Friday, July 26, 2024

A Plea from the Daughters of Abraham: Reclaiming Our Lost Humanity

It is over 100 days since Hamas terrorists invaded Israel to carry out a killing spree that resulted  in the brutal murder, rape, and mutilation of now 1,498 human beings. In the wake of those  sophisticated and well-orchestrated attacks, 217,921 Israelis have been internally displaced, 14,175 civilians have been injured, at least 569 soldiers have fallen, and there are still 134 hostages  held in captivity in Gaza. Over 11,000 rockets have been fired into Israel from both Gaza and  Lebanon. Daily attacks carried out by Hizbollah and the Houthi rebel group, by air and sea,  continue to threaten a full, regional escalation of hostilities. 

On the Palestinian side, the death toll is currently 28,576, which includes 10,000 suspected Hamas affiliated militants. The majority of civilian casualties have been women and children. Another  68,291 Palestinians have been injured by Israeli airstrikes. Famine level conditions continue to  increase, with 9 out of 10 Palestinian eating less than one meal a day. The 335,000 children in  Gaza under 5 years old are currently facing a high risk of severe malnutrition. In this war between  Israel and Hamas, Israel has decimated 60 percent of Palestinian homes in the Gaza Strip. 85 percent of Gaza’s  population — representing 1.9 million people — is internally displaced. The destruction of  hospitals, refugee camps, schools, and places of worship make the territory nearly  uninhabitable. There is nowhere safe in Gaza. 

Nearly four months living in a state of war outside the war itself, we see our diasporic communities  becoming more and more entrenched in separation, hatred, and fear. We are two women, choosing  another way, and that is to dialogue. We do not know where our dialogue will get us or anyone  else, if anywhere, but we understand that not doing so will guarantee more destruction through the  othering of each other. We refuse to participate in this hopeless dynamic. 

Ultimately, our hope and goal is to speak in one voice. 

We have connected and committed to each other as Daughters of Abraham. We acknowledge that  we are two members of a dysfunctional extended family whose discord is deadly. In spite of this, we opened our hearts and intentionally sought to foster connection. Something greater than us  brought us together and we believe it to be good. 

One of us is a daughter of Palestine, the youngest of eight daughters. Her parents immigrated to  America from a small village in the West Bank, called Deir Debwan, four miles east of Ramallah.  Although her parents were in America, they held tight to their Palestinian culture and Muslim faith.  Nada’s identity is deeply rooted in her Palestinian heritage, and she dreams of a peaceful,  prosperous, free Palestine. 

One of us is a daughter of Israel, the grandchild of Holocaust survivors, and the proud wife of a  former IDF Captain. She is Jewish, American, and Israeli – and – many years ago, went to Israel  in search of Palestine. For her, every centimeter of Israel is steeped with her history and heritage,  and her heart always yearns for Zion. 

The two of us are deeply connected to this holy and tragic land. 

We are both mothers. We are bringing up another generation of Palestinian and Israeli children in  the Diaspora. We feel the obligation – no – the choiceless choice to support our respective peoples  who are suffering, dying both physical and spiritual deaths. 

To the Daughters of Palestine: Nobody is coming to save us – especially not the men who we  allowed to lead and who contributed and continue to perpetuate this violence. Our leadership has  failed. So it is our turn. We were born for such a time as this. We owe it to our ancestors and the  future generations – not despite the fact that we are privileged to be safe in our first-world countries,  but because we are safe. Our people in Palestine are in survival mode. We are not. We can move  toward reconciliation. We can talk – no, listen – to each other. We can intentionally reach out to  the Daughters of Israel just for the purpose of listening. We can hear their cries. 

To the Daughters of Israel: Once again we are mostly alone, with very few willing to acknowledge  us as human beings, deserving of security and self-determination. The more we try to assert and  insist on our right to exist, the more enemies we seem to make. Since October 7, we’ve learned  that the most powerful leaders and spokespeople for international human rights and justice, and  the most erudite, elite institutions of the world concur, that the brutalization of our sisters’ bodies  is reasonable, justified, and deserved. Afterall, we are the people who, generation after generation,  the world believes that the panacea for all that ails humankind is to clean and rid it of the Jews.  We are in survival mode. To come out of this alive, we need the Daughters of Palestine. We can  no longer pretend that we can do this alone.

The most difficult part of this work is overcoming the feeling that we are betraying our people who  need our voices to amplify their cries to the other side. It feels disloyal to utter the failures of our  own people that contributed and continue to contribute to our own suffering, yet it is necessary. 

This is not easy. It is easier to stay in our echo chambers, yelling for people to hear our cries and  get angry when they don’t. It feels weak to stop our yelling and start listening. It is challenging to  rise above emotion and use our intellect to think through the historical, spiritual, and political  issues. It is emotionally messy – there is always an overwhelming cloud of grief, making every  ounce of effort given to anyone or anything utterly exhausting. Opening up is always a risk – you  could get hurt. But that hurt is not as agonizing and damaging as the loneliness and anger that  naturally result from disconnection and division. 

We discovered that we didn’t get hurt when we had a vulnerable conversation with each other. In  fact, we felt healed, seen, affirmed, valued, and lifted up. We became empowered and, above all  else, not hopeless. But just the two of us – it isn’t enough. 

Our words are a plea to you: Daughters of Palestine and Daughters of Israel, we share in the loss  of our humanity. Let’s try to reclaim it together. 

Author profile
Nada Higuera

Nada Higuera is a Palestinian-American and constitutional attorney.

 

Author profile
Heidi Basch-Harod

Heidi Basch-Harod is an American-Israeli, and a Daytime Emmy-Award Winning producer and  women’s rights activist.

 

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