Atef Douglas - Nablus

The Palestinian division between the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas) and the Palestinian National Liberation Movement (Fatah), which has been in existence since 2007, has weakened the people in both the Gaza Strip and the West Bank.

The questions of the Palestinian people and the answers they are looking for came in the words of one song launched by the Palestinian artists Shadi al-Burini and Qasim al-Najjar earlier this year, to be the word of the people for 12 years of bleeding.

Traces of suffering
The beginning of the song conveyed a clear message to the Palestinian leadership that it was time for everyone to hear the voice of the people's anger and anger and suffering from internal divisions.

It is the blame of the political leaders, artists move to criticize the economic situation of the country, and the lives of people from high prices and unemployment exceeded 30%, which was the government's response to the imposition of taxes and laws that increase the tragedy, "social security," which the artists publicly criticized.

The song also passed on important details in the lives of Palestinians such as martyrs and prisoners, as well as popular resistance represented by the months-long confrontation in the Red Khan in Jerusalem and the major return marches in the Gaza Strip.

She also referred to the right of the Palestinians to return to their lands, which they had been abandoned for 70 years, stressing that returning to the homeland is an inherent right of the Palestinians.

The song also did not overlook the series of daily suffering of Palestinians distributed between the killing, demolition and arrest, and his body in the character of Umm Nasser Abu Hamid and its steadfastness in the camp despite the repeated demolition of her home and the arrest of her five children.

People 's Song
"This time we wanted to highlight the suffering of the Palestinians and their growing concerns. The lyrics of the song are the language of the Palestinian street and quoted from those who expressed their silence and expressed their feelings, which increased the success of the song locally and Arab and echoed the tongues of citizens on several occasions," said artist Qassem al-Najjar.

The video clips and pictures that accompanied the song added another feature to it, and gained more attention to the events of the Palestinians and their realistic projections, which deepened their message.