 From your experience in the gales of the Israeli combined forces, and you know several people's movements across the world that they want to be helpful and they do something. From your own experience, what do you advise us? What can we do to support health activists and practitioners who are inside the gale? What can we do? What is the best? What can be effective? Okay, because people have movement and other movement, you know, they are defending the right. I mean, sometimes it's important to focus on certain category inside the communities, like one of that, the prisoners. And because the issue of Palestinian prisoners, I mean, is very hard to experience. And most, like around two-thirds of Palestinian people, they exposed to prison, and because there is no respect for international law about their rights and about their cause and sentence for prison. Because, you know, we as the prisoners inside the Israeli occupation, we are considered freedom fighters, and we want our liberation, we want our self-determination. That's why, I mean, the issue of prisoners should be an international issue. It is part of the solution for Palestine in general and the prisoners are specific. And inside the gale and inside the prisons, I mean, many things need international activists and movement. Mainly the sick prisoners, the prisoners with cancers, the prisoners with the chronic disease, the prisoners with the limitation, with disabilities. And, you know, and the focus on the negligence of health management inside the prisons. One of that, like last week, we lost, like Sadia Farajallah, she is one of the prisoners, female prisoners inside the jail. And people who died inside the jail, they do not give the body for the family. This is one issue, you know, that at least to bear them under, you know, the tradition of Muslims or Christian or whatever, they keep them until they finish their sentence. And some of them, they took like 100 years or more, or 200, I mean, more than 200 years. So they, the family, they do not receive the body. There is a lot of issues they can, people's health movement, they can, or other, they can focus. Like this is one part of that, the body of the death people, the negligence inside. It campaigns for the elderly people, the chronic disease and cancer patients, why they should be released soon and immediately. And the Palestinian people, they will take care of their, of them and they can feed them outside if they were not given appropriate treatment. Also, we need like, if, if, I mean, don't know if it could be happen that the international health networks and movements and so on, they can send with the, with cooperation and coordination with the red crescent to send an expert to assess the health situation of the prisoners, the health situation of the places and the clinics inside the, inside the jail and how much this competent for, you know, managing the care and the healthcare of the prisoners inside. So, yes, there is a lot of issue it could be raised at the international level and the importance of that, at first of all, is to free the prisoners because they are politically prisoners according to the, to the convention, to the Geneva Conventions. Yeah, war prisoners. Yeah, war prisoners. I mean, if they do not treat us as a war prisoners, if we are war prisoners, I mean, we should be released and they should be released. I highlighted the most important things as, you know, and also if there is a human rights international coalition to focus a lot on the investigation period. Yeah, because it's very hard. The condition is very difficult. The isolation that they, the prisoners they are faced is terrible. You give us a very good campaign agenda for to work on it. Thank you very much for that. And finally, do you have anything to share with us, especially if you want to talk about your future plans? What do you, what do you plan to do during the coming month, years? Okay, I, before that I want to add something and comment on something. Well, yes, we are talking about the difficult experience and a difficult situation inside, but I want to talk about the challenges and how much the prisoners and the women inside how they are brought very powerful and very active, very, they are, I mean, they are, they have a very, the agent inside of them. How to overcome these challenges? For example, inside the jail, inside the prison, they are very organized. They use the time in very appropriate way. There is time almost for reading. There is time for sport. There is time for having social gathering. There is time for celebrating our social life, like birthdays, like, you know, marriage in your, in your house. So we do some things for them inside. During the Eid. For me, for example, last Eid I was there. It was for me the first time I saw the Eid praying and the Eid Khutbah. One of the girls, she did the Khutbah and the other one, she did the Imam. And for me, it was, they are very strong and they are very powerful. And, you know, in the playground that we have, of course, that they are surrounding, they, they pray and they, they give the Khutbah and they do the Imam. And this is this kind of view. I never say it outside. And I said, I mean, why women? They can't do this. They can't do it in the jail, but they can do it outside. The most important things, always they have time for discussions in issue related, political issue, social issue, security issue, you know, how to protect yourself inside the jail from the managers, from the inspectors, you know, because they try to intervene between the prisoners. And also there is academic teaching. Some of them, they finish their tawji, the high school. They teach each other and they did an exam outside with the coordination with the Ministry of Prisoners and the Red Accresents. Now there is an eight girls who have high years of sentence. They are enrolled in the universities and they are at the level of 30 years. They are studying social worker. And I was responsible on the scientific committee that I taught the courses with Al-Quds University, Open University. And we manage even this kind of school study and university is not allowed inside the prison. So this is kind of a challenge. They call it the secret teaching, the secret academic teaching. And they do lectures, they do presentation, they do papers, very high quality, the ideas they put inside, the expression they put inside. And always we celebrate by the end of the semester and we talk to the other groups about their papers and about their achievements in general. And there is a library there and we have a library club. They establish a library club to do some competition between the prisoners who reads more. There is a lot of, always, like there is a dynamic inside and using their time. You will be very admired knowing how they think, how they are accepting, not accepting. They are converting this kind of stress to opportunity to overcome the challenges. The solidarity between each other is very good. I have family there and some of them consider me as their mothers and their family. And when I left, it was very hard for me. Thank you very much for sharing this. This is very inspiring and we continue to learn a lot from the resistance of Palestinians inside the jail and outside the jail. Of course. Now I'm talking, I'm returning back to the question about what I'm going to do. Unfortunately, my sentence is not to go back again to the work for five years. And if I return back to the work, to the organization or other organization considered illegal from their perspective, I will be go back again to the jail for 12 months. So I'm working in the field since more than 40 years. I started my work when I was a student. So I guess I'm in the time to resign and I did already. And I should take care of myself and my family and my health, but I will not be outside just on home. Maybe I will enroll and I start to look for that to go to university education teaching in general or do freelancing. Because I like to do kind of research, training and admin consultation, health management consultation. I'm competent in this issue and I will be volunteer for involving in different activities and not to be aware from the civil society and from human rights and health. Defending rights in general. This is my plan and I will see. But I still, I am in the break. Tell now. Thank you very much Shadda for sharing this experience with us. And I hope that you will overcome the hardship you passed through during the time in the jail, but also we value what you shared with us about inspiring us. There are no resistant people inside. And again, as I said, we continue to learn from the Palestinians resistance inside and outside the jail. This interview will be available in the 29th issue of People's Health Dispatch. The Health Fortnight Newsletter published by PHM and People's Dispatch. It was co-authored and with the support of our comrades at Viva Salud, who are launching a campaign, not a target about the shrinking space of health workers and the activists. Also, as I said, we are committed as People's Health Movement to continue to defend Palestinian rights, to land, to life, freedom and to health. This is what we can promise and we will continue to get inspired by Palestinian resistance. And this campaign that will be launched by Viva Salud will start in September this year. Please follow us at social media to stay up to date with our activities. And we thank Shadda once again and we conclude the session at this point unless Shadda wants to share anything else with us. Thank you, Hani, for the interview. And I guess this interview, not because I'm talking on it, but it's important that the People's Health Movement and the People's Dispatch and other watchers to know the more detailed things about our life inside the prison. I mean, maybe they have the general idea, but they tell things, sometimes the human aspect, the life, the difficulties, the challenges. These human stories, I mean, this is important, people, it's important to listen to these kind of stories. And it will increase the volume, the solidarity with us in general. Thank you very much. Thank you very much.