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 Jan 25, 2025)

For the Iran 'Woman, Life, Freedom' Iran actual news            
Updated Jan 24, 2025

For the 'Women's Arab Spring 1.2 Revolt news       
Updated Jan. 24, 2025

Special reports about the Afghanistan Women Revolt
and more
Updated Jan 22, 2025

For Syria: the Fall of Assad and aftermath
Updates Jan 23,2025 
CLICK HERE ON HOW TO READ ALL ON THIS PAGE 
 

 

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SPECIAL REPORTS

2025
Jan wk4P3 --  Jan wk4 -- Jan wk3P2 -- Jan wk3 -- Jan wk2P2 -- Jan wk2 -- Jan wk1 P2 -- Wk1
2024 Dec wk5 -- Dec wk4 P2 -- 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 January and earlier, 2025
:
What is Israel’s deadly ‘Iron Wall’ military raid in Jenin?
& 'Skull without a jaw'
& I dream of a quiet, drone-free Gaza
& 'Staying alive was luck'

Previous reports:
The ceasefire will not bring our lives back
& No child should ever see the horrors of Gaza
& The genocide has left me feeling like a stranger in my own homeland
& Why I won't stop telling Gaza’s stories
& Israel may burn Gaza schools, but Palestinians shall resist
& This is the last phase of Zionism

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

 

January 22 - 20, 2025
Food for thought:
A ceasefire?
Not as far as the idf
and its co-genocide-predetators
are concerned.
'The show must go on!'
Read more and decide for yourself
 
January 21 - 19, 2025
Food for thought:
Let's see what an israeli word is worth.
Read more and decide for yourself

  Actual news
January 17 - 13, 2025
A ceasefire has been reached
but the milions-people life question is
if the idf-led carnage/bloodshed will stop?
And more actual news

January 19 - 14, 2025
Pre-ceasefire & Post-Ceasefire

December 30 - 26, 2024
'Betrayed' and 'abandoned' Sixth baby dies from severe cold
 
 

 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.


Al Jazeera - Jan 22 2025 - By Mohamed Solaimane
<<‘Skull without a jaw’: Gaza survivors search for what remains of the dead
Palestinians are taking the opportunity provided by the Israel-Hamas ceasefire to search for the remains of loved ones.
Khan Younis, Gaza Strip, Palestine – With a heavy heart, keen eyes and trembling hands, Abu Muhammed Ghaith meticulously searched through the thick nylon bags used as makeshift shrouds for those killed in Gaza. Inside the morgue at Nasser Hospital in the southern city of Khan Younis, he was hoping to find a trace of his missing son. Instead, he was met only with unidentified body parts and fragmented remains. The sight left him collapsed on the ground, overwhelmed by grief and exhaustion. Yet, he gathered his strength and continued searching for any trace of 17-year-old Muhammed, shifting his focus from bodies to personal items: a pair of sandals patched with yellow plastic or an orange sweater, a black jacket, tracksuit pants – anything that could belong to his son. “Has anyone seen a patched sandal with a yellow sole? Please, if you find it, let me know,” Abu Muhammed pleaded with others who, like him, had come to the morgue early on Tuesday to look for their loved ones among the remains of dozens of bodies that the Palestinian Civil Defence had salvaged from beneath the rubble in Rafah, south of Khan Younis on the Egyptian border. Tears streamed down his face as he sank to his knees and leaned against the wall. “I’m no longer looking for his body – just his sandal. You see what we’ve come to?” he muttered, a mix of sorrow and helplessness in his voice. A ceasefire that came into effect on Sunday between Israel and Hamas has enabled hundreds of thousands of Palestinians to return to their mostly-demolished homes in Rafah and elsewhere in the Strip. Relentless shelling for 15 months has driven nearly 2 million Palestinians in Gaza into displacement, many without the chance to properly reclaim the bodies of loved ones who perished beneath bombing and rubble. The devastated infrastructure and Israel’s targeting of ambulances and civil defence also hindered their ability to reach sites struck by bombs. Muhammed has been missing since November. He had left the family’s displacement camp in al-Mawasi for what he said would be a quick trip to retrieve belongings from their home in Rafah.
He never returned.
Abu Muhammed is certain his son was killed by Israeli fire or shelling while trying to return home. “He wanted to bring back some of our belongings and return to the camp. But he brought back nothing, and he didn’t come back either,” he told Al Jazeera.
‘A few bones’
In the days since the Israeli military partially withdrew from Rafah, local rescue teams and medical staff have recovered dozens of remains and body parts, which were transported to the Nasser and European hospitals in Khan Younis for identification. With the news circulating, families with missing loved ones have flocked to these sites, hoping to find closure.
For Abu Muhammed, it was the final hope he had to find his son.
Since the day he went missing, Abu Muhammed spared no effort in searching for him. He contacted the Red Cross, the Ministry of Health and anyone who might help. He even returned to his destroyed home in Rafah, combing through its rubble. “I’ve looked everywhere. His mother is on the verge of losing her mind, and his sisters are desperate for answers,” he said. The war has killed about 47,000 people, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry. However, the globally-renowned Lancet medical journal expects the actual number of deaths to be 41 percent higher than the announced toll. In May, the United Nations humanitarian arm, OCHA, said more than 10,000 people were believed to be buried under the rubble in Gaza, adding that it could take up to three years to retrieve those bodies, given then the very primitive tools in the territory. After hours of sifting through the rubble of his destroyed home in Rafah, a heartbroken Faraj Abu Mohsen found no trace of his son. On his way back to Khan Younis, where his family is displaced, the 42-year-old came across body parts and torn clothing about 200 metres (656 ft) from the ruins of his house – items he recognised as belonging to his son. “I had given up hope of finding him alive. While walking back to Khan Younis after searching all day, my foot struck some bones. I moved them aside and uncovered clothing that belonged to my son – his black shirt, blue pants, and sneakers. I knew it was him,” Faraj recalled, sorrowfully. He gathered the remains in a bag, buried what he could, and promised to return to search for more. “None of us imagined that all we’d have left of him would be a few bones,” he said, his voice heavy with grief.
Challenges of identification
Inside and outside the morgue at Nasser Hospital, a heart-wrenching scene unfolded. Desperate families described physical features or clothing in the hope of identifying their loved ones. “My son recently had a tooth implant,” one mother said. Another father called out, “He was wearing blue jeans.” Others spoke of height, build, or unique items like a cowboy hat or a patched sandal. Adding to the pain were the stark labels written on the shrouds: “Skull without a lower jaw”, “Bone fragments”, “Rib cage”, or “Upper and lower limbs”. Instead of names and ages, medical teams documented the details left of Palestinians slain by Israeli artillery to help families identify the remains. Alongside these notes were descriptions of personal items found with the remains – rings, watches, shoes, or damaged ID cards. The lack of DNA testing capabilities in Gaza significantly hampers identification efforts, Dr Ahmed Dhahir, a forensic medicine consultant with Gaza’s Health Ministry, explained, adding that Israel has long restricted the entry of DNA testing equipment into the Strip. “Without this technology, many bodies remain unidentified, leaving families in perpetual anguish,” he said. Dr Dhahir outlined the identification process: remains are first retrieved by rescue teams, then examined and documented. Details such as the recovery location, date and any personal items are recorded. Given the state these bodies have been found in, forensic experts rely heavily on circumstantial evidence, such as clothing or belongings, to guide families. “We follow legal protocol by keeping the bodies for up to 48 hours to allow families an opportunity to identify them. After that, the remains are buried by the Ministry of Endowments and Civil Defence in a designated cemetery, with specific numbers and records maintained for potential future identification if testing equipment becomes available,” Dr Dharir said. He also noted that one-third of the remains recovered from Rafah so far – about 150 cases – remain unidentified. “The most challenging cases are those involving partial remains: a skull, leg bones or fragments of a ribcage. These are carefully numbered and catalogued, but without DNA testing, definitive identification is often impossible,” he added.
Families in limbo
Current forensic resources in Gaza are limited, with only three specialists available in the southern region and none in the north, Dr Dhahir explained, adding that this shortage strained an already overwhelmed system, especially with the sheer volume of remains recovered following Israeli attacks.
For families like Abu Muhammed’s, the inability to locate or identify loved ones prolongs their grief. “We just want to know his fate,” Abu Muhammed said. “Even if all that’s left of my son is a bone, we want to bury him and say goodbye.” The forensic teams face mounting pressure, not just from families but also from the growing backlog of remains. Dr Dhahir emphasised the need for international assistance. “We urgently need DNA testing equipment and trained specialists to help identify victims. This is not just about closure for families – it’s a humanitarian necessity,” he said.
As efforts continue, families cling to hope, no matter how faint. For Abu Muhammed, the search for his son has become a daily ritual, one he cannot abandon despite the emotional toll. “I’ve lost count of the shrouds I’ve opened. I don’t know if I’ll ever find him, but I’ll keep searching,” he said.
The tragedy of unidentified remains underscores the broader human cost of the conflict. Beyond the staggering death toll lies an equally painful reality: families left in limbo, searching for answers amid the rubble of their lives. For many, closure feels like an unattainable dream – one stolen by war and the lack of resources to mend its wounds.
This piece was published in collaboration with Egab.>>
SOURCE: AL JAZEERA: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2025/1/22/skull-without-a-jaw-gaza-survivors-search-for-what-remains-of-the-dead


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.

"When a rose dies
a thorn
is left behind
to eternally sting
the skins
of the genocide-baby killers."

"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 2025