The
Story Of Hiba
By Sa'id
Ghazali in Tubas, West Bank
Independent
27 May 2003
Even her family is baffled that Hiba Daraghmeh insisted on covering
herself from head to toe in a dark brown, all-enveloping robe at all
times. The white veil she also wore - a badge of Islamic fundamentalism
- concealed her head, mouth and nose. Only her almond-coloured eyes
were visible to the outside world.
The shy 19-year-old student
of English literature never spoke to men, and so avoided drinking coffee
or tea at the cafeteria of Al Quds Open University in her home town,
Tubas in the West Bank. All of her friends were women. Even her cousin,
Murad Daraghmeh, 20, also a student at Al Quds, says: "I never
saw her face. I never talked to her. I never shook hands with her."
The first time the world
saw her young face unveiled was in a poster. Islamic Jihad released
it, after her death eight days ago.
Hiba was a suicide bomber.
She detonated the explosives around her waist outside the Amakim Shopping
Mall in the northern Israeli town of Afula, killing three Israelis and
wounding 48.
Eyewitnesses described a
horrifying scene of rubble, shattered glass and great pools of blood.
As casualties lay on the pavement, emergency workers hunted in the ceiling
to recover body parts. One of the dead was a female security guard who
had tried to bar the student from entering the building. With the others,
she brought to 360 the victims killed by suicide bombers in 32 months
of the intifada.
Monday last week had dawned
like any other in Hiba's household. As usual, she said her prayers at
dawn. She insisted on preparing the family breakfast of cucumber salad,
bread, olive oil and thyme, and tea. Her mother, Fatima, 45, recalls:
"We ate. She washed the dishes.''
Then Hiba went outside to
the garden where the family had almond and olive trees, pomegranites
and roses. Her mother says: "She watered the plants and I noticed
she was smelling the roses. She was laughing, and I asked her why. She
told me, 'I feel that I am a new person. You will be very proud of me.'
Then she left and never returned."
Before leaving town, Hiba
visited her sisters, Jihan and Mariam. She returned a notebook to a
classmate. She went to say goodbye to her grandfather.
The last time anyone in Tubas
saw her, she was - as always - wearing her Islamic clothes. Four hours
later when she got to Afula, she was dressed in jeans. She was also
wearing a belt of explosives.
To the followers of Islamic
Jihad, which recruited her, to many Palestinians and millions of Arabs
and Muslims, Hiba Daraghmeh is the fifth heroine of the intifada. To
Israelis and the international community she is a terrorist, a callous
killer. Told of the atrocity, President George Bush vowed that it would
never deflect Washington from the road-map to peace. He dismissed suicide
bombers as "sad and pathetic".
Interviewed as the Israeli
Cabinet was voting narrowly in favour of the Middle East road-map, Hiba's
family say they are proud of her. They insist they knew nothing of her
plans.
Only her grandmother Fozeh,
breaks ranks and says she regrets her action and blames those who recruited
her. She says: "She was too young."
They are staying with relatives
now, for the family's house, large and comfortable, was dynamited by
the Israelis the day after the bombing. Only the garden, where Hiba
smelt the roses on the morning of her mission, remains.
On the rubble of their home,
the family has plastered one of the Islamic Jihad's posters of her.
There are two more on a wall in Tubas.
Hiba Daraghmeh was much more
devout than her family. Obsessed by religious ideals, she was a fundamentalist
Muslim. Her mother says: "At 15, she wore the Jelbab. At 16, she
wore the veil."
The Jelbab is the flowing
costume that envelopes the entire body. The white veil covering all
but the eyes is a badge of fanatical Islam shunned by most Palestinian
women including Hiba's mother, sisters and female relatives. "Throw
it away, this veil," her grandmother remembers telling her. "You
are too young and it is too hot." Her oldest sister, Jihan, 26,
recalls: "Any time the radio or TV played a love song, she turned
it off.''
She was a model student,
gaining 100 per cent in her most recent exams in Palestinian studies.
In English literature she scored 89 per cent.
"She saw herself as
a special person," Jihan said. She demonstrated that in her religious
obsession. "She used to pray for two hours, standing, stooping
and kneeling in devotion,'' Jihan added. "She spent most of her
free time reading the Koran.
"When she was repeating
its verses she said she felt unique. I thought she meant unique in her
studies and religious feelings. I did not realise she meant she wanted
to be unique in her death."
Aside from Hiba's religious
zeal, the political environment she grew up in radicalises many Palestinians
to the point where they make no distinction between soldiers and shoppers
in a mall. A psychiatrist, Ahmed Abu Tawahina, explains: "The closures
and daily incursions by the Israeli army, the martyrs' funeral, the
eulogies recited by militants, the graffiti, revering suicide bombers
as Istishadyeen - the martyr- attackers - are part of the political
environment which nourishes suicide bombings."
The involvement of women
in suicide bombings is a new and unsettling phenomenon for many Palestinians.
Hamas, responsible for most suicide bombings, and for the four previous
suicide bombings by women, opposes it because the organisation has enough
male volunteers.
Islam does not prohibit the
participation of women in the jihad. But Islamic Jihad would not encourage
it, say members, unless the female suicide bomber insisted on doing
it.
Hiba Daraghmeh might have
insisted because of her own personal brush with the Israeli military
authorities.
She was visibly affected
by the trial of her 23-year-old brother, Bakr. Bakr had been shot in
Nablus in a demonstration to commemorate the 1948 Palestinian Nakba,
or disaster anniversary, when Israel was established. He was arrested
on charges of weapons possessions and carrying out attacks for Al-Aqsa
Martyrs Brigades. The charge sheet includes the possession of an explosive
belt. The Israeli prosecutor requested a 99-year prison term for him.
On the day her brother was
arrested in June 2002, the army stormed the family house. One of the
soldiers tore up Hiba's text books and a copy of the Koran, her mother
says.
A week later, there was a
curfew on Tubas. As she was walking to school, an army jeep stopped
her and soldiers forced her to take the veil off. Her grandmother explains:
"She was very angry. She was full of hatred against Jews. I believe
this is the motivation for what she has done."
Immediately after a suicide
bomber is named, the Israeli army demolishes the bomber's family house
and arrests members of his or her family. The army prevents them from
rebuilding on the same spot.
Murad Daraghmeh calls her
a heroine. As he surveys the ruins of the family home, he says: "I
am a coward. She is courageous. I will never be an Istishahdi. I have
brothers and sisters. The army would arrest them. And the army would
destroy my family house."