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Lebanese journalist Rawan AlAmeen says since Israel expanded its genocidal war into Lebanon, it is her Gazan contacts reaching out to offer words of hope.
Book Club: Seldom researched, the Great Famine of Mount Lebanon (1915-1918) was one of WWI's greatest atrocities. Drawing on first-hand testimonies, Taylor Brand's 'Famine Worlds' offers an important analysis of what it's like to live through trauma.
Book Club: Estella Carpi's latest book looks at how humanitarian aid in Lebanon is entangled with diverse forms of development, and how the murky and often opportunistic politics of defining crises affect the displaced.
Book Club: In 'No One Knows Their Blood Type' Jumana grapples with life after learning her Palestinian father may not be her biological parent
On a fateful day in February 2022, Ibrahim al-Marashi found himself praying in two religions for two Marias. In a world where narcissism and conflict cause immeasurable hurt, humanity can triumph over division, he writes.
Over the past year, our hearts and minds have been shattered. For mental health podcaster Layla Maghribi, Israel's genocide in Gaza has changed her forever.
Years of state-sponsored Islamophobia have stirred the UK's racist underbelly, which reminds Tariq Mehmood of the 70s and the dangerous era of Paki bashing.
Book Club: 'Dearborn' tells diverse stories of Arab-Americans, showcasing their joys and struggles in the city known as the 'capital of Arab America'
Book Club: Asmaa Waguih's latest book uses photojournalism to highlight the impact of Yemen's war, drawing on her experiences in Iraq, Lebanon, Gaza, and Egypt.
Book Club: It has often been said that pre-Oslo, Palestinian refugees of 1948 built a state within a state in Lebanon. In Erling Lorentzen Sogge's ethnographic study, he shines a spotlight on the lived experiences of those within 'Ayn al-Hilwe.