 As a Palestinian living in the occupied territories, my life is always on the line. The murdering, the arrests, the beating of peaceful protesters that are protesting on a weekly basis in my village. So that was the point where I decided that I had seen enough in my life. So I held my mother's phone during one of the Fridays, which we organized weekly protests during these Fridays. I recorded whatever was happening. I, as a 7 or 12 or even a 17 year old child, should not be experiencing any of that. I should not be thinking of what's next struggled, what I want to cover. Instead of that, I should be living my childhood. I mean, I loved playing soccer. I remember I wanted to become a soccer player. It's a positive thing that I was privileged enough to have a voice, to have a platform and to be able to send a message that so many people were not able to send, send the message that is not the message of Jena alone, but the message of every single child who's living under a form of oppressive system. Either if it's poverty, fascism, any form of injustice around the world is something that I try to represent. And what should be done is for more young people to speak up because it's not something good from you to do. It's a duty and it's something that's required from any human who still has humanity.