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Palestinian-Israeli Knesset member Mansour Abbas is the newest mouthpiece for the Israeli government's colonial narrative, but the Palestinian people will not be easily swayed in their fight for liberation, writes Ramona Wadi.
By recognising Jerusalem as Israel's 'historic capital' and promising to move the UK embassy, PM-hopeful Rishi Sunak trivialises the Palestinian right to statehood in favour of political interests and career advancement, writes Emad Moussa.
28 years on since the Hebron massacre, Palestinians see its legacy lives on, taken up not only by a marginal, isolated group of Israeli extremists but as the driving ethos underpinning most of Israel's political parties, writes Emad Moussa.
Mansour Abbas, Ra'am Party leader in the Israeli Knesset, portrays himself as a pragmatist by denying Israeli apartheid. But this pragmatism he proclaims is merely an extension of Israel's exclusionary colonial politics, writes Ramona Wadi.
Despite a history of trade union solidarity with Palestine, rapper Lowkey was de-platformed by the Trade Union Congress after a secret letter from the head of GMB Union, a move that Sohaib Benessa writes betrays the foundations of union organising.
The 1948 Deir Yassin massacre was a blueprint for the ethnic cleansing of Palestine. Despite Israel attempts to deny its history of crimes, we must commemorate it in order to remind the world of the ongoing plight of Palestinians, writes Emad Moussa.
Given the connections linking the company that produced Jordan Peterson's video message to Muslims, with US and Israeli intelligence, Lowkey questions whether there is a coordinated push to promote the Abraham Accords.
Co-founder of Palestine Action, Huda Ammori, writes about how activists used direct action to target arms company Elbit Systems for their role in arming Israel, and succeeded in driving them out of the UK.
While the "Tantura" documentary has managed to temporarily pierce Israel's collective amnesia, it is unlikely to force a true reckoning on the country’s dark past or result in redemption for the Palestinian victims, writes Emad Moussa.
For decades, Palestinians have told the story of the Tantura massacre, but only when Israeli veterans confessed did the world listen. Until Palestinians have the authority to narrate their own history, justice remains elusive, writes Jehad Abusalim.