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People took to the streets in Paris, demanding an immediate ceasefire in Gaza and Lebanon. #GhostPrincess
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"Viva Viva Palestina.."
Protesters marched at the University of Manchester to show solidarity with Palestine and Gaza. #GhostPrincess
Protesters marched at the University of Manchester to show solidarity with Palestine and Gaza. #GhostPrincess
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Protesters demonstrate in Ancona, Italy, in solidarity with Gaza ๐ต๐ธ #GhostPrincess
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A protest held in Oslo, Norway, in support of Gaza. #GhostPrincess
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Protesters demonstrate in Utrecht in support of Gaza. #GhostPrincess
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People took to the streets in Zurich, Switzerland, in support of Gaza. #GhostPrincess
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๐ฌ๐งLove and solidarity for the people of Gaza.
The Red Line march through the streets of Bristol in a spectacle of autumn colors in Castle Park. #GhostPrincess
The Red Line march through the streets of Bristol in a spectacle of autumn colors in Castle Park. #GhostPrincess
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๐ฎ๐น๐ต๐ธMilano, Italy stands with Palestine. #GhostPrincess
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Liverpoolโs 49th Free Palestine sets off. #GhostPrincess
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Western freedom.
Security at a stadium in Toronto, Canada, kicked out a fan from a Raptors game for wearing a hat with a map of Palestine on it. #GhostPrincess
Security at a stadium in Toronto, Canada, kicked out a fan from a Raptors game for wearing a hat with a map of Palestine on it. #GhostPrincess
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People took to the streets in Edmonton, Canada demanding an immediate ceasefire in Gaza and Lebanon. #GhostPrincess
Shadia Abu Ghazaleh, who was the first female martyr of Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine
Shadia Abu Ghazaleh was born in Nablus on January 8, 1948, and educated in Nablus. She joined George Habashโs Arab Nationalist Movement as a young woman in 1964 in pursuit of the liberation of Palestine.
The tenacity and death-defying courage in the life of Shadia Abu Ghazaleh is an illustration of the resistance and relentless spirit of Palestinian women. Abu Ghazaleh studied at Ein Shams University in Cairo before returning to Nablus following the occupation of the West Bank in the 1967 six day war. There, she joined a local branch of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine becoming one of the original members after the organisation was founded in 1967.h (The PFLP was founded on December 11, 1967 from the Arab Nationalist Movement).
Abu Ghazaleh organised and led womenโs military units and was one of the first Palestinian women to participate in military resistance after the 1967 occupation. She was also deeply devoted to education and political struggle, treating it as an integral part of revolution. She had firm conviction in collective and organised work and emphasised the role of culture, politics, and strategy in directing armed struggle. She knitted together and led womenโs military units and wash one of the first Palestinian women to participate in military resistance after the 1967 occupation. Shadia Abu Ghazaleh succumbed on November 28, 1968, as she prepared a bomb in her home for a military operation against the occupation.
She became the first female martyr of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.
Today, her name is permanently embedded in the annals as a struggler, a pioneering women leader, and a fighter in the history of the Palestinian people and the people of the world. Her spirit still shimmers, like an inextinguishable flame. She manifested what distinguished a revolutionary from an ordinary person. People like her have to be reborn when Zionism is posing the most mortal threat to mankind .Her spark still shimmers to plant seeds for new lotuses to bloom to liberate the Palestinian people. Today, in times of greater adversity, it is all the more challenging a task to confront the poisonous weeds or enemy.
Two schools have been named in her memory: the Shadia Abu Ghazaleh School for Girls in Gaza and the Shadia Abu Ghazaleh High School for Boys in Jabalia.
Women have long been in the vanguard of this century of resistance, flinging rocks at tanks in the โintifadaโ uprisings, forming groups like the Palestinian Federation of Womenโs Action Committee, commandeering commercial planes like Leila Khaled and Therese Halasa, slapping soldiers like Ahed Tamimi after her cousin was shot by Israeli forces. The decades long struggle of the Palestinian liberation poses a challenge not only Israel occupation and racism, but British imperialist ambitions to divide, exploit and occupy the Middle East.
#GhostPrincess #GhostsofPs
Shadia Abu Ghazaleh was born in Nablus on January 8, 1948, and educated in Nablus. She joined George Habashโs Arab Nationalist Movement as a young woman in 1964 in pursuit of the liberation of Palestine.
The tenacity and death-defying courage in the life of Shadia Abu Ghazaleh is an illustration of the resistance and relentless spirit of Palestinian women. Abu Ghazaleh studied at Ein Shams University in Cairo before returning to Nablus following the occupation of the West Bank in the 1967 six day war. There, she joined a local branch of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine becoming one of the original members after the organisation was founded in 1967.h (The PFLP was founded on December 11, 1967 from the Arab Nationalist Movement).
Abu Ghazaleh organised and led womenโs military units and was one of the first Palestinian women to participate in military resistance after the 1967 occupation. She was also deeply devoted to education and political struggle, treating it as an integral part of revolution. She had firm conviction in collective and organised work and emphasised the role of culture, politics, and strategy in directing armed struggle. She knitted together and led womenโs military units and wash one of the first Palestinian women to participate in military resistance after the 1967 occupation. Shadia Abu Ghazaleh succumbed on November 28, 1968, as she prepared a bomb in her home for a military operation against the occupation.
She became the first female martyr of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.
Today, her name is permanently embedded in the annals as a struggler, a pioneering women leader, and a fighter in the history of the Palestinian people and the people of the world. Her spirit still shimmers, like an inextinguishable flame. She manifested what distinguished a revolutionary from an ordinary person. People like her have to be reborn when Zionism is posing the most mortal threat to mankind .Her spark still shimmers to plant seeds for new lotuses to bloom to liberate the Palestinian people. Today, in times of greater adversity, it is all the more challenging a task to confront the poisonous weeds or enemy.
Two schools have been named in her memory: the Shadia Abu Ghazaleh School for Girls in Gaza and the Shadia Abu Ghazaleh High School for Boys in Jabalia.
Women have long been in the vanguard of this century of resistance, flinging rocks at tanks in the โintifadaโ uprisings, forming groups like the Palestinian Federation of Womenโs Action Committee, commandeering commercial planes like Leila Khaled and Therese Halasa, slapping soldiers like Ahed Tamimi after her cousin was shot by Israeli forces. The decades long struggle of the Palestinian liberation poses a challenge not only Israel occupation and racism, but British imperialist ambitions to divide, exploit and occupy the Middle East.
#GhostPrincess #GhostsofPs
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