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Book Club: Omar Khalifah’s 'Sand-Catcher' is a sharp, fast-paced novel about four Palestinian journalists trying to uncover an elderly man’s elusive Nakba story
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.
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.
Book Club: Through a thorough analysis of Zionist leftist politics, Areej Sabbagh-Khoury's study juxtaposes history and memory to demonstrate how the Palestinian Nakba was not a singular catastrophe but rather a protracted process of confiscation.
The teenager's murder at the hands of a Jewish Israeli settler is the result of the Israeli regime's incitement of violence against Palestinians. His story, and the story of his village of Sandala, is that of the continuing Nakba, writes Yara Hawari.
For 75 years, Israel has sought to erase Palestinian history to legitimise its foundational myths and justify ongoing dispossession and occupation. This denial is anti-Palestinian racism in action, writes Emad Moussa.
As Palestinians commemorate the 75th anniversary of the Nakba, Dana El Kurd looks back on the successes and challenges of the Palestine solidarity movement, and future opportunities to build a global liberatory project.
Emad Moussa recounts the traumatic stories of his grandparents who were among the hundreds of thousands of Palestinians forced out of their homes by Zionist militias during the Nakba in 1948, to form the state of Israel.
Comment: As long as Israel continues to occupy and oppress Palestinians, the memory of the Nakba will continue to regenerate and re-emphasise itself, writes Emad Moussa.
Comment: Trump and Netanyahu's plans for annexation build on a legacy of impunity for colonial violence, tacitly approved by the international community, writes Ramona Wadi.