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Young Muslim Women at the Forefront of Fighting for Palestine

by Narges Mohammadi

WALES/ Muslim youth, and particularly women, are at the heart of a buoyant new movement in Wales and elsewhere against the Israeli oppression of the people of Palestine.

“We got to free Palestine!” shouts Sana, a Muslim high school student from Cwmbran.  “They’re dragging people out of their houses, they’re bombing all the families and kids, kicking women out of their homes.”  She was screaming the words loud and clear, to be heard over the throng of people marching down St Mary St, Cardiff, on a sunny Saturday at the end of May. 

It was the second protest in as many weeks in the Welsh capital with over 1,000 people in attendance, held in response to the sudden escalation in the Israeli bombing of Gaza. 

“They [Israel] have been doing it for 73 years,” she continues, referring to the Nakba, or Catastrophe, the violent programme of ethnic cleansing that killed 15,000 Palestinians, drove 750,000 from the land and created the modern state of Israel through destruction of around 530 Palestinian villages and cities. 

“It’s finally time for them to be free!” shouts Sana, who is standing alongside three of her friends.   In her hand was a batch of leaflets from the Palestine Solidarity Campaign that she was rapidly handing out to passers-by. I ask if she is part of the group and she replies no; she has just taken them off a stall moments earlier and wanted to distribute them. 

“It’s been amazing,” she says, referring to the huge protest behind her. “So many people have come together. Not just Muslims; all humans have come together to support Palestine. It’s honestly amazing.” 

“Our school friends are non-Muslim,” she says, pointing to the young woman next to her. “My friend here is non-Muslim, and she’s come to support us as well.” 

Sana’s Views on Politicians & the Media

Asked about First Minister Mark Drakeford’s near total silence on Gaza, Sana in damming: “He should show Muslims he cares. Wales is full of different cultures and, amazingly, different cultures have come to support us, but the government needs to wake up.”

She hits out at the BBC too, whose offices she has just picketed with hundreds of others: “Shame on you BBC, they are not doing anything about it.”

The presence of Sana and her friends is indicative of a wider trend of young people taking centre stage in the recent wave of huge Palestine protests, often with Muslim women, alongside men, at the forefront. 

Their actions confound the Islamophobic narrative, fostered by the liberal establishment over two decades and picked up by the far right, that Islamic culture is uniquely sexist and that Muslim women have very little agency of their own.

Yasmin had travelled from Swansea with her friend to be at the protest. 

“You don’t have to be Muslim to be at this protest, it’s not a religion thing, this is ethnic cleansing,” she says. “This has been going on for so many years. It’s their land and Israel has no right to remove them from their land. Innocent people are dying, children are dying.”

Like Sana, Yasmin is furious with the BBC. “The BBC are calling it a clash. It’s not a clash, there’s no clash. In Gaza, they have nothing to fight back with. Innocent people are dying because of what Israel is doing.” 

“What if Israel came to the UK and started taking us out of our homes,” she exclaims. “We wouldn’t like it, we would fight back.” 

School, College & University students; key to the movement

The protests that have swept Wales in recent weeks have been made up of young and old people, and those of different ethnicities and genders. Activity among the whole Muslim youth and the community, in general, has been key and has been helped by the easing of lockdown and the ability to join Friday prayer at Mosques. 

One man, who was helping to carry the large Palestine banner at the front of the protest, said he was a Cardiff University student from Oman. 

He attends a Mosque in the City center near the university, and says that everyone there was talking about Palestine and the protests: “They are all raising their voices for Palestine,” he tells me. “Before they didn’t know,” he says. “And now social media starts to show what’s happening there.”

Elsewhere, near the front of the protest, was a group of young Muslim women from St Teilo’s high school in Cardiff. They moved along with the crowd, loudly chanting ‘Free Palestine” and “End the Occupation.”

“We need to make a move and do something for Palestine,” one said, adding that they had a lot of friends from the school who had come to the protest.  Asked if they would organize a walkout in the school, they said they wanted to but were unsure whether or not it would be possible. 

Clampdown on youth protests

It is students like these, often motivated after attending protests or politicized through the BLM movement, who have also been leading the way when it comes to school walkouts. This activism has taken place against the backdrop of a hostile British state which has targeted young Muslims through the Prevent programme in schools.  

One parent, whose daughter goes to Fitzalan High School in Cardiff, told the voice. wales that students there had been put off engaging in Palestine solidarity activity by the head of the school, who told students not to take sides against Israel and that activity couldn’t happen on school property. 

Much of the attacks on pro-Palestine activism come on the back of the UK Government’s Prevent programme in schools, which overwhelmingly targets Muslim students. 

Ilyas Nagdee, who campaigns against the Prevent strategy, told Middle East Eye recently that since putting a call out on Twitter, he had received a hundred requests for help from children and their parents worried about schools clamping down on Palestine solidarity actions. 

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