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Settler colonialism is an Australian concept from the 1990s only if you ignore seven decades of Global South academic literature, writes Alonso Gurmendi.
Reginald D Hunter is the latest target of pro-Israel provocateurs feigning victimhood. Time to bring down the curtain on this pantomime, says Rivkah Brown.
In Palestine, not all violence is equal. It is an innate function of Zionism, but not the existential struggle of the Palestinian people, writes Ilan Pappe.
From Ismail Haniyeh to Imad Mughniyeh, Israel's policy of assassinations is a great example of winning the battle but losing the war, writes Emad Moussa.
Like the US, Australia's politicians cheer on genocide. But Palestinians and First Nations peoples remain firm in their struggle, writes Randa Abdel-Fattah.
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.
Israel's violence against Palestinian women is core to its settler colonialism because they sustain indigenous life and resistance, writes Farrah Koutteineh.
From running into the sea for airdropped aid to risking their lives for a sack of flour, Israel's war is an attack on Palestinian dignity, writes Emad Moussa.
Israel's 'scholasticide' is central to its colonial project, because education is at the heart of Palestinian resistance and liberation, writes Samar Saeed.
If the ideology of Zionism is left unchecked, there is a real threat that Israel will extend its genocidal war to the West Bank and Lebanon, writes Emad Moussa.