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Egypt: And this one goes to Djamila Bouhired

 Algeria’s 75-year-old activist and revolutionist Djamila Bouhired, is ill and is beseeching her country and countrymen to finance her medical treatment. The news has infuriated many Egyptian bloggers who see her as an Arab icon and a hero.

Writing at Egyptian ChroniclesZeinobia believes that we as Arabs are good at destroying national heros:

Djamila Bouhired has sent an open letter to the Algerian State and people to help her in her illness. The famous Arab nationalist heroine of 1960s who became a symbol of independence in the whole Arab world is begging from the Algerian government !! The woman is asking the government to help her especially as a woman of national pride and dignity she refused aids from the Gulf 🙁

Djamila’s situation reminded Zeinobia of our own Egyptian war veterans:

she has brothers in Egypt from 1973 Suez resistance veterans whose pension is disgrace forcing them to work as drivers on micro-buses in Suez. Those veterans stood against Sharon for weeks defending our dignity !! In fact she has brothers and sisters across the Arab world , those who did not think too long when they gave their lives to the nation but the nation is thinking too long to give them back what they do deserve.

Instead of football wars, Zeinobia wished that:

our relations would have been in better condition , it would be great if we send to Djamila the best of our physicians or invite her to Cairo again as she has been always a welcomed guest.

Nawara Negm posted two videos on her blogthe first video is a message from the Algerian Kommondoss Team welcoming her among them and offering to pay her medical expenses. Thesecond is a video of an Algerian explaining to the whole world who Djamila Bouhired is and how the Arab world has let her down!

Nawara commented saying:

اسفخص على دنيا كلها لما جميلة بو حريد تحتاج يوم تستلف عشان تاكل … مافيش حد فينا احسن لما ست الناس تعيش مش لاقية تاكل … هي جميلة دي جزائرية يا ناس؟ جميلة اللي كسفت رجالة العالم (ايام ما العالم كان فيه رجالة) تخص الجزائر بس؟ ما تخصش كل انسان عربي؟ هو لو النيل نشف تبقى مشكلة مصر والسودان بس؟ هو فيه اغنى من العرب؟ الله، بتروح فين الفلوس يا عم الامور انت وهو؟ بتتصرف على هيفا واخواتها اللي نافخين كل حتة فيهم عند بتاع الكاوتش لما شوية وح نلاقيهم طايرين في الهوا … ÙŠØ¹Ù†ÙŠ ايه؟ يعني ايه جميلة تضطر تستلف وللا حتى تضطر تطلب زيادة معاش؟ يعني ايه انا مش فاهمة يعني
Shame on a world where an icon like Djamila Bouhired has to beg for a living! We are all guilty when such a great woman can barely survive! People! Djamila is not just an Algerian woman! She is  woman who put all men to shame at a time when the world was full of real men! Is she just an Algerian affair? Isn’t she an Arab icon that we are all proud of? Where are the Arabs and their money? Isn’t she more worthy of their dollars more than singers and entertainers? This world is coming to an end .. a world where a woman like this has to borrow money! I really don’t get it!

Tarek Ez ElDen posted her letter to the Algerian PresidentBouteflika; Djamila’s letter says:

إن ما يتقاضاه المجاهدون لا يرقى إلى المبالغ الكبيرة التي يتقاضاها نواب البرلمان أو ما تحصلون عليه أنتم شخصيا (بوتفليقة) وكذا ما يحصل عليه محيطكم”ØŒ ودعت بوتفليقة إلى التوقف عما أسمته “الإهانة”ØŒ بإعادة النظر في “المنحة المتواضعة التي يحصل عليها المجاهدون ليعيشوا بكرامة ما تبقى لهم من أيام”.
“Compared to the huge sums of money that you (addressing Bouteflika) or parliament members make, the pension scheme for revolutionists and veterans is mediocre.”

She also urged the president to stop his continuous “insult” by revisiting the “humble pension given to the people who fought for their country – people who deserve to live the little that’s left in their lives with dignity.”

Marwa Rakha: Born and raised in Egypt, I was brought up to be a good middle class Egyptian girl; but somehow being good did not suit my notions. Deep down I have rejected the heavy heritage of traditions and norms that made no sense to my inquisitive mind.



I have come a long way from the scared little girl that I once was ... I found my passion in writing, my voice in teaching & training, and my strength in marketing ... I took off my mask ... and I decided to speak up and loud .. as loud as loud could ever be.


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