With thanks to Br. Rafeh, California  
  
    The Children of Deir Yassin
    by Pat McDonnell Twair
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]  
  
    As hostilities intensified between Jews and Palestinians during the   
spring of 1948, Hind Husseini, who co-ordinated the establishment of   Arab 
children's centres in Jerusalem , found it increasingly difficult   to move 
about the war-torn city. The morning of April 9 has resounded   with volleys of 
gunfire marking the solemn funeral of her cousin,   Abdul Qader Husseini, the 
charismatic leader of the Palestinian   resistance. He had died the day before 
in a six day battle to regain   Kastel, an Arab fortress overlooking Jerusalem 
. Now this most revered   of all Palestinian fighters was being buried at the 
sacred Haram   al-Sharif. This was the biggest blow the Palestinians had so far 
  sustained. As the Palestinians stopped shooting their precious bullets   into 
the air and began to mourn the sudden loss of Abdul Qadar,   ominous rumours 
began to spread of a massacre. The atrocities   mentioned in whispers were more 
horrible than the bereft Arabs could   comprehend
 and they seemed to be taking place that very morning on the   western 
outskirts of the city near Kastel.  
  
    A few hours later, Arab authorities announced Jewish terrorists has   
attacked the village of Deir Yassin . In hope of inciting neighbouring   Arab 
governments to come to their aid, they graphically described the   slaughter of 
Deir Yassin's civilian inhabitants. The Arab governments   did not respond, but 
tragically, the Palestinian peasants did and   began to make a mass exodus from 
their homeland of millennia to the   Jordanian border.  
  
    Hind huddled close to the radio in her two-room apartment in the Suq   
al-Haman neighbourhood of East Jerusalem . She realised a massacre of   this 
magnitude meant all out war. She did not go to her office the   next morning as 
co-ordinator for the Arab Women's Union . However,   when the level of gunfire 
sporadically abated, she ventured outside.   Turning the corner, the horror of 
the massacre of Deir Yassin hit her   full force as she beheld several bloodied 
children huddled against a wall.  
  
    "Oh my darlings, what happened? Are you hurt? What is this, you have   no 
shoes, why are you in night-clothes?"  
  
    The shivering children were too frightened to cry, they stared at her   in 
wide-eyed horror unable to describe the atrocities they had witnessed.  
  
    Picking up the two youngest, Hind gently whispered to the dirty,   
frightened children to follow her. It was bitterly cold even at midday   on 
that April 10 morning. Hind unlocked the door of her apartment and   motioned 
to the frightened waifs to follow her inside. She gently   lowered the toddlers 
onto her bed, rushed to bring blankets from a   closet and began to heat water 
for bathing.  
  
    Now that they knew they were safely in the hands of an adult who spoke   
Arabic but dressed differently than the women of Deir Yassin, the   children 
began to whimper. Mohammed, the oldest, told Hind that he had   hid under his 
parents' bed when the terrorists entered his home. He   had heard his mother 
scream for a long time. From his hiding point, he   had seen the bodies of his 
sisters and brothers fall to the floor. The   house had been looted. Several 
times hands had pulled out old clothes   and shoes from under the bed, but he 
had not been detected. For the   rest of the day and into the night, the little 
boy had heard groans   and cries, gun-shots, screeching tyres, and the strange 
guttural   sounds of the intruders. At daybreak the bodies the bodies that lay 
in   his house were pulled out. When he saw his mother's lifeless body   being 
dragged by its heels like a sack of wheat, sobs uncontrollably   came out of 
his throat. A terrorist reached under the bed,
 touched   him, pulled him from his hiding place, and roughly walked him to a   
truck where several other children were holding onto one another.  
  
    One eight-year old girl was soaked in blood; Mohammed feared she had   been 
wounded. He didn't want her to die in this truck. Barely able to   speak, she 
told him her name was Thoraya and assured him she wasn't   wounded. Her aunts 
had protectively hid her behind them when the   terrorists entered their house. 
The women had been stabbed, their gold   earrings and gold bracelets forcibly 
removed, but Thoraya had remained   safe and protected by their bodies which 
fell over her and which she   felt stiffen over the hours. It was only when one 
of the terrorists   returned to make sure all the jewellery had been removed 
from the   corpses that she had been found and taken to the truck.  
  
    Hind bathed Mohammed and dried him with a warm towel. Then grasping   his 
arms inside her tightly clenched fists, she looked directly into   his eyes and 
pledged: "You will never, ever be alone again, I swear."  
  
    For the ensuing week, Hind worked with Adnan Tamimi to locate the   
surviving children of Deir Yassin - 55 in all. In light of the   brutality of 
the attack by the Irgun and Stern Gang militias, it was   surprising to some 
that so many had been spared. Trucks had dispatched   the children to the 
Muslim quarter where they had been dumped on   street corners.  
  
    Long before the massacre of Deir Yassin, which would become the major   
milestone in her life, Hind had put aside thoughts of marriage as she   watched 
her homeland crumble under the onslaught of European Jews. The   Husseini 
family of Jerusalem was about as close to aristocracy as   Islam recognises. 
Her father, a judge, had died when she was two years   old. Being the only 
daughter of a family of five boys, she was   pampered to the extent of 
preparing to pursue a higher education, but   protected in the sense that it 
was deemed unwise for her to attend a   university in Europe with World War II 
approaching. After she   completed high school at the English College for Girls 
in Jerusalem in   1937, she began teaching at the Islamic   Girl's School. She 
again broke with tradition when she left the family   compound to live in her 
own apartment after she accepted a post in   1945 with the United Women's 
Society Organisation.  
  
    Now this pioneer Palestinian feminist realised it was time to return   to 
the family home with her 55 babies. She had only 135 Palestinian   pounds in 
the bank, but Hind wrote in her journal: "I will live with   these children or 
I will die with them."  
  
    Hind's family was sympathetic to her calling. They turned over to her   the 
elegant Dar Husseini (Husseini House), a house her grandfather had   built in 
1891 and in which she had been born on April 25, 1916. So on   her 32nd 
birthday, just two weeks after the massacre of Deir Yassin,   Hind renamed the 
stately mansion Dar El Tifl (Children's House).  
  
    Thereafter, construction always seemed to be going on in the compound.   
Two, four-storey buildings were built, schoolrooms were opened in   standing 
structures. Teachers and yet more teachers were hired.   Orphans were rarely 
turned away.  
  
    In 1963, Hind determined she should learn the very latest in   educational 
skills and attended the University of Hamburg for three years.  
  
    Concerned that Zionists were attempting to undermine the history of   the 
Palestinian people, the dedicated nationalist found another   passion: the 
preservation of Palestinian arts and crafts. She began   collecting pottery, 
old furniture, and vintage hand-embroidered   dresses; she participated in many 
symposia in neighbouring Arab states   that dealt with Palestinian handicrafts. 
Eventually Hind established a   folkloric centre and museum exhibiting baskets, 
inlaid furniture,   brassware, and national costumes of the Palestinian people. 
 
  
    Over the years, Hind remained steadfast in ignoring offers of millions   of 
dollars for her property in the traditionally upscale Arab   neighbourhood of 
Sheikh Jarrah. Shortly before her death in 1995, she   took the ultimate step 
to protect it by registering it as a possession   of the Waqf (the Islamic 
religious authority).  
  
    Today 250 orphans live at Dar El Tifl and 1450 day students receive   
instruction from pre-school to graduate level studies. All high school   
graduates have excellent English skills.  
  
    The high standards of the curriculum and staff have earned a   prestigious 
academic record for the school. Conscious that not all   students are destined 
for higher studies, Hind established   Vocational training in such subjects as 
catering and secretarial work.   A new science workshop is being overseen by 
two Palestinian professors   living in California for twenty gifted students 
between the ages of   thirteen and fifteen years. Working on five computers, 
students carry   out experiments in fluid dynamics, genetics, and physics. 
Primarily   working with materials around them - grocery bags and bottles - 
they   have created a model submarine and hot air balloon. Dar El Tifl   
students will be on the Internet in 1998. Two years ago the Hind   Husseini Art 
and Literature College was established on the compound   and offers bachelor's 
degrees in English, Arabic and social studies.    Dar El Tifl shares 
supervision with Al Quds university over a master's   degree in
 Palestinian and Islamic civilisation. The original family   residence now 
houses a primary health clinic and guest quarters   downstairs while 
administrative offices are upstairs.  
  
    Yet, 50 years after the massacre at Deir Yassin, Dar El Tifl is   suffering 
more than ever at the hands of extremist right-wing Israeli   Jews bent on 
taking over all of Jerusalem . Orient House, the   unofficial headquarters of 
the Palestinian National authority in   Jerusalem , has been the special target 
of the Jewish settlers who   brought Benjamin Netanyahu into power as prime 
minister in June 1996.   Orient House is directly across the street from Dar El 
Tifl, and   Israeli militants often break onto the school grounds and threaten  
 students as they approach the school.  
  
    Teachers and students alike have received hope from the United States   
since 1992 when Dalal Muhtadi, a Saudi citizen who lives in California   , 
founded Dar El Tifl-USA. "I had wanted to assist needy Palestinian   children 
for years," Muhtadi explains. "Then in late 1992 my Auntie   Hind called from 
Jerusalem and said she needed my help."  
  
    Over the years, the Saudi government had made grants to Dar El Tifl   but 
these had dried up after the Gulf War. Muhtadi traveled to   Jerusalem , talked 
to Hind Husseini, the directors and teaching staff   and familiarised herself 
with the school curricula and operation of   the orphanage.  
  
    "I was convinced Dar El Tifl was accomplishing the goals it had set   for 
itself. Now it was my turn to muster support for it in the United   States ," 
continued Muhtadi, a great-niece of Hind Husseini.  
  
    But, why, we asked, would Israeli extremists want to terrorise   
Palestinian orphans. Hasn't enough blood been shed over the past   
half-century?  
  
    "They don't hide their motives, Muhtadi replied. "Fundamentalist   fanatics 
in Israel want to wipe out every trace of a Palestinian   presence in Jerusalem 
."  
  
    Mean-spirited settlers do their best to make life miserable - even   scary 
- for Dar El tifl students. Settlers have broken the gate of the   school, 
entered the playground area, and threatened children. In their   protests 
against Orient House, fanatic settlers have installed   themselves in front of 
the school and raised wooden signs painted with   a skull and crossbones on the 
school wall. When day students approach   the school, shouting settlers with 
raised fists make them walk a   gauntlet of insults and loud curses.  
  
    Mahira Dajani, who heads Dar El Tifl's board of trustees, writes: "We   
have tried to teach our children the love of peace and to train them   to 
accept peaceful coexistence as a reality and to forget the evils of   war. The 
presence of settlers outside the school gate changed the   children's outlook 
on life as a whole. The settlers harassed the   children in many ways, 
including: uttering filthy words and making   lewd gestures, throwing rotten 
fruit and empty bottles at the school   gate and inside the school grounds, and 
trespassing on the school   grounds repeatedly so that the school has been 
forced to erect a wire   fence over the wall."  
  
    The Israeli military also has intensified its presence in front of   Orient 
House since Netanyahu's election. Dar El Tifl's school wall has   become a 
favourite place for Israeli troops to stand, thus imposing a   siege mentality 
on the children in the playground. School officials   complain the tear gas the 
soldiers use has an unpleasant smell. But   the bad odour is nothing compared 
to the stench of urine. Portable   latrines have been set up in front of the 
school for the soldiers'   use, but they relieve themselves throughout the 
area. The Palestinians   believe this is a deliberate insult and provides a 
frightening   spectacle to young girls on their way to school.  
  
    "You can't imagine how terrible it is," Muhtadi commented. The urine   
odour is overwhelming for a three-block radius."  
  
    Many day students have transferred to other schools rather than be   chased 
and threatened   by nasty settlers. The Israeli policy of making Jerusalem 
off-bounds   to West bank and Gazan Palestinians has left students from these 
areas   with one of two choices: either to become boarders at Dar El Tifl and   
seldom be with their families or transfer to schools in Gaza or the   West Bank 
.  
  
    The school has also lost those of its teachers who live on the West   Bank 
, because Israel won't grant them identity cards to enter Jerusalem .  
  
    What are the circumstances of the children who live at Dar El Tifl?   Two 
such youngsters are Sabreen, 5, and Wafa, 15. Sabreen's father was   shot and 
killed after he finished his prayers at a mosque in Gaza . At   the time, 
Sabreen's mother, who has twice undergone surgery for a   heart condition, was 
pregnant with her third child. She had no choice   but to leave Sabreen at Dar 
El Tifl. Wafa is from Bethlehem , where   her mother was shot dead by Israeli 
bullets while she was shopping.   Wafa's father is unemployed. Rather than have 
his children starve, he   brought Wafa and her two brothers and two sisters to 
Dar El tifl.  
  
    Despite the racist behaviour of the settlers, Dar El Tifl continues to   
heal and educate. Each year since 1950, some 800 Palestinians have   graduated 
from the institution. Funds from Dar El Tifl-USA have   established a 
counseling centre where a social worker, a graduate of   the Hind Husseini 
College of Art and Literature, works with   traumatised students and refers 
those with special needs to   professional care-givers.  
  
    Postscript  
  
    Immediately after the death of Hind Husseini in September 1995,   Muhtadi 
announced a memorial would be given in her home in Yorba Linda   , California . 
Word spreads as fast among the Palestinian community of   California as it does 
in the homeland and dozens of people whose lives   had been affected positively 
by Hind came to Muhtadi's home.  
  
    "I shall never forget it," Muhtadi recalled, "when an older couple   
entered the living room. The woman said `I am one of the children of   Deir 
Yassin.'"  
  
    It was Thoraya, who years earlier had married Muhammad, and together   they 
had had four children.  
  
    For most of that evening the couple recalled the traumatic events of   
April 9 and 10 and their rescue by Hind.  
  
    They left that night for their home in San Diego . Muhtadi has never   
since been able to find them. Their phone was disconnected. Massages   left at 
their children's homes were never answered. The tragedy of   Deir Yassin has 
left deep scars that will last for generations.   Nonetheless the vision of 
Hind Husseini has given hope to many who   were beyond hope as later Israeli 
onslaughts left their toll of   traumatised, orphaned Arab children.  
    
      2007-03-31 Sat 18:06:50 cst  
  NewTrendMag.org      
                
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