Palestinian Artists
The war reminds us that Palestinians are also artists and not merely people perishing under the bombs and mortars.
The war reminds us that Palestinians are also artists and not merely people perishing under the bombs and mortars.
Hell continues in a never-ending war, yet with sumud, the Palestinian people remain resourceful, remarkable and above all, kind.
Arie Amaya-Akkermans talks to Lebanese and Cypriot artists about their work on the divided island of Cyprus.
Turkish artist Sena Başöz explores the metaphor of the magnolia and the advent of the apocalypse within the realm of imagination.
Justin Salhani argues that the “beautiful game” has been a powerful instrument of emancipation for workers, feminists and anti-colonialist activists around the world.
Though it ended on catastrophe, with the war in Gaza, the editors of The Markaz Review recall their favorites of the year.
Gaza’s professional para-cycling team for amputee athletes rise above Gaza’s darkest days through determination and excellence in sport.
Had Jesus been born today he would be considered Palestinian, and his birth would have faced many obstacles along the way, writes Ahmed Twaij.
In Gaza, the rubble and ruin must remain in full view not only as evidence of war crimes, but as living testimonies of shattered lives.
An exclusive excerpt from the 2023 title “Hamas: From Resistance to Regime” by Paola Caridi, translated by Andrea Teti.
Turkish poet Efe Duyan presents two poems from his collection “The Behavior of Words.”
Samantha Thornill, an American poet of Trinidadian-Tobago origin, shares two poems from her collection, “The Animated Universe.”