Age, Biography and Wiki
Nafez Assaily was born on 1956, is a Palestinian sociologist and peace activist. Discover Nafez Assaily's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 68 years old?
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He is a member of famous Activist with the age 68 years old group.
Nafez Assaily Height, Weight & Measurements
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He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.
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Nafez Assaily Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Nafez Assaily worth at the age of 68 years old? Nafez Assaily’s income source is mostly from being a successful Activist. He is from . We have estimated Nafez Assaily's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.
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$1 Million - $5 Million |
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Timeline
Nafez Assaily (نافذ العسيلي), born in 1956 in the West Bank, in the Old City of Jerusalem grew up in Hebron, and is a sociologist and Palestinian peace activist.
As director of PCSN, Assaily pressed Israel to enable family reunifications among Palestinians who were left separated from each other in 1967.
Over a 23-year period, according to a Red Cross estimate, Israel had only approved of 9,000 reunifications among the 140,000 petitions requesting such permits.
Of that intifada, which formally endorsed recourse to means of non-violent resistance against the occupation, Assaily stated that, "In 1967 they (Israel) defeated the armies of three countries in six days, but they [could not] defeat the intifadah."
The lesson he drew was that Israel had a harder time coping with non-violent opposition than with an actual war.
Assaily recounts episodes of how he advises people struck by settler violence to respond:
"Once Israeli soldiers razed all the trees in a community's olive grove. So I convened all of the families involved and told them that the proper response was not to react violently but to persevere. They had to replant the trees. The first time they did this, all of the seedlings were torn out once more, but on the second occasion we did things differently. To replant them again we bided our time until Israel celebrated the Earth Day festival, when everyone plants a tree. I invited everyone to set about planting trees on that day and no one could raise objections, given the occasion. In the end the soldiers let us keep our trees in exchange for an undertaking to no longer plant any more trees. This was a good result, achieved without any need to throw stones, something which would have given them a pretext for attacking the (local) population.'"
Another method is to ask children to bring to school Fanta or Coca-Cola bottles, or cans, and then to fill them with pebbles, customarily used in throwing stones at the Israeli soldiers.
The purpose of the exercise is to show children how to make a rudimentary musical instrument, in this case a maraca.
He advises them to use these musical devices in front of Israeli soldiers manning checkpoints, rather than throwing stones at them.
Nafez lives on the northern outskirts of Hebron.
His land lay some 70 metres south of the Givat Harsina Israeli settlement, and his home 100 metres away.
His views on non-violence were shaped by Islamic mysticism, by Buddhism, and Gandhi, the 1982 film.
He obtained a master's degree in peace studies and conflict resolution.
A significant moment in his awareness came when he, a teacher of English in Jerusalem at the time, heard a talk in 1983 given by Mubarak Awad, a Christian Palestinian, and began to work under him.
It was this talk which convinced Nafez that the idea of non-violence was not merely a pipe dream.
Lucy Nusseibeh had invited Awad to talk at Birzeit University and, at the time, such talk was dangerous.
According to her husband, the philosopher Sari Nusseibeh
"'At the time, to put forward the image of yourself as a non-violent person was not kosher in the Palestinian community. You had to put yourself forward as a guy with a gun, with ten guns hanging around your waist and shoulders, or keep silent.'"
Awad had founded the Palestinian Centre for the Study of Nonviolence (PCSN).
When Awad was under threat of deportation he had to cancel his month-long appointment to the Gamaliel Chair at the Metropolitan Milwaukee Lutheran Campus ministry, and Assaily took his place, received a standing ovation from representatives from 51 church representatives in Milwaukee presbytery, and delivering addresses on 40 occasions.
In 1986 he developed, in collaboration with the PCSN, his own project of a mobile book-loan service called "Library on Wheels for Nonviolence and Peace" (LOWNP) in Hebron in order to encourage reading among the youth of the town, and in particular the study of non-violence.
Blind children in the area can borrow books on cassettes.
Puppet shows are also organized in order to teach children ways towards peace.
Where the terrain did not allow the Mobile Library to pass, books were loaded onto a donkey, a "library on donkeys", in order to reach outlying homes in the hills.
According to a professor of Middle Eastern history, Sheila Katz
"The library touched thousands of families over the next three decades, teaching traditions of nonviolence and peace in Islam to empower participation in social change."
One estimate puts the number of people which have been reached by LOWNP's work at some 50,000 people over the two decades.
In June 1988, Awad was expelled from Israel, and Nafez became the center's acting director.
Israel allowed such reunions for Ethiopian and Russian Jews, and in 1990 Assaily forwarded a specific request to have 140 women and children who had been deported returned to their families.
Interviewed on the occasion of the 1990 Temple Mount riots in which some 20 Palestinians were killed, Assaily said provocations by either side were not the point: the problem was that Israel desired all of Jerusalem as its capital, whereas the Palestinians insist that East Jerusalem, where the Haram al-Sharif/Temple Mount lies, be the capital of a future Palestinian state.
As early as 1997 he was defined as a Palestinian who had argued for a comprehensive strategy of non-violence through 43 years of the failure to achieve anything by armed struggle.
Though a Sufi Muslim, he received his early education at Christian schools in Jerusalem – the first a Roman Catholic primary school, the other a Coptic Orthodox secondary school, and went on then began his tertiary studies at An-Najah National University in Nablus, where he majored in English and sociology.
His background thus afforded him a familiarity with three distinct religious traditions each of which would contribute to his non-violent philosophy.
In response to the first Intifada, Harsina settlers built a security fence, and then, in 2000 gradually expanded, felling the olive trees and levelling the ground until the encroachment ran close up to his home.
The land yielded him and his neighbours income from the grape and olive harvests, but lay under a confiscation order.
In time Assaily's work received funding from organisations like the World Health Organization, Pax Christi, Caritas Internationalis and Misereor, which enabled him in 2007 to branch out by developing a subsidiary Books Along the Divide service in order to furnish with reading materials young Palestinians, in taxis and buses, who found themselves obliged to wait for long periods to pass many of the 540 Israeli checkpoints.
The material consists of texts on non-violence, biographies of Moses, Joseph and Jesus and works penned by Gandhi.
Assaily's research on pamphleteering in the several months following the outbreak of the First Intifada, according to which, of the 17 leaflets circulating, 163 actions were called for, and of the 17 methods advocated for resisting the occupation, 26 were non-violent, has been cited by historians such as Mark Tessler, Samuel J. Eldersveld Collegiate Professor, Philip Mattar and others in comprehensive studies of Palestinians and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
In 2009 alone Assaily visited 83 villages and lent some 11426 books to 1496 children in the Hebron area.