Jewish Supremacy and the Making of Genocide in Gaza
In today’s dissonant reality, many countries feel like they need protection from Israel.
In today’s dissonant reality, many countries feel like they need protection from Israel.
Palestinian artist Mona Hatoum keeps returning to the same questions: How is space regulated, surveilled, and colonized? And what remains concealed?
Israeli settlement plans threaten a monastery, green spaces, and even a cemetery.
Raja Shehadeh offers a simple but impossible answer to this simple but impossible question: “And yet we must.”
Palestinian writer Nasser Abu Srour, finally free after 32 years in Israeli prisons, speaks to interviewer Rebecca Ruth Gould.
Kamal Aljafari’s new-old film historicizes Gaza in its demise.
Edward Said remains a singular prophet and exemplar for everyone struggling for a world based on peace, justice, and mutual recognition.
Palestinian artists have long turned their people’s struggle into vibrant expression.
Immediacy matters in this collection because it fundamentally alters how the poems should be read — not “about” war, but inside of it.
Coffee, gas, warmth — basic things to many, but in Gaza, they become rarities.
A young writer reports that safe transportation remains dangerously scarce.
What could be more central to any discussion of peace and justice than Palestinian freedom and sovereignty in our lifetimes?