Cape Times

Listen carefully, resist, show love

Palestinia­n children live a remarkably fragile existence. At each juncture, they must make sense of themselves, the crumbling, chaotic world around them and their broken families. A beautiful calendar of their art now describes some of their lives, writes

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WHEN asked about the curious presence of two enormous yellow circles in the drawing he had just completed, Ahmed Dawabsheh exclaimed forcefully from his hospital bed: “This is my picture and it needs to be very sunny and bright. That’s how I like it – with two suns!”

You may recall the incident that was the cause of his year-long hospitalis­ation.

His family home was fire-bombed during the night by Israeli settlers, killing both his parents and his baby brother. Ahmed was badly burnt during the incident and has already undergone multiple surgeries as a result of the attack. These medical procedures will continue to order the passing of his adolescent years.

His life has been irrevocabl­y marred by violence in a multiplici­ty of ways, many of which are not foreseeabl­e or measurable.

The gravity of suffering and hardship Palestinia­n children have endured over what is coming up for 50 years of Israeli occupation weighs down on the conscience of us all.

As long as Palestinia­n children continue to be woken in the night by attacks and house invasions, torn from their dreams and warm beds into a circumstan­ce of sharp-edged and horrifying reality, we should not sleep easily, anywhere.

Ahmed’s story and his artwork is one of 13 that comprise a 2017 calendar released to commemorat­e 50 years of Israeli occupation in Palestine. Each month covers a child’s story and an original painting or drawing, all of which was documented in the first part of this year.

In addition, each story is set against an article of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child that serve – in theory – to protect them, yet all too commonly fail to.

Shamsaan (meaning “two suns”) is a collaborat­ive project between South African and Palestinia­n partners and all proceeds are collected for the Aqwaf SA Palestine Children’s Endowment Fund.

The first print run is in English, and Arabic, Turkish and Italian editions are in the making.

Through the children’s eyes, we are given a poignant snapshot of everyday life under occupation.

There are recurring themes one can draw from these 13 life stories. What is most striking is how Palestinia­n children live a remarkably precarious and fragile existence. Many are on the move, in a state of flux, between homes, destroyed homes, temporary shelter and new homes.

At each juncture, they must make sense of themselves, the crumbling, chaotic, world around them and their broken families. All are touched by tragedy and loss in some way.

Over the course of their short lives, every child has been imminently contingent to death and violence. The presence of tanks, guns, barbed wire, tear gas and imprisonme­nt are peppered throughout the everyday. Spaces and times of play cannot be viewed without the looming threat of military interrupti­on.

Many have been thrown in jail, beaten up, and had their familial nucleus torn apart by the Israeli army or police. Many encounter armed military personal on their way to school and see physical checkpoint­s and legal obstructio­ns to their dreams and paths to the ocean, the mountains, their ancestral homes and their future aspiration­s.

On Universal Children’s Day last year, more than 400 Palestinia­n minors were in Israeli prisons.

At this time, Gi’von prison in the West Bank had just opened a temporary wing to accommodat­e a burgeoning number of minors and facilitate for the arrest of more.

Indeed, on average, about 1 000 Palestinia­n children are arrested annually in the West Bank. Those who are 12 years and above can be tried in military courts.

The vast majority are arrested for throwing stones.

A Unicef report on Palestinia­n minors in detention details overcrowdi­ng, lack of communicat­ion with guardians, humiliatin­g treatment, beatings and solitary confinemen­t as punishment for disobeying prison guards or complainin­g about conditions.

These shocking and unacceptab­le facts about child imprisonme­nt reflect the larger predicamen­t that Palestinia­ns are an incarcerat­ed nation. Since June 1967, about 760 000 Palestinia­n men, women and children have been detained in Israeli prisons, according to UN sources.

This life under violent oppression has been endured with the, at times, overt and, at times, indirect or covert complicity of Palestinia­n authoritie­s, be it through poor leadership, corruption and self-enrichment or ineptitude.

Imprisonme­nt has dire consequenc­es on the sustainabi­lity of a child’s education. There are frequent interrupti­ons in a Palestinia­n schoolgoer’s life in addition to this, due to inhibited freedom of movement at Israeli checkpoint­s/road closures, school and house demolition­s, forced expulsions of families and or school closure due to conflict.

It is little wonder then that the incidence of child labour in Gaza has doubled over the past five years. Yet so many of these children are committed to their studies, most particular­ly Muhammad from Sussya, whose mature dispositio­n tells of a life experience beyond his 12 years.

His artwork is of a plan for the school he envisions for his community. He desires classrooms dedicated to specific subjects; the school is currently muddled in a cramped and haphazard temporary arrangemen­t. The whole of his village of about 60 people in the South Hebron Hills are forced to live in tents after falling victim to waves of forced expulsions and demolition­s. He, and many of the children interviewe­d for the calendar, remain adamant, however, that they will be educated profession­als one day. This leads one to recognise that these children have the most astounding­ly strong spirits.

They have a will to live, to succeed, to travel and enjoy free and dignified lives. There is little trace of bitterness or bigotry, but rather the desire to realise complex notions of universal rights, national ideals and laws. Many are already involved in social activism and are participan­ts in unions and organisati­ons in their communitie­s. They are leaders and trailblaze­rs in their own right, such as Ahmad Azza, a Youth Against Settlement­s leader in Hebron, and Jana Jihad Tamimi, a budding journalist and activist from Nabi Saleh. It is outrageous, therefore, that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu should address the UN General Assembly recently with

Yesterday was Internatio­nal Day of Solidarity with the Palestinia­n People, marking the date in 1947 when the UN General Assembly adopted a resolution partitioni­ng then mandated Palestine into two states, one Jewish and one Arab. On the same day in 2012, the State of Palestine joined the UN as a non-member observer state and is now recognised by 136 countries

the insinuatio­n that Palestinia­n mothers teach their children to hate; that Palestinia­n children are haters.

This calendar resists such crass essential is at ions, instead allowing for a layered perception of these children in all their vibrancy, colour, complexity, strength and fragility. Children of conflict are all too often seen but not heard.

Their stories in Shamsaan call upon us to all be patient and perceptive enough to listen to a child’s voice. Through listening carefully, we play a part in resisting the normalisat­ion of occupation, and give these children the space to begin the fraught processes of healing. In turn, may these children inspire us to read and learn more about the Palestinia­n people and their struggle for liberation. Dr Nina Butler is an independen­t writer, researcher and yoga instructor. She is writing a book on Palestinia­n and Israeli historiogr­aphy drawn from her PhD research . Calendars can be ordered at www.shamsaan.org. For more informatio­n, write to info@shamsaan.org or go to info@awqafsa.org

 ?? PICTURE: CLAIRE THOMAS ?? VULNERABLE YOUNG LIVES: Muhammad Nawajah and his brother look out over their temporary settlement in the South Hebron Hills. Their father, Nasser Nawajah, a comunity leader, is under administra­tive detention by Israel for his resistance to repeated...
PICTURE: CLAIRE THOMAS VULNERABLE YOUNG LIVES: Muhammad Nawajah and his brother look out over their temporary settlement in the South Hebron Hills. Their father, Nasser Nawajah, a comunity leader, is under administra­tive detention by Israel for his resistance to repeated...
 ?? Picture: NADIA MEER ?? ART THERAPY: From left, Muhammad Nawajah, Layth Nasr, Zahra Mahmoud, and Ahmad Nawajah create their artworks for the calendar in a tent school in the South Hebron Hills. Their real school was demolished during forced removals.
Picture: NADIA MEER ART THERAPY: From left, Muhammad Nawajah, Layth Nasr, Zahra Mahmoud, and Ahmad Nawajah create their artworks for the calendar in a tent school in the South Hebron Hills. Their real school was demolished during forced removals.

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