Nakba #26 - Assad Ammya
Överlevarna31 Dec 2025

Nakba #26 - Assad Ammya

“We lived in a small house on Mount Carmel. It was a mixed area with Muslims and Jews. My father worked at a cigarette factory and also sold olive oil. My brother started working at Spinneys supermarket, which was owned by a couple of Englishmen. I had seven Jewish friends in the neighborhood who sometimes came over to our home. Cohen later became a police chief under the British. Another was named Shabbatai Levi, one was Spector, and a girl was named Sternheim. My mother invited everyone to eat. She baked bread, boiled eggs with onion skins so they turned brown, and served cheese and yogurt. We spoke Hebrew with one another. My grandfather made Arabic coffee that lasted the whole day. Cohen’s father used to come and drink coffee with my father. The girl Sternheim worked in a flower shop. ‘I will protect you,’ she said. ‘I will come and get you wherever you are. Call me and I will come. Don’t be afraid.’ I still remember her phone number: 3917.” (begins to cry) I had just turned 13 and worked at a café in central Haifa. The owner was named Siegel. He spoke only German. Jochanan also worked at the café, and we became friends. One day Jochanan was hit by a British military jeep. The driver was drunk. Jochanan was taken to the hospital but died four days later. I wanted to attend his funeral but couldn’t because I had nothing to cover my head with. I stood at the entrance to the cemetery and cried. ‘Is he your brother?’ a man asked. ‘No, he’s my friend, but he was like a brother.’ The man gave me a kippah with a Star of David on it so that I could approach the grave.” “The first time I noticed unrest was when the Stern Gang blew up a car outside the British police station in Haifa. That was in early 1947. We moved to Kababir in Haifa, where only Muslims lived. My brother-in-law Ibrahim drove us in his car. We rented an apartment. But after a while it didn’t feel safe in Kababir either, so we moved on to al-Tira, south of Haifa, where we owned a house. Al-Nakba began when the Haganah blew up 16 houses in al-Tira. Assad al-Bardan, one of our neighbors, went out at night with a lamp to see what was happening. He was shot. There were air raids at night. People were afraid to sleep in their homes and sought refuge in olive groves and caves. On the last day, before we fled, the shooting was constant. Only my brother and I were at home. My parents were hiding in a cave, but we didn’t know where. We went outside to see what was happening. ‘What are you doing here?’ a man asked. ‘Everyone has already fled.’” “We didn’t know where to go. We were from Mount Carmel and didn’t know the surroundings of al-Tira. We were afraid. We left our house when the moon had risen and saw about 50 Jewish soldiers entering al-Tira. We lay down on the mountain so as not to be discovered. As we continued walking, we met Muhammad and Afu. They showed us the way to ‘Ain Hawd. It was dawn when we arrived, but bombs were falling, so we continued south. After three hours we reached Ijzim. There we met our oldest brother, who gave us each a cigarette. Our brother paid a man to guide us out of Ijzim toward Nablus in the West Bank. There they gave us breakfast and water, and there we finally found our mother and one of her sisters. Together we continued to Jordan. There was little water. After a couple of months, a truck took us to Duma, outside Damascus in Syria. We and about ten other families were allowed to stay in a mosque. They divided a hall with blankets where we lived. We stayed there for four or five months. Then the whole family was reunited again—except for one of my brothers, Ahmed, who was imprisoned in Palestine. I lived in Syria for 36 years. I came to Sweden in 1980.”

Det här avsnittet är hämtat från ett öppet RSS-flöde och publiceras inte av Podme. Det kan innehålla reklam.

Avsnitt(323)

Nakba #25 - Abdullah Taleb El Salhane

Nakba #25 - Abdullah Taleb El Salhane

“My father was a farmer. He grew, among other things, potatoes and tomatoes. I used to tend his sheep.” - What do you remember of your home village? “Your question is wrongly put. You should ask who k...

31 Dec 202544min

Nakba #24 - Safia Mohammad Alawis

Nakba #24 - Safia Mohammad Alawis

1947 “Near us was the Jewish village of Nesher. They visited our olive groves and we visited their homes. We were almost like siblings.”

31 Dec 202558min

Nakba #23 - Khalid Jameel Saed Mosmar

Nakba #23 - Khalid Jameel Saed Mosmar

1948 “Men, women, children, and the elderly arrived in Nablus by truck. They had been expelled from villages and towns in the surrounding area. The refugees were housed in a school. Inside, many famil...

31 Dec 20251h 14min

Nakba #22 - Mahmud Khalil ‘Abdallatif

Nakba #22 - Mahmud Khalil ‘Abdallatif

1946 “I grew up in Akka. We had a shop where my father sold timber. I was part of a scout band that played music in the streets. When we passed by my father’s shop, he would come out and watch. When h...

31 Dec 202558min

Nakba #21- Hisen Farea al-Sabour

Nakba #21- Hisen Farea al-Sabour

1936 “I don’t know exactly what year I was born. We didn’t use dates or years. We were illiterate. We used to say that someone was born the same year someone else died.” 1940 “My mother died when I wa...

31 Dec 20251h

Nakba #20 - Lee Mahmud Musa

Nakba #20 - Lee Mahmud Musa

1943 “My father was a simple man who worked in all kinds of construction jobs. He was the kindest person in the world. Every time my mother chased us, he yelled at her. My father also had a cart from ...

31 Dec 20251h 17min

Nakba #19 - Kazim al Zu‘ubi

Nakba #19 - Kazim al Zu‘ubi

1943 “Palestinian Jews and Arabs lived side by side, like one family. Arabs married Jews and Jews married Arabs. They were our friends, our relatives—we protected them.”

30 Dec 202555min

Populärt inom Utbildning

historiepodden-se
det-skaver
rss-bara-en-till-om-missbruk-medberoende-2
allt-du-velat-veta
nu-blir-det-historia
roda-vita-rosen
sektledare
johannes-hansen-podcast
harrisons-dramatiska-historia
not-fanny-anymore
rss-viktmedicinpodden
i-vantan-pa-katastrofen
sa-in-i-sjalen
rss-dr-bjorklund
rss-foraldramotet-bring-lagercrantz
rikatillsammans-om-privatekonomi-rikedom-i-livet
rss-max-tant-med-max-villman
rss-real-talk-with-jesper-stahl
rss-relationsrevolutionen
rss-basta-livet