Hanadi al-Halawani - the Jerusalemite stationed at the doorstep of al-Aqsa and the Qur’an wallet - appeared on social media as one of those who were administratively excluded from the Al-Aqsa Mosque to prevent them from entering the Al-Aqsa compound, which also prevented them from participating in the events over the past two weeks.

Al-Halawani went to broadcast live videos on social media platforms near the squares of the Al-Aqsa Mosque that live next door, to which fake accounts and settlers attacked and insulted, and they were not satisfied with that, but some accounts insisted on reminding her of the most horrific moments she went through inside the prisons of the occupation.

Al-Jazeera Net conducted a telephone conversation with the Jerusalemite Hanadi Al-Hallawni to tell what happened to her, and to reveal a more cruel story that she went through because of her struggle for the sake of Al-Aqsa Mosque for years ago, which led to the issuance of a decision to deport her from Al-Aqsa Square, and during her conversation Al-Halawani explained why the occupation called her the most dangerous Jerusalemite Israel.

A horrific incident that she was exposed to and is used by the settlements against her on social media, as Hanadi asks the influencers to turn off the comments feature before the start of the live broadcast due to the painful comments made by unknown accounts that reminded her of a terrible incident that occurred to her during her arrest, where one account described her body and bullying her, saying, Do you remember the day we took off your headscarf? "

Hanadi still remembers the harsh conditions of her detention, since she was held in solitary confinement and alone in a room that looked like a toilet, as all her clothes were removed, which is known as a naked search. She said what really hurt me was that there were three cameras that photographed everything that happened even after they finished taking off my clothes They left me in that room for more than 15 minutes alone, without my clothes, just in front of the cameras.

Hanadi added that she will not cry and will be steadfast, but what happens with her during the course is an explicit and blatant admission of this violation against her by the fake accounts that do not hesitate to remind her of this position despite the passage of years on it, but these accounts insist on using it against her, especially in recent times. However, it was not the only one being cruelly treated inside the occupier's prisons.

Removing the veil is a way to abuse the Murabitat

During the past years, Hanadi was subjected to the experience of arrest about 62 times, in addition to the issuance of administrative decisions against her to be deported from Al-Aqsa Square, renewed whenever they ended.

Those decisions included 15 Jerusalem stations, and Hanadi tops the list, which includes Khadija Khwais, Fatima Khader and Madeleine Issa, and the list includes women and girls of all ages, including the daughter, mother and grandmother, but what happened with Hanadi Al Halawani is different.

She is the only woman who was arrested by the occupation from inside her home, and she was subjected to solitary confinement 3 times, and what she saw was very painful.

Hanadi recalls her experience, saying, “I was beaten and held in solitary confinement with female criminal offenders, and what was worse than that was that I was forced to take off my hijab and bring my socks off in front of the men in prison. At first I thought that the problem was with the metal pin in the hijab and I said why not, but then I discovered that they took the hijab and the jilbab completely, and I was not I wore Islamic clothing under my jilbab, and that was in criminal custody. "

She continued, saying, "From the horror of the situation, the Jewish female prisoners arranged a Bashkir to cover my head. I felt that they had compassion on me as the jailers did not, and moments later the jailer came to give me my hijab." In the summer, with high temperatures and continued imprisonment until the winter and cold, and she was prevented from entering the appropriate winter clothes during detention, Hanadi al-Halawani was not the only one inside the prison, but was accompanied by other police officers who were subjected to harsh violations.

Menstruation is prohibited in the prisons of the occupation

Hanadi was once detained with a fiftieth station called (S.N.), a grandmother of 17 grandchildren, who had missed her menstrual cycle years ago, but due to stress, perhaps or health conditions that bled, Hanadi says, "The guards asked us more than once for diapers, so they categorically refused and ignored We asked, and despite her suffering from several chronic diseases, we did not ask for medication to relieve her pain, we only asked for women's sanitary pads, and with the guards continuing to refuse, she did not find the station, but it seemed to use part of a completely dirty (blanket) that seems to have not been washed for years, and she cut it with her teeth to suit her. She cried and feared that she had diseases such as AIDS or any other infection, but there was no other solution. Everything was very dirty even the toilet was polluted and there was no soap in the detention room that was filled with dirty smell.

According to Hanadi, the Murabitat are so afraid of this that they even keep diapers in their clothes for fear of a menstrual period during the period of detention.

Hanadi explained that "the female prisoners who have been issued a court ruling for a term of punishment only for those who are allowed to enter feminine pads and winter clothes, while confinement under investigation and short periods are not allowed to do so and they are not allowed to take chronic disease medication as well."

Hanadi Al-Halawani - a mother of 4 children from the Jerusalemite Almoravids - appeared in the videos of the group breakfast in Al-Aqsa Square and in the "Al-Maqlouba Challenge", which the occupation fears.

With a calm and strong smile, no one felt the size of the suffering that she experienced and lived in her daily life, and with great grief she still pains from the decision to remove her from Al-Aqsa Square, but she tries to stick to hearing the call to prayer in the five prayers in her house next to Al-Aqsa, but she still longs to pray in it and is waiting for the end of the decision Her current deportation, which is supposed to end next June, hopes that it will not be renewed as is the case in past years.

Hanadi is currently studying at Birzeit University, one of the oldest universities in Jerusalem. She is pursuing her graduate studies and is interested in the democracy and human rights program.

Despite all the violations that she was subjected to, the Jerusalemite Hanadi al-Halawani concluded her speech to Al-Jazeera Net, saying, “I entrusted myself to expose the violations of the occupation against us in detention centers and prisons, and therefore I spoke about what happened to me and the stationings, but I did not offer anything to Al-Aqsa and Jerusalem, those who make a real sacrifice are the ones in Gaza, they gave their lives, their homes, and entire families, women and children under the dirt from the bombing, but I did not offer anything. "