#93 Feminine Resistance in Palestine: Ashira Darwish & V
Jul 11, 2024
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Ashira Darwish & V discuss feminine resistance in Palestine, highlighting stories of sumud against occupation. They explore challenges faced by women in conflict zones, deconstruct 'samud', emphasize global solidarity through song and dance, and dream of a free Palestine. The conversation reflects admiration and solidarity among Palestinians for a united, peaceful future.
Feminine resistance in Palestine showcases strength against occupation and patriarchy.
Expressing vulnerability and emotions is crucial for healing from trauma.
Music and dance play a significant role in trauma recovery and self-expression.
Deep dives
Focus on Collective Healing and Community Support
The importance of collective healing through community support and solidarity is highlighted. It emphasizes the significance of coming together in times of hardship, sharing experiences, and providing emotional and practical assistance.
Embracing Vulnerability and Emotional Release
The podcast underlines the value of embracing vulnerability and allowing for emotional release as an essential part of healing. It discusses the impact of trauma on individuals and the necessity of expressing emotions, such as crying and grieving.
Power of Music and Dance in Trauma Recovery
The transformative power of music and dance in trauma recovery is emphasized. It highlights how singing and dancing can serve as healing tools, allowing individuals to express themselves, release emotional pain, and find strength.
Vision of a Free Palestine and Unity
A vision of a free Palestine is shared, envisioning a future where borders are dissolved, checkpoints dismantled, and a sense of unity and inclusivity prevails. The dream includes welcoming refugees, celebrating diversity, and fostering interconnectedness among all people.
Global Solidarity and Interconnected Struggles
The podcast advocates for global solidarity and interconnected struggles, emphasizing the shared experiences of marginalized communities worldwide. It underscores the importance of unity, mutual support, and collective action in addressing systemic injustices.
In this episode we present excerpts from the recent conversation (June 2024) between Ashira Darwish & V as part of SAND’s “Conversations on Palestine” around the premiere of the film Where Olive Trees Weep hosted by the directors of the film and co-founders of SAND, Zaya and Maurizio Benazzo.
https://whereolivetreesweep.com/
You can watch this full conversation and 22 others. SAND has created a program with leading historians, spiritual teachers, trauma therapists, poets and performers to complement the themes explored in the film and provide a larger historical, cultural and social context to the plight of the Palestinian people.
In this conversation, prepare to be moved and inspired by the stories of Palestinian women's sumud (steadfast perseverance) against the violence of occupation, patriarchy and dehumanization. Their narratives expose how colonial occupation is a gender-based crime inextricable from the repression of female self-determination. This conversation promises to be a tribute to the unbreakable spirit of Palestinian mothers who nurture profound love, clandestine schoolhouses, and revolutionary consciousness — even when all they have is the sanctity of their wombs. Ashira Ali Darwish worked for 15 years as a TV & Radio journalist and researcher in Palestine for the BBC, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch. She is the founder of Catharsis Holistic Healing, a trauma therapy project pioneering a type of Sufi active meditation which draws its roots from ancestral and Indigenous knowledge. Her personal healing journey from full body paralysis with a severed spinal cord in 2012 has given her a deep insight into the process of recovery and healing. In 2021, she received the “ISABS Honours” from the Indian Society for Applied Behavioural Science for her contribution to positive societal transformation. V (formerly Eve Ensler) is the Tony Award-winning playwright, activist, performer, and author of the Obie award-winning theatrical phenomenon The Vagina Monologues, published in over 48 languages, performed in over 140 countries, and heralded by The New York Times as one of the “best American plays” of the past 25 years and that “no recent hour of theater has had a greater impact worldwide.”