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What do you know about the fate of Hezbollah women? Who is Khadijeh Hariz?

Muhammed45

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Today, on Friday, 25 May, the eighteenth anniversary of the liberation of southern Lebanon is called the occupation of the Zionist regime, and is called the Day of Resistance and Liberation. So let's take a quick look at the women of Hezbollah, the women that we have heard less of their bravery.
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Khadijeh Hariz is one of the women who is a member of the Resistance Axis, who has played an active role in the process of liberation struggles of southern Lebanon. As for her childhood, she says that since I was grown up, I tried to read books and less attended to women's meetings. I wanted to feed my thought by reading the books of Gibran Khalil Gibran and literary stories and foreign translated masterpieces.

She started her education at age of 13. Because girls' education at that time was not a priority. But this fact could not impose itself on Khadijeh. She had a great interest in science, always watched inside the school from windows of the classroom nearby their house, to learn how to read and write. When her mother saw this, she signed her daughter up at school.
A revolutionary spirit was raised inside Khadijah. She read Palestinian history and Occupation of Jerusalem, and had a great desire for politics. She put forward her revolutionary discourse in the society. But her thoughts were rejected by her conservative family. They said: Politics has nothing to do with you. Girls do not talk about politics. But Khadijeh did not care about these issues.

Following the black September events in Jordan and the secret transfer of elements of martyrdom to southern Lebanon, Khadijeh did what the revolutionaries could do. She cooked food and sent to the martyrdom forces through her children, because they were secretly present in southern Lebanon. Her children also learned the revolutionary and nationalistic Palestinian spirit. Her eldest son was 18 at that time. The Palestinian cause prompted Khadijeh to go to nursing and join the Palestinian Red Crescent.
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Organizing a demonstration in Ansar camp
She was always looking for areas for role play. In the 1980s, when the Zionist regime invaded Lebanon, she felt the spirit of hatred of the occupiers in herself. She once gathered women whose families were imprisoned at the Ansar detention center and arranged a rally. She took women to the car and took them to the detention center. Hardly passed the obstacles one after the other until they reached a huge trench. Inspection elements and Zionist officers asked them to choose someone to speak on behalf of the rest. Khadijeh was chosen among them. The Zionist officer asked why you came here? Khadijeh answered : We have come to ask you why you are here. This is my land and my country, but you have come to occupy the soil of my country.
The Zionist officer was angry with the courage of Khadijeh so beat her with button stock of his weapon. The women were starting to shout, but Khadijeh jumped to one side. The military pursued her. Khadijeh went up the hill to the prison and looked at the detention center and shouted Allahu Akbar. She shouted that O our young people! We had launched a women's demonstration. Prisoners followed the story from the corners to see what had happened. Chaos broke out in the prison, and for the first time prisoners rebelled.
Among these shoutings, Khadijeh escaped and hid herself from the sight of Zionist forces. Since then, the Zionists have known her as a saboteur, and the Zionist radio has always called her name. At that time, it was a decisive stage in the life of Khadijeh and her struggle for revolution. She slept in her car, transferred weapons with her own car and handed over arms to the resistance forces. She was not alone in this mission, but her little daughter, Maryam, was also with her.
Khadijeh was arrested on one of the December nights of 1983, while fleeing cold and snow to her home. Zionist armed elements attacked her home on dark night and transferred her to a detention center with a pickup truck. During the departure to the detention center, they had closed her eyes with a band. A few hours later they arrived at the Detention Center.
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She was physically and psychologically tortured for 15 days. The moments were terrible. They covered her head with black cases and hit on her head with a stick. In the extreme cold of those days, they threw cold water on her face. Threats and stresses continued.
The prison guards attempted to erode the spirit and body of Khadijeh. The hardest torture was when guards threatened to hijack her hijab or insult her mother. Then they took her into a room with black walls. The water was flowing from under her detention center, and it was a terrible moments. With the remembrance of Allah, Khadijeh calmed down and urged herself to strengthen her heart for not confessing about resistance forces and their camps. She did not confess under all the tortures and pain and psychological pressures.

When she crossed the corridors of the prison, Palestinian female prisoners from the small window of their cell with Palestinian accents announced the coming of an element of Lebanese resistance. They expressed sympathy with Khadijeh, and their remarks reduced the pains of tortures that Khadijeh had tolerated. Al-Rumlah Prison in Occupied Palestine was full of prisoners of Christians, Lebanese and Palestinians.

Khadijeh spent three months in Al-Rumlah Prison, and learned a lot during this period. She learned foreign languages and studied many books. The prison guards tried to use the Palestinian women in the workshops, and for this reason they had to teach them industry to use them as labour forces. These women even tried to learn different professions or languages, even when they met other prisoners in the dining room.

Khadijeh Hariz's husband was imprisoned at the Ansar detention center. Khadijeh says: Sometimes letters came from him. I remember that he once sent me a letter through the Red Cross that was very influential on me. In that dark and small room, there was a great sea of feelings in me.

Khadijeh was transferred to the Ansar detention center in southern Lebanon after three months from the prison of Al-Rumlah. This was the beginning of the new catastrophes of Khadijeh. She wished for sunlight and tried to keep herself steady in cold weather of that prison. Despite all these hardships, she was still steady.

She also worked in prison with the participation of other prisoners to create problems for the Zionist regime, to the extent that the prison became one of the levers of propaganda and economic pressure on the Zionist regime. She was in jail for many months until she heard about the exchange of prisoners in 1984 between the Zionist regime and the Palestinian Liberation Movement. The moments were hard and the hope of freedom was alive in her.

Khadijeh remembers the times that she was released and received symbolic gifts from Ansar prisoners, including iron handcuffs and letters and wooden plates bearing her name and her husband's name.

Part 1
 
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@Ceylal
An other man of that well known world. I must admit, she is much better than many of our men too.
To be honest with you, she is unknown to most of us in my world..
Like , I wrote many times before, women are the real men of the middle East and North Africa...
 
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