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Saturday, December 2, 2023

The daily, grinding violence in the West Bank is worse than ever before. Why does it go unseen? ... in The Guardian

 "In the seven weeks from 7 October, Israeli forces and settlers killed 221 Palestinians in the West Bank, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs – more than the entirety of 2022. They include eight-year-old Adam al-Ghoul and Basel Abu al-Wafa, 15, from Jenin refugee camp. Another 2,955 people have been injured. Raids on Palestinian refugee camps, villages and towns have become even more frequent – and are now taking place in broad daylight, when they often used to be perpetrated under the cover of darkness. Drones and snipers are used to targetyoung people who throw stones, bystanders and anyone who challenges the military’s actions.

Medical teams in the West Bank have also been blocked from treating our injured. The World Health Organization has reported 229 attacks on “healthcare” between 7 October and 28 November, most of which took place during raids. These included obstructing ambulances, detaining and using force against healthcare personnel, and conducting militarised searches.

The sheer level of destruction shows that Israel’s aims during this war go well beyond a “second Nakba” in Gaza alone. The Balata refugee camp was targeted by an airstrike on 18 November, and Israeli armoured vehicles and bulldozers then raided its narrow streets, causing heavy damage to the already-ailing roads and essential infrastructure. This is a well-established Israeli tactic that seeks to destroy the fabric of everyday life. In Jenin camp earlier this year, Israel destroyed water pipes, cut off electricity, damaged roads and wrecked cars.... " ....READ MORE

The daily, grinding violence in the West Bank is worse than ever before. Why does it go unseen?

 
 
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Friday, December 1, 2023

Symbols of #Palestine


 


We Are Not Numbers- Palestinian youth tell their human stories behind the numbers in the news

 

get involved https://wearenotnumbers.org/get-involved/

You too can help the youth of Gaza share their stories by:

  • Donating money to help pay a monthly stipend to the three Gaza youth on our project team, transportation expenses for the participating writers (many of whom could not otherwise afford to travel to workshops), rent office space, rent video equipment, etc. Even a donation of $5 helps!
  • Publicizing our website by sharing the link with friends and family via social media and email.
  • Finding other media willing to re-publish our participants’ stories, such as relevant websites and university or hometown newspapers. If you have a suggestion and/or can introduce us to an appropriate contact, email Pam Bailey (pam@wearenotnumbers.org).

Don’t forget to sign up to receive via email each new story posted to the website!

Meanwhile, other sites that are useful for up-to-date Palestinian news are Palestine ChronicleMondoweiss, AlJazeera, Middle East Eye, The New Arab and Ma’an News. Educate yourself, then:

  • Write letters to the editor when you read media coverage that is incorrect or incomplete.

.... We Are Not Numbers (WANN) is a youth-led Palestinian nonprofit project in the Gaza Strip. It tells the stories behind the numbers of Palestinians in the news and advocates for their human rights. WANN was founded and conceived in early 2015 by the American journalist Pam Bailey. The project was brought to fruition by Dr Ramy Abdu, chairman of the board of directors at Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor (Euro-Med Monitor). WANN is registered under the umbrella of Euro-Med and its fiscal sponsor is Nonviolence International, a U.S. organization.

Our Story During the Israeli military attack against Palestinians in the summer of 2014, Ahmed Alnaouq’s 23-year-old brother, Ayman, was killed by an Israeli missile while simply walking on the street near his home in Dir-Al-Balah. Ahmed sunk into depression from which he thought he would never return to normal life again. During this time, he met Pam Bailey, who encouraged him to write his story.

The story resonated with and attracted a great deal of attention from people in the West. As a result, established and aspiring “word artists” from around the world joined with youth in Gaza, and now, West Bank and the diaspora, to create We Are Not Numbers. Through this platform, we share and celebrate the stories, daily personal struggles and triumphs, the tears and the laughter, and the aspirations of Palestinians that are so universal that if it were not for the context, they would immediately resonate with virtually everyone.

 

Statement of solidarity with Palestine from Kenyan artists to WANN writers... 

"... We are outraged by the mainstream media’s continuous complicity in dehumanizing Palestinians and silencing their narrative.

We denounce antisemitism, Islamophobia, racism, and all acts of violence and terrorism in all forms. We believe every human life matters and every human being deserves to live a life of dignity.

We are moved by the Palestinian people’s resilience, strength, and spirit and the fearlessness of the Jewish people who are speaking up against what the state of the Israel is committing in their name.

We call on all people of conscience to demand an immediate ceasefire in Gaza and the safe release of all hostages. We firmly believe lasting peace and security can only be attained through political solutions that bring an end to Israeli military occupation and state violence against Palestinians.... "


Thursday, November 30, 2023

Nothing- a poem by Ahmed Dremly of Gaza Palestine

 https://wearenotnumbers.org/nothing/

November 27, 2023
Artist unknown. Courtesy the Palestine Poster Project Archives.

Nothing

 

I’m still breathing

but that is not enough

to feel alive.

 

I lost my loved ones.

I lost my power, hope, dreams,

and my last tears.

 

Nothing can express

the pain of losing the people

who were a main part of my life.

 

Nothing can erase

the last look at them

from my eyes.

 

Nothing can stop

replaying our memories

before Israel took them away.

 

And nothing

can let me imagine

moving forward with my life

after them.

 

Editor‘s Note: Ahmed Dremly is from Gaza City. Through its bombing, Israel killed his best friend, nine of his cousins, an uncle, and other friends and family members who are still under the rubble.



Mentor: Zeina Azzam

 


The mission of WANN is to create a new generation of Palestinian writers and thinkers who can bring together a profound change to the Palestinian cause to get their voices heard. WANN provides the world with direct access to the Palestinian narrative without any restrictions and without foreign intermediaries speaking on behalf of the Palestinians. https://wearenotnumbers.org/

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O Little Town of Bethlehem, Palestine

To Christ on his Birthday - poem by Fadwa Tuqan (1917-2003)

 To Christ on his Birthday- poem by Fadwa Tuqan (1917-2003)

 
Lord, glory of the universes
On your birthday this year
All the joys of Jerusalem are crucified
All the bells, O Lord
Are silent!
For two thousand years,
They haven't been silent on your
birthdays,
Except this year
The domes are now in mourning
Black is wrapped in black
On the Via Dolorosa,
Jerusalem is whipped under the cross
Bleeding
On the hands of the executioner.
The world is adamant to the tragedy
The light has departed from
that lost ruthless master
Who did not light one candle
Who did not shed one tear
To wash the sorrows of Jerusalem.
 
 
Palestinian poet and memoirist Fadwa Tuqan (1917-2003) — whose acclaimed autobiography, A Mountainous Journey, was translated to English by Olive E. Kenny and Naomi Shihab Nye
 
She was born in Nablus to a literary family; studied English literature at Oxford; and won acclaim and literary prizes for her poetry, in Arabic and in translation. 

She was born in Nablus to a literary family; studied English literature at Oxford; and won acclaim and literary prizes for her poetry, in Arabic and in translation.

The poet Abbas Beydoun wrote, after her death, “Fadwa was an original poet in her own right, writing from her own experiences and for her late brothers, Ibrahim Tuqan, the most famous Palestinian poet of the time; and for her second brother, who died in a tragic accident. Fadwa stood up as an Electra in mourning between two dead brothers, shouldering the pain of the family, which we can easily call Palestine. Poetry came to her in the image of the Palestinian fate; ultimately her choice to write poetry was not as important as her real mission, which fell somewhere between that of Joan of Arc and al-Khansa.”

 https://arablit.org/2020/03/01/born-on-this-day-7-poems-by-fadwa-tuqan/

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Obituary in The Guardian
 
Fadwa Tuqan, poet, born March 1 1917; died December 12 2003 Tuqan gained an international audience after her poetry was translated into English in the 1980s. Young Arab-Americans read her work to rediscover their roots; Israeli and Jewish feminists divined a sympathetic resonance from their sister across the "green line". She did not marry or have children.

11 Palestinian Voices Shaping the Contemporary Narrative on Palestine (in English)

Hala Alyan - author of Salt Houses
Hala Alyan is a Palestinian-American writer, poet, and clinical psychologist who has become widely known for her lyrical exploration of identity, as well as the burdens and blessings of displacement. Her debut novel, “Salt Houses,” which won the Arab-American Book Award in 2018, tells the story of a Palestinian family who was uprooted from their home as a result of the Six-Day War in 1967.

Addressing the themes of conflict, displacement, assimilation, and belonging, Alyan’s work humanises the struggles experienced by 21st-century diaspora communities around the world. Her words serve as a powerful reminder of the impact that hope, resilience, and empathy can have on the human spirit.

11 Palestinian Voices Shaping the Contemporary Narrative on Palestine

by Selma Nouri 

 October 26, 2023

https://www.gqmiddleeast.com/culture/palestinian-voices-shaping-narrative

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Rashid Khalidi has become one of the world’s most prominent Palestinian scholars. Born to a Palestinian father and Lebanese mother in New York City, Khalidi has dedicated his life to the intellectual understanding and preservation of Palestinian identity. Across the world, his writing and scholarship have become fundamental to contemporary movements in support of dignity and justice in Palestine.

Plestia Alaqad is a 22-year old Palestinian journalist, who rose to prominence after using social media to share daily video diaries from her home in Gaza. Her videos expose the realities of a life under siege. From the horrifying sound of explosions to close-up images of rubble and destruction near her home, Alaqad’s videos offer a human perspective to the issues of conflict and displacement. Now, with over 800,000 followers on Instagram, Alaquad has transformed the way that many people receive the news, breathing life into the headlines and statistics that many have become desensitised to.

Alongside her twin brother Mohammed El-Kurd, Palestinian activist Muna El-Kurd became known across the world in 2021 for co-founding a viral social media campaign against the forced removal of Palestinian families from their homes in the Sheikh Jarrah neighbourhood of East Jerusalem. Through her viral posts, El-Kurd offered a window into the unsettling realities of life under occupation and became a voice for the many Palestinian families, who, like her own, sought to protect their homes from forced seizure.

Named one of Time’s 100 Most Influential People in 2021, El-Kurd continues to use her platform and voice to uplift the Palestinian identity and share their struggles for justice with the world.


Wissam Nassar is an award-winning photographer and 2015 Pulitzer Prize finalist whose images have served as a form of visual activism across the Arab world. Born and raised in Gaza, Nassar’s work has covered the Arab Spring, as well as the ongoing conflict between Israel and Palestine. His images have been featured in The New York Times, The Washington Post, and other noteworthy publications and are widely revered for their ability to capture vivid expressions of humanity amidst conditions of brutal conflict and oppression.

As Nassar explained in an interview with TIME Magazine in 2017, his photographs from Gaza focus on how the people simply “want to live normal lives.” They are human beings with hopes, dreams, and families who, even in the midst of rubble, play sports, listen to music, and share meals with friends. These difficult realities are what Nassar captures through his photos.

Mariam Barghouti is a Palestinian-American writer, researcher, and commentator based in Ramallah. Her work has been featured in The New York Times, Al Jazeera, The Guardian, and other notable news outlets.

Throughout her career, Barghouti has served as a prominent academic voice for the Palestinian people, bringing their issues to the global conversation on equality, social justice, and human rights. Her honest and poignant reporting has encouraged people from across the world to not only acknowledge but value the Palestinian perspective amid realities of conflict and occupation. 


Ahmed Hijazi

Ahmed Hijazi is a Palestinian content creator capturing the realities of life under siege. With over 1.2 million followers on Instagram, Hijazi has managed to expose the suffering and challenges endured by the Palestinian people.

By communicating via social media, Hijazi is able to reveal a side of conflict and occupation that is most often ignored. Rather than simply reporting on the frequency of attacks or death tolls, he takes viewers into the hearts and minds of those suffering.

Mosab Abu Toha is a Palestinian poet, short story writer, and scholar who was born in Gaza. He is the founder of the Edward Said Library in North Gaza, the city’s first English-language library, and recently published his debut book of poetry entitled, “Things You May Find Hidden in My Ear: Poems from Gaza.”

His poetic words speak for those whose voices have been silenced or whose lives have been cut short as a consequence of conflict, psychological suffering, and deprivation. He is asking them to never turn a blind eye to the realities of conflict or injustice.


With 5 million followers on Instagram, photojournalist Motaz Azaiza is sharing a different side of Palestine with the world. Azaiza explores the duality of life in Palestine, where laughter and smiles can, within milliseconds, be wiped away.

For years, Azaiza has worked with the UN to document conditions on the ground in Palestine. Through this work, he has seen relentless suffering and joy – livelihoods built but then suddenly destroyed. In situations of both laughter and grief, Azaiza is always ready with his camera pointed, proving that, even in the midst of darkness, there is hope and humanity to be captured through images.

Ahmed Shihab-Eldin 

Ahmed Shihab-Eldin is an Emmy-nominated journalist, producer, and actor of Palestinian descent who has become known globally for his unwavering dedication to the achievement of social justice and human rights in the Middle East. Throughout his career, Shihab-Eldin has used his platform as a poignant and skilled journalist to ask “difficult questions,” explore “taboo” topics, and amplify voices that are often ignored by Western media.

Shihab-Eldin has proven that he is never willing to remain silent. This is especially true in his continued support of the Palestinian struggle. When justice is on the line, no amount of censorship, criticism, or indifference will keep Shihab-Eldin from speaking up. 

Mohammed El-Kurd

GQ Middle East’s April 2023 cover star, Mohammed El-Kurd has become widely known across the world for his activism and eloquent writing on the struggles for justice in Palestine and the Occupied Territories.

His debut collection of poetry, titled “Rifqa,” offers a vulnerable and vivid account of the ways in which settler colonialism and occupation can manifest in the lives of those subjected to its brutalities. For many Palestinians and young people across the world,  El-Kurd has become the voice of a generation seeking hope, humanity, and justice in the midst of oppression.

 https://www.gqmiddleeast.com/culture/palestinian-voices-shaping-narrative


Sakir Khader "We are like the olive trees that have been there for thousands of years, and we will be there for a thousand more. That’s sumud."

 

Sakir Khader’s Portraits of Resistance

Exploring sumud and the symbolic power of the keffiyeh in Sakir Khader’s intimate portrayals of Palestinian resistance

In Palestine, sumud  ( صمود ) means steadfastness, resistance and resilience. It’s what you do to quell the pressure of a knee to the neck – it’s stopping a bull-dozer in its tracks, re-growing olive trees from ripped roots, and most urgently, it’s the embodiment of every person in Gaza right now. Put simply, sumud is a way of being, of existing every day as a Palestinian in the face of asymmetrical power.

Palestinian filmmaker and photographer Sakir Khader knows this well. In fact, it’s at the heart of everything he does. “My main focus is our sumud and our existence,” He tells GQ Middle East. “Sumud is seventy-five years under constant oppression, and we still never give up. We are not fleeing. We will not leave this land. We are deeply rooted in this ground. We are like the olive trees that have been there for thousands of years, and we will be there for a thousand more. That’s sumud.” 

Everything about Sakir’s practice is an exercise in resistance, down to his choice of medium. Since the second Intifada, the Netherlands-based Photographer has been capturing and sharing portraits of Palestine in his now signature monochrome film. A decision, which he explains, is far more than stylistic, and that is no surprise.

“I shoot black and white because as long as my people cannot live in dignity and in their freedom, I will not shoot colour anymore.” He says. However, Sakir goes on to assert that, in black and white, “the emotions, they speak as colours.” There is no denying this: the stories and emotions in his portraits are searing, evocative and vivid. The people are themselves, colour enough and speak louder than any hue, especially when shot with the same kind of respect that underlines all of Sakir’s work, in and outside of Palestine. 

So much of his work, however, features another form of monochrome that’s increasingly seen everywhere today punctuating protests of millions worldwide, where,  in almost every shot the keffiyeh is somewhere...

While the keffiyeh’s origins date back to the Sumerian priests of Mesopotamia in 3100 BCE and has been worn all across the Arab region, albeit in varying colours, the scarf has a more specific meaning for Palestinians. ...READ MORE

GQ Middle East

Men's fashion & style magazine provides latest trends, advice, men’s clothing, dressing style, grooming, travel, fitness, health news across UAE & Middle East.

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"We collect, translate and publish texts from Palestinian writers confronting the genocide in Gaza, to lift up their words." @arablit : Hiba Abu Nada 1991-2023

 Hiba Abu Nada. Writer from Gaza. born 1991. Her first novel, Oxygen is not for the Dead, was published in 2017. On the evening of October 20, Hiba Abu Nada was martyred with her family under bombardment in their home in the Manara neighborhood of Khan Yunis.
7 October, 6:54am

We go to sleep thinking about very ordinary things, a university exam, buying a new piece of clothing, worrying about applying to a job, then suddenly the sound of the alarm changes, exams are cancelled, schools and universities are shut down, gunpowder blasts everywhere, Al-Jazeera turns red, we turn on the radio, Telegram, in our minds we start to reschedule all our plans. In Gaza, everything changes in an instant.

8 October, 11:30am

Our newsfeeds are funeral homes / memorial services / obituary pages. We move from page to page as if walking through a square full of funerals packed side by side. God, the weight of these days.

8 October, 10:02pm

America wants to send an aircraft carrier to support the Zionist entity. Good, inshallah when we are liberated we will turn it into a floating restaurant in the sea. ...READ MORE 

https://www.gazapassages.com/141737777133-1-1

All rights reserved to the people of Palestine
كل الحقوق محفوظة لأهل فلسطين

With crediting the authors and without editing, we encourage you to publish, print, and distribute the texts by all possible means in support of the Palestinian struggle for liberation. Any financial income generated from these texts is the property of the people in Gaza and must be directed back to them in full. For questions and further coordination, please contact us.

ArabLit #CeaseFireNOW

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Wednesday, November 29, 2023

Burqin Church (كنيسة برقين), considered the fifth holiest place for Christians worldwide, and the third oldest church in the world. It is located in the village of Burqin in Palestine’s Jenin Governorate (جنين) in the West Bank, Palestine

Entrance to Burqin Church (كنيسة برقين) Photo by @feryal27

Entrance to Burqin Church (كنيسة برقين), considered the fifth holiest place for Christians worldwide, and the third oldest church in the world. It is located in the village of Burqin in Palestine’s Jenin Governorate (جنين) in the West Bank.
 
It is currently in use by the Palestinian village's small Christian (Greek Orthodox) community, as well as Palestinian Christians from Jenin and the surrounding cities. It is also a popular attraction for pilgrims visiting Palestine from around the world.
 
The church was built on top of a cave in the 4th century, during the Byzantine period in Palestine by Saint Helena. According to Christian tradition, the cave was the site of a miracle:
 
Jesus was passing through on his way from Galilee to Jerusalem when he heard cries for help from ten lepers in the cave, who were living isolated nearby. He encountered them and told them to present themselves to the priests, although they were not yet cured. On their way their leprosy disappeared. Since this miracle, the church became a station for many Christian pilgrims.
 
The church was repeatedly expanded and renovated during the early Muslim period and then during the Ottoman Empire. Today, the church is composed of the lepers' cave and an 18th-century hall and nave.

One day the wind will carry laughter instead of screams... from the river to the sea Palestine will be free


 

1948 Nakba: 15,000 killed, 750,000 displaced. 2023 Gaza: 21,000+ killed, 1.75M displaced

 

St Poryphyrius Church in Gaza, one of the oldest churchs in Palestine- bombed by Israel in 2023

 

Israel killed more journalists in Gaza in 7 weeks than all 20 YEARS of the Vietnam war & all 6 years of World War II

Israel has killed more journalists in Gaza in 7 weeks than all 20 YEARS of the Vietnam war & all 6 years of World War II 

63 journalists killed in Vietnam by both sides 

69 killed in World War II by all parties 

70 killed in Gaza by Israel alone

America's Mainstream Media & Fake News (thank you Jonathan Cook for your honor & honesty) ... illustrated by some randomly plucked up truth telling cartons, memes, and a map

America's Mainstream Media (truth telling cartoon meme found today on X)

Jonathan Cook
@Jonathan_K_Cook
Writer, journalist, self-appointed media critic. Winner of the Martha Gellhorn Special Prize for Journalism

Just remember when the 'respectable' media warn us about fake news that the biggest fake news we're being exposed to – every day, for weeks on end – is peddled by the 'respectable' media: that Israel is 'eradicating' Hamas, rather than the truth that it is carrying out ethnic cleansing and a genocide of the Palestinian people. 

This week the UN warned that Palestinians will be killed in even bigger numbers than from the bombing by disease brought about by Israel's denial of food and water, and its destruction of health and public sanitation infrastructure. 

 This isn't some tragic side effect of Israel's policies. Israeli planners knew this would happen from the start.



Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib's Statement Calling for the Release of ALL Hostages and Palestinian Political Prisoners.

 

Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib
My statement calling for the release of all hostages and Palestinian political prisoners.

also on Twitter/X this morning

During the first 4days of the ceasefire the Israeli government released 150 Palestinian prisoners and arrested 168 new prisoners.