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This Week in Palestine archived cover
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What Are Fifteen Years?
By Manar Harb
I started my editorial career at This Week in Palestine
(TWIP), and I am very proud of this fact. TWIP is a national magazine,
made for the people, by the people! It may have started as a publication
for tourists, but throughout the fifteen years of its existence, TWIP
has acquired quite a unique archive of the Palestinian narrative. During
my own experience, I was absolutely fascinated by the amount of
material we received for each issue. The entire process was like soaring
above the clouds with readers and writers. I was connecting with
Palestinian authors from all around the world. I remember so many who
reached out to us to express their thoughts and share their stories. I
felt exposed to the entire Palestinian community that I was trying to
connect with. Suddenly, TWIP was the only place that somewhat
represented a “collective.”
The
collective is an important part of the Palestinian struggle; no
collective, no victory. And Palestinians everywhere need to think about a
collective vision if we wish to have a future with a place called
Palestine. Don’t kid yourself, we Palestinians are close to extinction.
Perhaps I exaggerate, perhaps not; either way, without a complete
understanding of the entire picture - the documentation and narration of
what happened, and of what is taking place - there will be no justice!
Local
organisations and businesses in solidarity with the Palestinians should
support such a constructive medium. We Palestinians are a society, with
a culture and language. We have our cause and the right to our land.
Freedom of movement, speech, and press are the basics. If you’re in
solidarity and you believe that, put your investment in the right place.
Finance
and marketing are two important factors in the life of a magazine, and
they also influence the content and final output. These are areas that
we should also think about and examine. The overhead involved in
printing 12,000 copies of each issue is not cheap! And yes, to sustain a
magazine, resources are required.
TWIP
has the capacity to reflect a part of the Palestinian narrative to an
English-speaking audience, which is a pretty powerful tool. And the
English-speaking audience is a broad audience. We Palestinians have not
been very good at presenting ourselves in public. I mean the public
media. We haven’t been very successful at presenting ourselves to each
other. I find that TWIP is a healthy space for us to have these
exchanges and conversations between ourselves, and yes, in English,
because the world needs to know.
Palestinians
will always be weak if we remain divided; we will be strong only if we
are united with our Arab neighbours and allies. It is true that borders
disconnect us, and that if it weren’t for the Israeli occupation,
there’s no reason why I wouldn’t be speaking Farsi or Turkish. There was
a point in time, not long ago, when those borders were wide open and
people travelled freely from village to village, and town to town. We
won’t forget what once was, but we will also look very closely at the
present.
The present is the most exciting time! Some say that the present is a gift.
The
best gifts are those that come unexpected. We’ve got some presents to
give! With the young and the old, our voices, our energy, our fathers
and sons, our mothers and daughters, we’ve got to tell our stories;
that’s the only way to justice.
The
magazine has survived fifteen years of wars and conflict, issue after
issue, curfew or not, TWIP was published! The clarity of the vision
behind TWIP is what drives this success.
I
am grateful for TWIP as a model of success for Palestinians, an
experience that reflects how persistence and faith go a long way. For
the future of this humble magazine, I only hope for further growth. And
thank you, TWIP, for capturing some of the brighter moments. (:
I am really proud of you, Sani Meo and Taisir Masrieh!
Manar A. Harb is an aspiring writer and previous content editor of This Week in Palestine.
[AS
ALWAYS
PLEASE GO TO THE LINK
TO READ GOOD ARTICLES IN
FULL: HELP SHAPE ALGORITHMS
(and conversations) THAT
EMPOWER DECENCY, DIGNITY,
JUSTICE & PEACE... and
hopefully Palestine]