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Saturday, April 30, 2022

Harvard's Crimson Editorial Board Bravely Headlines "In Support of Boycott, Divest, Sanction and a Free Palestine" late April 2022

 "We are not sure how these words will reach you, or whether they’ll do so at all. But our stance isn’t rooted in proximity or convenience, but rather in foundational principles we must uphold — even if (or perhaps especially when) it proves difficult." 

https://www.thecrimson.com/article/2022/4/29/editorial-bds/

Editorials

In Support of Boycott, Divest, Sanction and a Free Palestine

When oppression strikes anywhere in the world, resistance movements reverberate globally. The desire for rightful justice spreads, like wildfire, moving us to act, to speak, to write, and right our past wrongs.

Over the past year, the Harvard College Palestine Solidarity Committee has strived to do just that. Amid escalating tensions between Israel and Palestine, PSC has hosted informational programming, organized weekly demonstrations of support through “Keffiyeh Thursdays,” and even installed a colorful, multi-panel “Wall of Resistance” in favor of Palestinian freedom and sovereignty.

In at least one regard, PSC’s spirited activism has proven successful: It has forced our campus — and our editorial board — to once again wrestle with what both Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International have called Israel’s “crimes against humanity” in the region.

We first and foremost wish to extend our sincere support to those who have been and continue to be subject to violence in occupied Palestine, as well as to any and all civilians affected by the region’s bellicosity.... PLEASE GO TO THE LINK TO READ THE ARTICLE IN FULL

Also in the Harvard Crimson late April 2022

An art display was put up in Harvard Yard by the Harvard College Palestine Solidarity Committee for Israel Apartheid Week. Photo By Julian J. Giordano on April 2022 article "Palestine Solidarity Committee Hosts Annual Israeli Apartheid Week, Drawing Backlash from Harvard Hillel"

https://www.thecrimson.com/article/2022/4/22/israel-apartheid-week-2022/

"“They’re trying to conflate criticism of the state of Israel with anti-semitism. We have Jewish members in our organization. We had Jewish speakers come speak at our events, so I don’t think that their response has been very convincing,” he said.

Bahour said that her favorite part of IAW’s programming has been the Wall of Resistance in Harvard Yard.

“The panels are all very powerful and they really show a lot of solidarity, because they're not all about Palestine,” Bahour said. “Each one covers a different topic and is trying to show that the Palestinian cause doesn't exist in a bubble, but it's rather very interconnected with our everyday life here in the U.S.” 

Monday, April 25, 2022

From Palestine with Art - Venice's Biennale Arte 2022... images collected from twitter ...etc

"One installation features an olive tree that has keys hanging from the homes of Palestinian refugees, signifying their right to return to those homes one day. There is also an audio program featuring recordings of spoken histories from Palestine and music from there. Faisal Saleh also explained, “Palestinian art is the most effective way to tell the Palestinian story to the world. We hope to show the world that, despite living in exile and under the most difficult conditions under occupation, Palestinian artists are able to excel and produce inspiring works of art that celebrate the beauty of Palestine, the strength of its people, and its rich cultural heritage.”   Check Out The First Ever Palestinian Art Exhibition At The Venice Biennale 2022

FROM PALESTINE WITH ART Palazzo Mora, Room 8, Cannaregio 3659


 

"Palestine: Attempts to bring Palestine to the Venice Biennale have previously proven controversial—in 2002, for example, curator Francesco Bonami proposed hosting a Palestinian Pavilion at the biennial, only to be accused of anti-Semitism in the Italian press. This year, there won’t be a Palestinian Pavilion either, but there will be a collateral exhibition courtesy of the Palestine Museum in Woodbridge, Connecticut. Titled “From Palestine with Art,” the show will be curated by Nancy Nesvet, a curator at the museum, and will feature 19 artists with ties to Palestine, including Ibrahim Alazza, Mohamed Khalil, and Rana Matar. Adding an explicitly political dimension to the show, there will be another presence from Palestine as well: a live tree that will be hung with keys from refugees. " A Guide to the 2022 Venice Biennale National Pavilions, From Futuristic Gardens to AI-Influenced Performance Art

 


Australia-based Palestinian artist @luxeternatv locates her mothers town #Haifa and her fathers #Yafa on the historic 1877 map of #Palestine on the floor of From Palestine With Art official @la_Biennale

A 2020 work by Nabil Anani, 'In Pursuit of Utopia #7', will be on view in Venice as part of the exhibition From Palestine with Art. Photo: Zawyeh Gallery

“From Palestine with Art” #Palestinian #Art is on Display in the 59th #Venice #Biennale painting by Samia Halaby, Venetian Red, 2021


Faisal Saleh, founder and executive director of the Palestine Museum US. The artwork in the background is Yafa by Palestinian artist Shaima' Farouki. The work is part of the museum's collection.


(IMEU NEWS & CULTURE) Palestine Museum US Tapped For Venice Biennale

"The Palestine Museum US made history when it opened as the first institution dedicated to Palestinian art in the Western Hemisphere. It made history again when it celebrated the breadth of a diaspora through its “Palestine Art Week,” which has continued to grow in a pandemic. This spring, it will break another global barrier with its participation in the Venice Biennale.

Palestine Museum Founder and Executive Director Faisal Saleh made that news public this week, as he announced the museum as one of 31 “Collateral Events” to participate in the 59th annual La Biennale di Venezia curated by Cecilia Alemani. Curated by Nancy Nesvet, head curator at the Palestine Museum, the exhibition From Palestine With Art will feature 19 Palestinian artists who are living across the diaspora, from New York, Boston and New Jersey to Kuwait, Jordan, Luxembourg, and Palestine itself. 

The exhibition, a multimedia homage to Palestine’s natural wonder and resilience, runs April 23 through November 27 of this year at Palazzo Mora in Venice. While it is up, Nesvet said, she is hoping to have a virtual component for viewers who cannot physically make it to Italy."

"“The mantra of the exhibition is very optimistic,” Nesvet said on a recent Zoom call with Saleh. “I wanted to show that this is such a beautiful place that is shared by a beautiful people that is still there after 4,000 years … that despite all the violence and destruction that's going on, the connection that people have to nature in Palestine has not been abandoned.”

“We're walking into a place that's ours,” Saleh added of the exhibition. “It's pride of place, it's pride of identity, it’s recognition for people who are Palestinian, but it's also recognition by the world.”"  ... READ MORE, as always please go to the original link to read the article in full.

Allar, west of Jerusalem - Ethnically cleansed by Zionists 26,847 days ago

Allar, west of Jerusalem - Ethnically cleansed 26,847 days ago Return is our Right and Destiny

 
A 1940s map of the area of Allar, Jerusalem from the Survey of Palestine.

Wikipedia description: "Refugees from Allar and other Palestinian villages who are old enough to remember life there express nostalgia for the natural abundance of the land lost. One Umm Jamal recalls eggplants, pomegranates, cucumbers and green beans as among the many products grown on the village lands which were fed by springs known to locals as Umm al-Hasan ("Mother of Goodness"), Umm al-Sa'd ("Mother of Happiness"), Umm Nuh ("Mother of Noah"), al-'Uyun ("The Eyes"), and Umm al-'Uyun ("Mother of the Eyes").[25]

In 1992 it was described: "Stone rubble, concrete blocks and slabs, and steel bars litter the site, together with the remains of stone terraces and walls. One domed stone structure, the former school building, still stands. On the slopes overlooking the site, almond and cypress trees and cactuses grow along the terraces."[26] 

Sunday, April 17, 2022

Sunday, April 10, 2022

Palestine Palm Sunday.... Before 1948 ... when all Palestinians were free to come and go from Jerusalem

Students from Notre Dame de Sion walking on the Palm Sunday procession from Bethphage on the Mount of Olives to the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem, c. 1932

 
The nuns from Notre Dame de Sion on the Palm Sunday procession from Bethphage on the Mount of Olives to the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem, c. 1932


Saturday, March 19, 2022

Today, 19 years ago, American peace icon and activist Rachel Corrie was crushed to death by an Israeli bulldozer while protecting a Palestinian home from demolition in Rafah, south of the Gaza Strip. #IsraeliCrimes #NeverForget #Palestine

 Today, 19 years ago, American peace icon and activist Rachel Corrie was crushed to death by an Israeli bulldozer while protecting a Palestinian home from demolition in Rafah, south of the Gaza Strip.  #IsraeliCrimes #NeverForget #Palestine

Painted on the apartheid separation wall in Bethlehem city in the occupied West Bank #Palestine

Painted on the apartheid separation wall in Bethlehem city in the occupied West Bank #Palestine

 

 

Friday, March 11, 2022

Support Ukraine... and Palestine

 

Picnics & Palestine

 "One of my favorite memories as a child in Palestine was when my mother (AY) used to make her scrumptious meat pies for us to eat, picnic style, on the grounds of #AlAqsa compound in #AlQuds (#Jerusalem)...She used to get very early in the day, prepare the dough and take it with her to Al Quds (the old city) ahead of us...
 

Once inside the old city, she would buy her fresh ingredients of ground lamb meat, onions, parsley, and spices and take them to the old bakery in the area that she frequented and trusted.
 
Once at the bakery, she would make triangle shaped meat pies (ikraas), which she stuffed with her magic mixture of mouth watering ingredients and give them to the baker to bake in his oven, making sure that they were baked to her exacting standards of golden perfection...
 
Afterwards, she would take the piping hot pies, mouth watering aroma wafting through the air, place them in a large tray, covering them with a blanket to keep them nice and warm, and meet up with us at the ground of Al Aqsa, whereby we would have our picnic under the shade of the ancient trees...
 
She used to make extra pies so that when strangers happened on us, drawn by that intoxicating aroma, she could share with them...
 
Till this day, the fragrance of fresh baked bread evokes memories of my beloved late mother, may Allah have mercy on her soul, and those magical moments spent with her in the holy grounds of Masjid Al Aqsa!"  

 

Sunday, February 6, 2022

Peace, mud on wood, 2007 when Palestinian Artists turned towards their environment and used materials such as wood, leather, mud, henna, natural dies.

Peace, mud on wood, 2007

"During the first Intifada, Palestinians boycotted Israeli goods as a form of resistance. Artists in their turn boycotted Israeli art supplies. Four Palestinian artists Vera Tamari, Nabil Anani, Tayseer Barakat and myself [Artist Sliman Mansour] formed the “new vision” group"

 "Artists turned towards their environment and used materials such as wood, leather, mud, henna, natural dies. This new approach helped to develop Palestinian art and formed a link between Palestinian art produced for several decades after Alnakbah and the contemporary art."  Palestinian Artist Sliman Mansour

Saturday, February 5, 2022

This Week in Palestine: A Palestinian gingerbread house baked by Riyam Kafri AbuLabban.

A Palestinian gingerbread house baked by Riyam Kafri AbuLabban.
 

"The Palestinian kitchen, like other kitchens, is in flux as it borrows and receives inspiration from other cuisines. Why not freekeh risotto? Why not hot cross buns with a cardamom-cinnamon Palestinian twist? (Visit Fadi Kattan’s Instagram account to sneak a peek.) And why not build Palestinian-style gingerbread houses?

 

Gingerbread houses are a nineteenth-century German tradition that became popular after the Brothers Grimm published Hansel and Gretel. There is something magical about a house completely edible from top to bottom, even more so amidst the spirit and charm of the Christmas season. Under the spell of gingerbread houses and the holiday season, I wanted to create a family tradition that fit with my children’s experience of Palestinian homes. I also wanted them to know that Christmas is a Palestinian holiday, that Jesus Christ is Palestinian."   Riyam Kafri AbuLaban