A sad, proud, moving day at St Bride’s Church on Fleet Street today, for the memorial service for #ShireenAbuAkleh
The shock and pain of Shireen’s friends and colleagues, just 6 weeks on from her murder, is palpable.
Her niece Lina, by video link, called her‘my best friend’.
‘A part of me is broken’, she said-but because Shireen was brave & optimistic, she has to go on, and hope for justice
Lina noted that Shireen was actually ‘still reporting, still exposing truths’ even at her own funeral- when the world saw Israeli forces attack mourners.
Shireen’s colleague Ali Samoudi called her a ‘lady of light in a holy city’, a sister- like everyone who spoke he recalled what a generous, giving person she was.
‘She may be gone but the seed she has sown across Palestine will continue to grow’
Najwan Simri spoke from Jerusalem with the city as her backdrop - ‘the view Shireen & I loved’.
Najwan met Shireen when working for Al Jazeera as a young woman, & they became close friends until Shireen was ‘nearest to my soul’.
Shireen was ‘the kindest person I’ve ever known’
Najwan & Shireen were often travelling, covering wars and clashes. Far from home, Shireen became like a second mother to Najwan, giving her a sense of security.
She loved Shireen’s sense of humour- even when things were serious & frightening she’d always try to find some joy
Shireen’s close friend Dr Nadia Naser-Najjab spoke in person & fought back tears describing her beloved friend. Shireen was always the one to intervene and bring people back together if there was a fall-out in their friendship group:‘our diplomatic friend’.
I spoke briefly to Dr Naser-Najjab afterwards and she told me she still scrolls through their old messages, and has to stop herself calling Shireen.
The senseless suddenness of her death has left her loved ones profoundly shocked and dislocated- they’re still reeling💔
British Palestinian singer Reem Kelani sang Arabic song ‘The Singer Said’, with the lines ‘I died standing/ Standing..I died like the trees’, noting that Shireen also died standing, just doing her job.
As a candle was lit we stood to observe a minute’s silence for Shireen and the other *FORTY FIVE* Palestinian journalists killed in the last 22 years. A reminder of how brave Shireen was and her colleagues are, with the ever present risk of death so clearly before them
Was great to see the diamond that is @MPeakeOfficial, who came all the way down to London just to pay her respects to #ShireenAbuAkleh
Quick chat with @ClaudiaWebbe and @jeremycorbyn too; he commented on what a beautiful service it was & how good to see so many humanitarian groups like @MedicalAidPal present.
He talked about the desperate need for peace, but that could only come with justice, & ending occupation
#ShireenAbuAkleh will remain as important in her absence as she was when present.
She inspired a generation of Palestinian girls through her example, & gave hope to so many.
Her niece Lina noted that even under brutal attack, her mourners still carried Shireen on their shoulders
just as bravely as she had carried their voices and their truths.
She asked us all not to stop speaking about Shireen.
That’s an easy promise to keep.
And little Palestinians will grow up knowing her name.
BAD day for the far right, GREAT day for Jeremy Corbyn yesterday!
Violent thugs were prevented from getting into Marxism and meanwhile, Jeremy got the most rapturous applause inside.
He had to do TWO events because even the main hall, which held over a thousand, wasn’t 1/
big enough for everyone who wanted to see him.
So we had to get him straight to talk 2- it’s not easy doing two long sessions back to back, but he aced it.
As I was lucky enough to be stageside let me share some clips. 1) addressing the national shame - hungry schoolkids
2/
2) the SCANDAL of PFIs- ‘These people are fleecing the NHS!’ 3) the two child cap: ‘a piece of 19th century moralism… Iain Duncan Smith saying the cause of poverty is (working class people) having too many children’
was understandably anxious, but she too was a suffragette. She’d raised Dora to understand politics, teaching her to read and debating the news with her.
She could only let respect & pride win out over motherly worries when Dora said:
Let me go, Mother. I’m quite capable. 2/
I know what I am fighting for, and am prepared to go to prison for the cause. I feel that women ought to have their rights and it will be an honour to go to prison.’
Dora made it to London & was on her first protest when she was brutally arrested. You can see her torn skirt.. 3/
They said they weren’t political; just wanted to help victims.
They lied on both counts.
Soon she started to hear Islamophobic comments. Some of her abusers were (nominally) Muslim, but she knew no race or religion was to blame.
White men abused her too.
She became alarmed
2/
-Who had she fallen in with?
-How could she extricate herself safely?
She asked, politely, that they didn’t racialise her story, which they were exploiting mercilessly. ‘Don’t pretend it was just one group’, she said.