Breadcrumb
Search
1 to 10 out of 545
Results
Ghefreh has lived through two Nakbas, 1948 and today. Her grandson Emad Moussa tells her story of twinned displacement and how they've now blurred into one.
Masarwa was summoned to a meeting after students and parents identified her in photos at the march and called for the school to dismiss her.
For Dalal, 1948 was the year she was forced to walk hundreds of kilometres on foot with her mother and two brothers, Nimr and Naim to reach safety.
The Nakba, Arabic for 'catastrophe', refers to the around 750,000 Palestinians who were ethnically cleansed alongside the 1948 creation of the state of Israel.
Palestinians took to social media to draw comparisons of the 1948 Nakba and Israel’s ongoing assault on Gaza which has killed over 35,000 Palestinians.
The Nakba is being commemorated on Wednesday as Israeli attack across the Gaza Strip force new waves of Palestinian mass displacement.
Nakba, or catastrophe, signifies the forced displacement and ethnic cleansing of thousands of Palestinians from their towns and villages, to make way for Jews
The Student Front at Tel Aviv University has slammed the lack of intervention following the police's refusal to issue a Nakba commemoration permit.
Israeli minister Avi Dichter said Israel's ongoing mass forcible displacement of Palestinians was 'a Gaza Nakba 2023'.
Regardless of what it may claim, Palestinians know that Israel's goal has always been mass murder, ethnic cleansing and forced expulsion just like in 1948. In Gaza, we are witnessing the prelude, writes Emad Moussa.