OCCUPIED
JERUSALEM, June 3 (IslamOnline) -All aspects of life in Palestine has
been affected by the state of war, including weddings. Marriages are
now held in low profile settings and the bride’s prince charmer has
become he who best demonstrates courage and resistance in face of the
enemy.
Most
Palestinian weddings now last no more than two hours.
“I
did not wear the white gown that is every girl’s dream,” Manar
Awad, a bride told islamOnline. “I was told brought instead the news
of my brother being shot by Israeli gunfire.”
“A
day before the wedding,” Manal went on, “my brother, Emad, called
me to congratulate me and told me to be happy no matter what happened
to him. I couldn’t stop my tears, feeling my he was bidding me
farewell, and hoped to Allah He would extend my brother’s life.”
Emad
worked with the security forces in the West Bank city of Ramallah and
for several months, the Israeli checkpoints refused to let him visit
his family. On the day of his sister’s wedding, an Israeli sniper
shot Emad. A few days later, he died.
“Emad
died and did not see my in my white gown. I couldn’t wear it after
he died,” the sad bride said.
Another
bride from Gaza, Huda, said that the checkpoints barred her groom,
Mamdouh in the Deir Balah military camp from coming to her.
There
was a car that Huda planned to take, as she wore a black cloak over
her white gown. She was going to walk on the Gaza coast for nearly 200
meters until she crosses the Netzarim checkpoint south of Gaza to be
taken by another car in the opposite side.
“I
think I’m going to reach my bridal home the following day. In the
past, couples used to go to the beach and take pictures with guests.
But now, I am forced to walk on the beach for 200 meters without my
groom and get my gown all soiled just to save our lives.
“Even
then, I may never go back to my father’s house without crossing the
checkpoints controlled by the mood of the Zionist soldiers,” she
said angrily.
The
Intifada against Israeli occupation has not only affected the nature
of the Palestinian wedding ceremony, but the Palestinian girls’
choice of a husband as well.
Heba
spoke to IslamOnline about her marriage to a man wanted by the Israeli
intelligence. “The Intifada has changed the dreams of the
Palestinian girl,” she said. “Resistance and struggle against the
occupation is the highest dowry her future husband can offer.
“I
agreed without second thoughts to marry him, even though I realized
how difficult our life would be due to his security situation. But I
have chosen him as a husband for the afterlife and not for this
life.”
Heba
hid her husband’s real name from all her friends until the wedding
procedures passed quietly without the Israeli intelligence reaching
him, she said.
“I
invited my friends and relatives to a simple wedding in my father’s
house. After sunset, everyone having left, I had to change my wedding
gown and dress in disguise. A car then took me through twisted roads,
in an attempt to evade Israeli intelligence eyes. We wanted our
marriage consummated, our happiness complete, before an Apache could
deny me of my man for good.”
Palestinian
weddings never last more than a couple of hours now, in light of
Al-Aqsa Intifada and the continued Palestinian struggle. The wedding
procedures usually start after the ‘Asr (afternoon) prayers and end
before sunset. People try to get done with the ceremony as soon as
possible, in fear of haphazard air strikes.
Another
bride, Mona Jabr, was unlucky enough, though, to have Israeli forces
begin their raids on Gaza much earlier than anticipated.
“There
were supposed to be lights to decorate the party and for the wedding
hall to be filled with guests,” she said. “Instead, there were
candles lit up, not to give a romantic ambiance to the party, but
because electricity was cut off all homes in fear of a fire flare-up
since air raids were going on. The guests were just our families, my
groom and I. The sound of warplanes over our refugee camp kept people
indoors, preferring to die within the confines of their own homes than
out in the street.”
“I
wished that this dark night would end fast,” she said in a sad tone.
“Our happiness was aborted way before time.”
Most
of the Palestinian traditions in such celebrations have disappeared
under the daily Israeli incursions and air-raids. Those invited to
weddings are only the close relatives of the couple and many of them
do not even attend in fear of sudden incursions. People are scared of
gatherings, and loud speakers are no longer used. In a low voice, some
songs are being sung by the guests in an attempt to cheer the couple
up.