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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
Israel's current assault on the West Bank is a reflex of an occupier losing its grip, lashing out with violence and expulsion, writes Mohammed R. Mhawish.
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.
Book Club: 'Tolerance is a Wasteland' looks at how denial helps and maintains the liberal imagination of a progressive and democratic Israel
Unless it sheds its colonial skin, the UN will fail to hold the West and Israel to account, or achieve real justice for the Palestinians, says Sara Troian.
Book Club: Drawing on postcolonial thought and resistive politics, Tahrir Hamdi argues the imaginative construction of Palestine is a key element in the Palestinians' ongoing struggle and crucial in creating a national identity.
Book Club: In Forest of Noise, Palestinian poet Mosab Abu Toha explores the pain, loss, and struggle of life in Gaza, while holding onto his connection to home
Book Club: Focusing on the period of 1948 to 1968, Marte Heian-Engdal's study compiles the international community's earliest efforts to solve the Palestinian refugee problem, and examines the impact of these developments on wider regional dynamics.
Was another Palestine possible in 1946, two years before the Nakba? The Anglo-American Committee was a missed chance which resonates today, writes Lori Allen.
Anna Saif argues that Israel’s education system which erases & demonises Palestinians, is at the root of the hatred that drives its army to mercilessly kill.