
Can love transform in the face of bombs, drones, AI surveillance, snipers, annexation, and expulsion?
READ MORENeemah Ahamed explores what home means when one's life is upended and what once held cherished emotions disintegrates.
07 NOVEMBER, 2025 • By Neemah AhamedNon-citizen Gulf residents are rarely depicted in media or literature, but two new novels may change all that.
07 NOVEMBER, 2025 • By Gaar AdamsJadd Hilal is French, Palestinian, and Lebanese. In this interview with TMR, he parses national identities.
07 NOVEMBER, 2025 • By Lara VergnaudHaunted by fear and fragile hope, two couples cross the Afghan capital and accidentally meet. Where is the common ground between them?
07 NOVEMBER, 2025 • By Parand, Asad NarimA new memoir builds a case for one state where everyone has equal rights.
07 NOVEMBER, 2025 • By Anna Lekas MillerAn essay on how and why grieving for Palestine is being policed in classrooms, newsrooms, and beyond.
07 NOVEMBER, 2025 • By Adam MakaryA lonely Lebanese writer welcomes a poor woman into his home, unwittingly realizing that it is she who is saving him.
07 NOVEMBER, 2025 • By MK HarbMaysaa Alajjan on a homeland that never accepted her, and another that she never knew.
07 NOVEMBER, 2025 • By Maysaa AlajjanFilmmaker Amy Omar explores the short stories of a Turkish writer living in Paris.
07 NOVEMBER, 2025 • By Amy OmarNationality: at the end of the day, we are richer for the diversity of our identities, and poorer for our divisions.
07 NOVEMBER, 2025 • By Jordan Elgrably, Malu HalasaAl-Dujaili shows how global crises connect us and reveal our shared humanity.
06 NOVEMBER, 2025 • By Noshin BokthTMR's October issue examines the multifaceted nature of friendship — intimate or communal, joyful or bittersweet.
03 OCTOBER, 2025 • By Rana Asfour