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In 1954, the Christian girl Teresa Halsa was born to a Jordanian Karaki father and a Palestinian mother from the city of Akka. This child became aware of seeing Palestine occupied and being subjected to the worst types of racism. When she grew up, she joined the Communist Party, and when she reached the age of sixteen, the occupation was able to arrest a group of resistance members. In Acre, its leader, Qasim Abu Khadra, was executed. Here, the course of Teresa Halsa’s life changed and she began her journey in the armed struggle in Lebanon.