     Prisoners are held in extremely inhumane conditions and are                            subjected to continual physical and psychological tourture.

 

11:01:40:20     Ash’s mother Nawal sought solace and strength in her faith.

 

11:01:44:00     After the killings of her sons, mother-in-law and nephew,

                        and imprisonment of her husband and now Ez, it is one of the few                    things she has left.

 

11:01:57:00     Although I could do nothing to alleviate the family’s pain, I stayed                   on to give them moral support.

 

11:02:25:10     The Alsadi family have had to get used to upheaval. Though                              worried for Ez they continued to try to create some normality in                   their home.

 

11:02:41:20     With schools closed due to the curfew, Zoar took the opportunity                     to practice her English on us.

 

Zoar: Young girl, practising her English to camera:

 

11:02:45:10     Is this, is this your… my bag, your bag. Ah…Yes…oh…no… this is                      my bag.

 

11:02:54:00     That’s your bag, that’s my bag….errrr….is that, is that… your                                bag….yes it is.

 

11:03:20:00     …ah I am sorry, here’s your…here’s your bag. Yes. Thankyou.

 

 

                       

 

                       

 

Young boy talks to the camera:

 

11:03:32:10     We shall overcome, we shall overcome, we shall overcome.

 

Young girl talking to her younger sister:

 

11:04:24:16     Say: I love you Caoimhe.

 

11:04:25:20     Come on, say: I

 

Younger sister speaks:

 

11:04:27:02     I

 

Older sister speaks:

 

11:04:29:00     Love

 

Younger sister speaks:

 

11:04:29:06     Love

 

Older sister speaks:

 

11:04:30:19     You

 

Younger sister speaks:

 

11:04:30:24     You

 

Older sister speaks:

 

11:04:32:20     Caoimhe

 

Younger sister speaks:

 

11:04:33:00     Caoimhe

 

Older sister:

 

11:04:48:10     Say Love Caoimhe.

 

Younger sister:

 

11:04:49:00     Love Caoimhe.

 

 

 

 

Caoimhe walks into the home of a family:

 

11:05:38:20     Good morning. How are you? How have you been?

 

Old lady speaks:

 

11:05:45:10     How are you? I hope you’ve been well.

 

Caoimhe speaks:

 

11:05:58:00     I wish I received treatment like this every day.

 

Old lady:

 

11:06:01:05     Here is for today and tomorrow. Happy?

 

11:06:05:18     Welcome, you are really welcome. I hope you are happy and well.

 

11:06:09:18     Oh my dear she’s filming us!

 

11:06:15:03     I’ve been wanting to see you for a long time.

 

11:06:19:00     I’ve been telling Tawfig, “I really want to see her.”

 

11:06:28:02     I told them to call you, to get you to come, so I could see you.

 

11:06:37:23     Are you living in the camp now?

 

Caoimhe speaks:

 

11:06:40:08     Yes I am staying at Sheik Bassam’s house, with Nawal.

 

11:06:46:00     The army came the other day.

 

11:06:48:08     They ordered us out into the street and arrested Az.

 

11:06:50:17     She is on her own now.

 

Woman in the house:

 

11:06:52:00     They arrested Az?

 

Caoimhe speaks:

 

11:06:53:10     Yes.

 

11:06:55:00     I said to the soldier. What do you want with Az?

 

11:06:58:00     He is very young and not wanted.

 

11:07:03:06     He said his father is a terrorist.

 

11:07:05:03     And if he isn’t one now…

 

11:07:07:00     He will be in a year or two.

 

11:07:09:07     Better to get him now and keep him in prison.

 

Woman in house:

 

11:07:13:13     I am really scared for Tawfig.

 

11:07:21:12     Really, I am very scared.

 

11:07:23:20     He hasn’t done anything wrong.

 

11:07:25:17     But I worry when he goes out to school…

 

11:07:28:00     He is getting older…

 

11:07:29:13     …and they are arresting everyone.

 

11:07:34:15     The other day they came to our neighbourhood.

 

11:07:36:07     Why do people call us the terrorists?

 

11:07:42:23     It is Sharon who is the terrorist, why are we called the terrorists?

 

Caoimhe talks:

 

11:07:42:13     The world says that about you because you are resisting.

 

11:07:49:00     The world is still racist.

 

11:07:52:00     You are the heroes.

 

11:07:54:20     You just want your rights, which is natural.

 

Boys sing a mantra:

 

11:07:58:10     For every tear of blood shed by a mother.

 

11:08:02:24     For the sake of every drop of blood.

 

11:08:06:13     There will be a new martyr to replace the old.

 

11:08:10:02     My people are full of reslove.

 

11:08:14:13     We will stay together and fight.

 

11:08:16:23     That’s it, that’s it.

 

11:08:19:22     We’ve finished.

 

Old woman speaks:

 

11:08:21:07     From 1948 onwards we have lived in misery.

 

11:08:25:02     We were forced to leave when we were children.

 

11:08:29:14     Now look at us.

 

11:08:31:02     We’ve become old, our children have married and they have become                      old…

 

11:08:33:16     …without knowing what it means to have a nation, without having a

                        Life.

 

11:08:37:11     There’s always trouble but we will get through.

 

11:08:41:13     We are strong.

 

11:08:44;05     We won’t leave.

 

11:08:46:11     We’d rather die for the struggle than leave.

 

11:08:52:09     We will endure.

 

11:08:54:15     Let Sharon bring all of his tanks.

 

11:08:57:07     We are still not going to leave.

 

11:08:59:15     We will die here in Palestine.

 

11:09:02:00     Palestine is still the paradise of the world.

 

Caoimhe speaks:

 

11:09:08:22     Your mother is so wise!

 

11:09:11:22     She really knows her polotics.

 

Old woman speaks:

 

11:09:15:22     They say we are terrorists but we’re not.

 

 

Caoimhe speaks:

 

11:09:21:01     Of course not.

 

11:09:22:10     People outside know you want freedom.

 

11:09:26:21     People know you want human rights and peace.

 

11;09:30:07     The problem is our governments.

 

11:09:31:23     Not the people.

 

11:09:32:04     Didn’t you see before the war in Iraq?

 

11:09:37:07     There were many marches and demonstrations…

 

11:09:41:00     …against the war.

 

11:09:43:22     More than two million in Europe.

 

11:09:45:09     The problem is that the governments don’t listen.

 

11:09:50:17     But many people outside know how you suffer under the occupation.

 

Woman in the house:

 

11:10:02:00     Our life is difficult, but God willing we will be victorious.

 

Old woman:

 

11:10:09:20     Give her a kiss!

 

11:10:12:12     What a beautiful kiss!

 

Caoimhe Voice over:

 

11:10:28:05     Over three thousand, five hundred Palestinians have been killed in                  the course of this intifada.

 

Caoimhe talks to woman at the grave:

 

11:10:36:06     How was Yusuf martyred?

 

Lady sitting at the grave with Caoimhe:

 

11:10:40:10     Yusuf was shot from a helicopter while he was sleeping on the roof.

 

11:10:53:20     He was shot here, here and here in his leg.

 

11:11:00:17     Oh, my dear son. May God be with you.

 

Another old woman sitting at the grave:

 

11:11:08:13     All we want from people, from the U.N is for them to experience this                     situation.

 

11:11:13:16     We want our children to live.

 

11:11:18:00     Look at these children…

 

11:11:20:02     …roaming the streets all day.

 

11:11:21:16     For ten days the schools have been closed.

 

11:11:24:02     There’s nothing for them to do.

 

11:11:28:04     Everday they wander around the graveyard.

 

11:11:30:03     Why?

 

11:11:31:21     Because they have been orphaned.

 

11.11.36:17     My grandson was twenty days old when he was orphaned - when my                      son was killed.

 

11:11:41:03     Why are they orphaned? The politicians sit on their thrones!

 

11:11:44:15     Support us! We want solidarity! If they know what that really means.

 

11:11:51:02     We don’t need their food or aid.

 

11:11:53:15     Look even our children are resisting.

 

11:11:58:08     But how are we going to feed these children?

 

The children all shout:

 

11:12:02:07     The soldiers are back!

 

11:12:15:18     They won’t rest until one of them is killed!

 

11:12:20:01     Look at the children, they are lost everyday in the streets.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Caoimhe Voice Over:

11:12:37:06     It is in the midst of so much death and loss that an insistence on                        life becomes the ultimate form of resistance.

 

11:12:44:01     In an context where evey aspect of life is controlled by a brutal                         occupation, to exist is an act of defiance.

 

11:12:51:24     Aruba is a 24-year old Physical Education teacher who had been                      engaged for four years to Raed a fighter who was wanted by the                    Israelis.

 

11:12:59:21     In the years following the massacre the remaining fighters in the                      camp have been assassinated, arrested or forced into hiding.

 

11:13:07:10     Despite the risks of Raed coming out of hiding they decided to go                     ahead and get married.

 

11:13:29:10     Two of Raid’s brothers, also fighters, had also been assassinated.

 

11:13:33:18     Aruba held their pictures on the day.

 

11:13:36:13     The tragedy of the situation is never absent not even on a                                   wedding day.

 

11:14:28:20     A volley of gunfire outside caused a moment of panic until it                             turned out to be Raeds friends celebrating his wedding.

 

11:14:41:12     Raed was arrested a year later, weeks after the birth of their first                     child.

 

11:14:45:12     He now faces life imprisonment.

 

Caoimhe talks to camera:

 

11:14:49:00     Life is very ephemeral, our presence here is transitory, people live                   and people die.

 

11:14:54:21     And because of the ephemeral nature of life, because of its short                       span, or long span, depending on what place your born into in the                       world.

 

11:15:03:00     That it’s so very necessary as human beings of conscience to stand                   together, to fight together, to struggle together and to really bare                  witness to a period of history that we are going to look back on, or                       our grandchildren are going to look back on a few generations                            down the line with incredible deep shame.

 

11:15:23:01     That the sound barrier around what is going on in Palestine                              wasn’t broken.

 

11:15:28:09     That Palestinian blood has become cheapened to the point that it’s                   expendable, that the narratives of people here have been silenced,                  that they haven’t been spoken to the outside world, that we                                  haven’t listened, that we haven’t fought hard enough.

 

11:15:42:22     And I’ve become very aware through my time here that I cannot                      disconnect myself from it.

 

11:15:49:17     It’s not something that I want to do. I feel very passionately                               committed, both on an ideological level in terms of the injustice of                the situation but also on a deeply personal level to friends that I                     have come to love here, the Nawal’s and the Abushadi’s, the                                     numerous people who have played a great role in my life for the                       last couple of years.

 

11:16:15:03     I can’t close my eyes to them, I can’t rest comfortably when I am                      not here if I’m not doing something in terms of campaign work or              advocacy work or interviews or public meetings or something that              I feel is doing their pain, their tragedy, justice.

 

11:16:30:10     That speaks of the resilience, the incredible resilience with which                     they still manage to endure.

 

11:16:37:00     To live their lives, to create spaces of beauty and joy within all of                      the tragedy.

 

 

END

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

           

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                       

 

 

 

© 2024 Journeyman Pictures
Journeyman Pictures Ltd. 4-6 High Street, Thames Ditton, Surrey, KT7 0RY, United Kingdom
Email: info@journeyman.tv

This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this site you are agreeing to our use of cookies. For more info see our Cookies Policy