The Story of Nael Barghouti: 44 Years in Israeli Prison, Released Today

On February 22, 2025, Nael Saleh Barghouti, a name etched into the annals of Palestinian resistance, walked free after 44 years in Israeli prisons—the longest-serving Palestinian political prisoner in history. Born on October 27, 1957, in the village of Kobar near Ramallah, Barghouti’s journey from a defiant schoolboy to a symbol of steadfastness culminated today in a release marred by exile, barring him from returning to the West Bank soil he fought for. His story is one of resilience, loss, and an unyielding commitment to his people, set against the backdrop of Israel’s occupation since 1967.

Barghouti’s resistance began early. At 10, during the 1967 Six-Day War, he witnessed Israeli forces invade Kobar, bombing the village entrance. Joining his family on their rooftop, he chanted against the soldiers and threw stones—a child’s act of defiance that foreshadowed a life of struggle. Raised in a farming family, he attended Kobar’s primary school before moving to Prince Hassan School in Birzeit. An avid reader of Palestinian, Arab, and Islamic history, his education was cut short in December 1977, when, at 20, he was arrested for anti-occupation activities and sentenced to three months in military prison.
Released in early 1978, Barghouti’s freedom was fleeting. In April, he, his brother Omar, and cousin Fakhri were arrested, charged with killing an Israeli officer near Ramallah. The military court, notorious for its near-100% conviction rate of Palestinians, handed him a staggering 117-year sentence. Thus began a decades-long odyssey behind bars, where he would evolve from a young activist into a revered figure among Palestinian prisoners.

Prison became Barghouti’s crucible. Initially aligned with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), he joined Fatah, the backbone of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) under Yasser Arafat. In 1983, disillusioned by the PLO’s defeat in Lebanon’s 1982 war—where Israel expelled the group to Tunisia amid massacres like Sabra and Shatila—he broke away to join Fatah al-Intifada, a splinter faction. As that group waned in the 1980s, he embraced the emerging Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas) during the First Intifada in 1987, reflecting a shift toward Islamist resistance. Inside jail, he earned the title “Dean of Palestinian Prisoners,” mentoring others and advocating for their rights.
The years took a toll. Barghouti’s parents died—his father in 2004, his mother in 2005—both denied his presence at their funerals. Physical and psychological abuse marked his detention, yet his spirit endured. After 33 uninterrupted years, freedom came in October 2011 via the Wafa al-Ahrar deal, where Hamas swapped 1,027 prisoners, including Barghouti, for Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit. Returning to Kobar at 54, he sought normalcy, marrying Iman Nafeh, a former prisoner who had served 15.5 years. Their November 2011 wedding was a national celebration, a rare moment of joy after decades apart. “He was desperate to claim a sense of normalcy,” Iman recalled. Barghouti farmed his land and enrolled at al-Quds University to study history, chasing dreams deferred.
That dream shattered in June 2014. Israeli forces rearrested him, citing a speech at Birzeit University as a violation of the exchange deal—an accusation critics called baseless. His 117-year sentence was reinstated, a move condemned as a breach of the 2011 agreement. Iman, who had spent only 31 months with him, watched helplessly as soldiers took him before he could harvest his crops. Back in prison, Barghouti resumed his advocacy, joining Hamas’s 2021 “Jerusalem Is Our Promise” electoral list before its cancellation by Mahmoud Abbas. In December 2023, he endured the “Three-Hour Assault,” a brutal beating by guards that fractured his ribs, part of escalating abuses post-October 7, 2023.
Today’s release, tied to a Hamas-Israel ceasefire deal, ends his 44-year ordeal—34 years until 2011, plus a decade since 2014. Yet, it’s bittersweet. Israel insists on deporting him, likely to Egypt or Qatar, denying him a return to Kobar. Iman, restricted from traveling, faces another separation. “He will refuse exile if it means leaving his land,” she told reporters, echoing his deep ties to the West Bank. The deal, exchanging Palestinian prisoners for Israeli hostages, reflects Israel’s policy of exiling those convicted of killing Israelis, a practice decried as collective punishment.
Barghouti’s story mirrors the Palestinian experience under occupation. Since 1967, Israel has controlled the West Bank, expanding settlements—over 700,000 settlers by 2025—displacing families like his. Military courts, with conviction rates exceeding 99%, have detained thousands, often without due process. Barghouti’s 44 years surpass even global records for political imprisonment, a stark symbol of this system. His shifts—Fatah to Hamas—trace the liberation struggle’s evolution, from secular nationalism to religious resistance, shaped by defeats and uprisings.
His personal losses are profound. Beyond his parents, his brother Omar spent 26 years imprisoned, and the family faced relentless raids and demolitions. His brief freedom in 2011-2014 offered a glimpse of life—marriage, farming, study—only for it to be snatched away. Iman’s words in These Chains Will Be Broken capture their bond: “Our love was a victory against the prison system.” Yet, exile now threatens that victory, a final twist in a saga of endurance.
What lies ahead? At 67, Barghouti’s health is frail—years of torture, starvation, and beatings have left scars. Yet, his release galvanizes Palestinians. Some liken him to Nelson Mandela, a prisoner-turned-leader, though exile complicates that path. His voice, honed by decades of reflection, could resonate from abroad, uniting factions or inspiring the diaspora. For now, he steps into an uncertain future, a free man denied his home.
Nael Barghouti’s 44 years encapsulate a struggle larger than himself. From a boy on a rooftop to the “Dean” behind bars, he embodies resistance against overwhelming odds. Today’s release closes a chapter, but not the story—of a man, a family, and a people who refuse to break.
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