Nakba #56 - Samia Nasir Khury
Överlevarna1 Helmi

Nakba #56 - Samia Nasir Khury

“My father worked as a governor for the British government, and the rest of the family followed him. He was later transferred to Safad. There we had good relations with our Jewish neighbors. That was normal. Women exchanged baked goods with one another during different holidays and celebrations. In 1946 it finally became clear to him what the British were doing—that they were preparing the way for the Jews to take over. His job became impossible, and he decided to resign. He went to the King David Hotel to submit his letter of resignation. As he stepped over the threshold of the hotel, he looked at his watch and realized he was early. He decided to visit a friend in Mamilla in the meantime. Shortly after he left the hotel, it was blown to pieces. The man my father was going to visit was not as lucky. He had gone to the hotel and was killed by the bomb. This was in 1946. Irgun was responsible for the attack, but the various Zionist organizations constantly blamed one another. This was only the beginning. Then came the bombing of the Semiramis Hotel and the massacre in Dayr Yasin. That was when people began to feel real fear. After my father resigned, he began teaching physics. We remained in al-Quds. I was a happy teenager. I went to parties, and my aunts and cousins lived there. It was a wonderful time. We used to go to the YMCA, where we were members. They had leadership courses, tennis courts, a gym, and a swimming pool. It was a fantastic place. In 1948, the family moved to Birzeit, where my father taught and where I attended a boarding school—it felt like my second home. Suddenly, rumors spread that something was wrong. People began pouring in from al-Ramla and Lydda. They were fleeing and had been walking for two or three days. I will never forget that sight. Everything was so sad; people were utterly exhausted. Someone told us they had lost a son. One man was confused and rambling; he did not understand what was happening. I especially remember a woman who had lost all her belongings. Despite that, she was grateful to have survived. She said: “Furniture can be replaced, but not people.” My aunt told my cousins and me to cook food for the refugees. We boiled eggs and potatoes, sliced tomatoes and cucumbers—everything we could get hold of. My aunt also helped prepare a school building where some of the refugees could find shelter. My aunts and cousins had come to Birzeit to escape the unrest in al-Quds. Everyone believed this would be over in a few weeks, and that we would be able to return. But in October, we began to understand that this was no picnic. After the war in 1967, East al-Quds was annexed by Jordan. It then became possible again for my mother and me to visit our house. The house had become a daycare center, so it was easy to enter. My mother began explaining to a woman sitting in the office that it had once been her bedroom. It was painful to see our house again. I had hoped, for as long as possible, that we would be allowed to return. We never went back again. The Nakba is still ongoing; the displacement is still ongoing. Everything here is so hard to predict under the Israeli occupation. When you get up in the morning and put your right foot down, you do not know whether your left foot will follow. In 1993, during the first intifada, my son produced a song and made cassette copies of it. He was arrested by the police and taken for interrogation at Moscobiyeh in al-Quds. He was accused of spreading music that glorified the intifada. He was imprisoned for six months. First he was held in Ayalon prison in al-Ramla. He went through hell there. We were allowed to visit him, but I was not allowed to touch him. He sat behind a net. Later he was transferred to Prison Six, outside Atlit. The time in prison made my son more enthusiastic and determined than before. He continues to make music.

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Jaksot(323)

Nakba #34 - Ismail Yakub al-Sayfi

Nakba #34 - Ismail Yakub al-Sayfi

1948 “The Egyptian army was supposed to defend the village, but when the Jews attacked at night, the Egyptians abandoned us. My mother, my older brother, and I fled into the darkness to a field where ...

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Nakba #33 -Maryam al-Sayfi

Nakba #33 -Maryam al-Sayfi

1945 “Behind our house there was a large fig tree. I used to play in the shade beneath it. Behind the house there was also a cave. My mother and grandmother gathered firewood there. They lit a fire an...

1 Tammi 1h 8min

Nakba #32 - Ziyad Hamid Maziyad

Nakba #32 - Ziyad Hamid Maziyad

1936 “My paternal uncle was 16 years old when he was killed by Jewish guards on horseback. They struck him on the head and he died the following day. My father’s employer, a Zionist named Dubel, offer...

1 Tammi 1h 1min

Nakba #31 - Kamil al-Shaykh Qasim

Nakba #31 - Kamil al-Shaykh Qasim

1946 "We were farmers and grew wheat, olives, fruit and tobacco. Our tobacco was well-known, it was on a level with the Greek. We had different names for each area of land, depending on what we grew o...

1 Tammi 49min

Nakba #30 - Ali Saadi

Nakba #30 - Ali Saadi

1948 "The Zionists killed my maternal uncle, Ahmed Shaban, and three others. They were shot in front of all the villagers. My uncle, who was perhaps 30 years old, was in the resistance movement, first...

31 Joulu 202544min

Nakba #29 - Fayiz ‘Auda

Nakba #29 - Fayiz ‘Auda

1946 ”My father owned a lot of land where he grew wheat and tobacco. He sold the tobacco to a company in ‘Akka. We had sheep, goats, camels, and cows. My father bought donkeys from Cyprus; they were s...

31 Joulu 20251h 8min

Nakba #28 - Amna Aydi

Nakba #28 - Amna Aydi

1947 “Lubya was a large village. The land stretched all the way down toward Ṭabariyya. We were farmers and grew olives, figs, and grapes. Some of my brothers were able to study in Ṭabariyya. For us gi...

31 Joulu 202547min

Nakba #27 - Fatima Abu Sultan

Nakba #27 - Fatima Abu Sultan

1948 “When the Zionists attacked the villages around Hamama, people fled to our village. Then our village was attacked as well. The attack came from the main road. Our men went out toward the road, bu...

31 Joulu 202550min

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