CRY FREEDOM.net
formerly known as
Women's Liberation Front
'Insight is the first step of resistance against any ideologic form of dictatorial and misogynistic oppression'
and
'Freedom is like a bird that nests in ones' soul'
Welcome to cryfreedom.net, formerly known as Womens Liberation Front.  A website that hopes to draw and keeps your attention for  both the global 21th. century 3rd. feminist revolution as well as especially for the Zan, Zendegi, Azadi uprising in Iran and the struggles of our sisters in other parts of the Middle East. This online magazine that started December 2019 will be published every week. Thank you for your time and interest. 
Gino d'Artali
indept investigative journalist
radical feminist and women's rights activist 

'WOMEN, LIFE, FREEDOM'
You are now at the section on what is happening in the rest of the Middle east
(Updates Dec. 27, 2024)

For the Iran 'Woman, Life, Freedom' Iran actual news            
Updated Dec 27, 2024

For the 'Women's Arab Spring 1.2 Revolt news       
Updated Dec. 13, 2024

Special reports about the Afghanistan Women Revolt
and more
Updated Dec. 25, 2024

For Syria: the Fall of Assad and aftermath
Updates Dec 26 - 25,2024  
CLICK HERE ON HOW TO READ ALL ON THIS PAGE 
 

 

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SPECIAL REPORTS

Dec wk4 -- Dec Wk3 P3 -- Dec Wk3 P2 -- Dec Wk 3 -- Dec Wk 2 P3 -- WK2 P 2 -- wk2 -- wk1 P 3 -- wk1 P 2 -- wk1 -- Nov wk5 P3 -- wk5 P2 -- wk5 -- wk4 P3 -- wk4 P2 -- Nwk4
 Click here for an overview by week in 2024

Special reports:
Updates December 27 and earlier, 2024
:
'Broken': Domestic violence impacts women, children in Gaza

& Gaza toddlers got the polio vaccine, then an Israeli bomb took their legs
& Millions in bonds for Israel put US states at odds with investment policies

Previous reports:
 
As Gaza war rages israel supportive outlets under fire
& EU research funds flow to Israel
& My mother's shattered dream of family reunion in Gaza
& Gaza's libraries will rise from the ashes
& The genocide kills dreams, not just people

and earler stories
 
Overview special reports
 

 


November 28 - 24 and earler stories, 2024
Is Netanyahu immune from ICC arrest warrant-NO!
 


TRIBUTES TO MOTHERS AND CHILDREN



Shireen Abu Akleh
In commemoration of Shireen Abu Akleh,
the 'voice of Al Jazeera'
killed while revealing the true face of israel

Updated:

December 6, 2024:
Attacks, arrests, threats, censorship: The high risks of reporting the Israel-Gaza war
 
Click here for earlier stories/news

December 27 - 24, 2024
Food for thought:
Is Israel using starvation as a war tactic in its genocidal war in Gaza?...Yes they are!
Read more and decide for yourself

And more actual news here

December 24 - 18, 2024
Food for thought
I, living in the EU,
am, like millions of others,
'bombarded' with a tsunami
of 'festivities celebrations' that urges
to buy and buy
without thinking.
but...
I can only feel ashamed
knowing that hundreds of thousands
of Palestinian people,
and especially children, mothers, women,
elderly, are starved to death
as a zionist tool of genocide.
So do I wish 'happy holidays'?
NO
I wish for food and peace for all.
Gino d'Artali
Read more and decide for yourself


December 10 - 7, 2024
Food for thought:
'The next one' as seen by an Iranian activist cartoonnist
and yes, with the fall of assad
it most likely is a matter of time
before the next ones,
netanyahu, khamenei, erdogan and others,
will follow.
Gino d'Artali
Read more and decide for yourself

 When one hurts or kills a women
one hurts or kills hummanity and is an antrocitie.
Gino d'Artali
and: My mother (1931-1997) always said to me <Mi figlio, non esistono notizie <vecchie> perche puoi imparare qualcosa da qualsiasi notizia.> Translated: <My son, there is no such thing as so called 'old' news because you can learn something from any news.>
Gianna d'Artali.


 Hanan - Photo Abdelhakim Abu Riash-Al Jazeera
Al Jazeera - Dec 23 2024 - by Maram Humaid
<<Gaza toddlers got the polio vaccine, then an Israeli bomb took their legs
An Israeli bomb killed three-year-old Hanan and 22-month-old Misk's mother and made them amputees.
From polio to amputation in Gaza
Deir el-Balah, Gaza - Three-year-old Hanan al-Daqqi spends her days with her younger sister Misk, occasionally asking questions.
"Where's Mama?"
"Where did my legs go?"
The two toddlers have been in the hospital for four months since they were brought there, battered and bleeding from an Israeli bombing, and had their legs amputated. Their father's sister, Shefa al-Daqqi, 28, has been by their side since then, but she still does not know how to answer the girls' questions.
'Trapped in a nightmare'
On the morning of September 2, Shaima al-Daqqi got up early to take her two daughters - Hanan and 22-month-old Misk - to get the polio vaccine, which was being offered to people in the midst of Israel’s war on Gaza. The following day, after the family had lunch, Israel bombed their home in Deir el-Balah. It killed 25-year-old Shaima and injured the rest of the family, including her husband Mohammed al-Daqqi, and tore through the two little girls' legs. Hanan was severely injured, losing both her legs - one above the knee and one below - and sustaining wounds across her body, including her face and intestines. She had to undergo surgery to remove part of her bowels. Meanwhile, little Misk had to have her left foot amputated. Their father, Mohammed, 31, was in intensive care for two weeks with a brain haemorrhage and injuries to his chest. "We've been trapped in a nightmare for four months now," says Shefa as she tries to soothe Hanan, who has been fragile and volatile since the attack. Both girls are in a state of fearful panic, clinging to their aunt constantly. Shefa tries to comfort them, but often finds herself weeping over the little girls, partly in sadness and partly in fear over what the future will hold for them. "All I can tell her now is that her mother is in heaven. What kind of future do they have to look forward to? How will [they] feel as they grow and see how different they are from other kids their age? How will Hanan wear the clothes she likes so much? What do I say when she asks for pretty dresses or shoes?' It's harder for Hanan because she understands more than her sister, and her injuries were far more severe." The hospital and its staff are working in such an overcrowded and underequipped environment that there’s no possibility of providing psychological support for the girls.
Staring at other children's legs
Shefa, a mother of three herself, takes shifts caring for the two girls, switching with their grandmother, the late Shaima's mother, their paternal uncle Ahmed, 29, and their father, who stays with them at night. Whenever they can, the adults bring little treats for the girls, whatever they manage to find in the markets. The girls often ask for toys, but there are none to be found so they have to make do with whatever little accessories and treats their family can find. Ahmed is the most fun for the girls, Shefa says, playing with them and taking them out of their room to check out the rest of the hospital. "None of us can or will ever be able to replace a mother," says Shefa, her eyes red and tears streaming. "I'll never forget Hanan's look when I brought my daughter Hala, who is her age, to visit them," Shefa recalls. "Hanan would stare at Hala's legs and then at her own amputated legs, confused. Before her injury, they used to run and play together all the time. Now they play on the hospital bed," Shefa, who used to live in Jabalia but was displaced with her family a year ago to her family's house in Deir el-Balah, said. Because the girls are in a phase of fast growth, they’ve been kept in the hospital for constant follow-up on their lengthening bones. What physiotherapy the hospital can give them is not constant enough to help them much. They draw, play with visitors, or play with their adult companion’s mobile phone to pass the time.
A mother's adoration
When Israel's war on Gaza started, Shaima was consumed with fear for her daughters. She couldn't eat or sleep, losing a lot of weight as she fretted about finding the food and formula the girls needed. She had always been devoted to her daughters, spending time with them and working to provide them with whatever they wanted. Especially little Hanan, who loved getting dressed up, caring deeply about her dresses and shoes. "Shaima adored them," adds Shefa. When polio vaccines were rolled out in Gaza and Israel agreed to allow the campaign to proceed unmolested, Shaima was determined that her daughters would at least have that protection. She encouraged her sisters and in-laws to do the same. "Of course, we all feared any harm to our children. But what's the point? Children get protection from polio, but then an Israeli air strike takes their legs? How does that make any sense?" adds Shefa.
Waiting for healing
Hanan and Misk cannot complete their recovery in Gaza because Israel has destroyed the health sector, so their names were put on a list of people who need to leave Gaza for treatment. The World Health Organization collects the names that go on the list, but nobody can leave unless Israel approves their departure, and it has not approved the girls' yet. "We've been waiting more than three months. They're just little girls [who] desperately need prosthetic limbs. Their mental state is worsening," says Shefa. It is not just prosthetics that the girls cannot get in Gaza. They need to be fully assessed and go through a rehabilitation process before prosthetics can be considered. Because Hanan and Misk are still growing, the bone growth associated with their ages will also pose challenges that will need constant follow-up and possibly several surgeries.
What Shefa knows is that the little girls' lives will never be the same again.
"Hanan wants to wear shoes and she asks me why she can't ... why she can't go play in the park," she says.
"I don't have answers.">>
SOURCE: AL JAZEERA: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2024/12/23/gaza-toddlers-got-the-polio-vaccine-then-an-israeli-bomb-took-their-legs
 


The Gazaian Thinker

"On the road of ...

children are soo much more wise
than big people.
That's a fact of life.
Like the Gazaian and only +-years-old girl,
shot and killed by an israeli soldier,
who said with her last breath
*I will tell Allah everything
about the evil
that offends life on and earth
by killing especially the innocent,
the women, the children
of whom I was and am one*.

She also knew that Mohammads' road
is not a dead-end street
but always has a beginning
which, when walked on,
with every step taken and word spoken,
is a step and word towards the truth.

So yes I will tell
and only ask from people still walking too
with every step taken or word spoken,
to let it be a step or word of truth
because that is Mohammads' road
that unites all Ummahs
and also leads to the final
words of truth and convictions
of all who so greedily and without heart
take life and ground of the Just.

And we, the Ummahs by heart and soul,
know what awaits us at the 'other side':
Allah who will ask "what did you do to help bring justice?"

Insh'Allah - hoda hafez"

Dedicated to Saly Khan and all other innocent children who gave their lifes for Freedom.

"I hear my grandpa's soul saying
'evil people
can only win
if good people
stay silent and do nothing.'"
 
and

"When the world,
at the brink of an WW3 outbreak,
is so troubled
you can/have/are
(to be) the solution."

and

"I was 'not' a child
I only wanted
a little bit dead,
just short,
to then wake-up again
on the banks
of the river to the sea
and a free Palestine"
 

 

Gino d'Artali
ghost-poet/writer of The Thinker - Gaza
 


Women's Liberation Front 2019/cryfreedom.net 2024