Mariam Barghouti grew up in the West Bank, raised by her grandmother after her parents, an imprisoned poet and a schoolteacher taught her to fight with knowledge and care. At age 10, after her home was destroyed, she and her brother were sent to live with an aunt in Providence, Rhode Island. There, Mariam became a nurse, working in the ER by day and witnessing the same patterns of injustice she thought she escaped exploitation, abuse, indifference. One night, a bloodied man was brought in, handcuffed and brutalized. When Mariam stood between him and those in power, something awakened in her: not a superpower, but an unbreakable will. She became Liberation a protector of the oppressed, wrapped in Kevlar and history. No cape, no mutation, just knives, skill, and ancestral fire. By day, she heals. By night, she resists. Her mission is not vengeance, but dignity for the silenced, the exiled, and the unheard.