Footage of severe flooding and snow in the West Bank

Severe weather conditions brought heavy rains and flash flooding to much of the Levant region. Near the West Bank city of Nablus, the floodwaters reportedly claimed the lives of two Palestinian women and a taxi driver after their vehicle was swept away. Fortunately, the three individuals were found and returned safely with little to no injuries.

Heavy rainfall also brought floods to large parts of Qalqilya. Israel’s barrier wall, which completely wraps around the West Bank city, prevented the water from draining. Homes and agricultural plots of land were submerged in muddy water. The failed drainage system can only be controlled from the Israeli side of the wall, reports Ma’an News, thereby leaving the residents unprotected from the water build-up.

In Gaza, preparations are being made to evacuate dozens of people affected by power outtages as a result of the stormy weather. [Read more...]

A dramatically optimistic update on the status of your Palestinian citizenship

Three very critical things are presently expediting the arrival of your new Palestinian passport.

First, the discourse on Palestine-Israel in the United States is changing. The Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions movement is making progress day by day and Capitol Hill is finding it trickier to fund a foreign army while simultaneously dodging strengthening discontent.

Second, the collaborationist Palestinian Authority, feeling pressure from the young and the old who’ve taken to the streets to call for an end to any state-sponsored collusion with the occupier, has even begun taking lessons from the old Hosni Mubarak regime and, well, the entire world witnessed just how fast that led to the regime’s demise.

Third, hunger strikers in Israeli jails have brought global attention to Israel’s policies of administrative detention, a policy that has transformed from eighteen days of arbitrary arrest during the First Intifada to indefinite periods of arrest-without-charge today.

If each of these situations can independently sever an artery of support for Israel’s illegal occupation, imagine the combined effect. The occupation stands on frail legs. It is unsustainable and the Israeli government knows it. The Israeli public knows it (even if it won’t admit to it). Sabra Hummus and Caterpillar both know it. It is only a matter of time before Israel’s Oslo-brokered impunity wears thin and it all comes crashing down. [Read more...]

A stirring Nakba photo of a raw, faceless man

(Updated; special thanks to Yazeed Ibrahim) There is something about this photograph that makes it difficult to look without wondering. The context surrounding the scene is tremendously vague yet it imparts a powerful message. Humans all fall, but some meet the earth right where it was once stolen from them. It’s twisted, almost.

I found this photograph by accident. I don’t even remember where or how but I do remember immediately saving it, renaming it, and putting it in a special folder. Since then, I’ve spent many long moments staring at it, sometimes even trying to read beyond the raw physical image of the faceless man.

I know that it has something to do with the Nakba but I can’t be sure how exactly it relates. Aside from the fact that I wish to share with you what has ultimately become my favorite still image of all time, I’m hoping someone would be able to explain it.

I speculate that the man is grieving over a refugee who was among the hundreds of thousands of Palestinians forcefully expelled from their homes in 1947 and 1948. If you look closely, the gravestone to the left says “1990″ and the one to the right says “1975″, so it is clear that the photograph had to have been taken in the year 1990 or later. The gravestone to the right also bears the name “Ramla”, a city ethnically cleansed by Israeli paramilitary units in the late 1940s and transferred to Jewish authority in early 1949. It is likely that this cemetery is the final resting place for Palestinian refugees and that this grieving man has returned to pay his respects to an individual who couldn’t escape the horrific consequences of the Nakba. [Read more...]

Left behind at the scene of the crime: Israel wages war on Bil’in

Guest contribution by Wedad Yassin

Weeks ago, Wedad Yassin traveled back to Ein Yabrud, a village near Ramallah in the West Bank, to visit her family and to experience Palestine’s rich cultural heritage. Her intention had been to tour through the Al-Khalil district, Ramallah, Bil’in, and Jerusalem. However, she was denied entry to Jerusalem. Nevertheless, Yassin explored Bil’in, site of the weekly demonstrations against Israel’s apartheid wall, and came across this jam’iyya or association dedicated to “enhancing and reviving Palestinian culture along with documenting Israeli crimes”.

Included is a series of photographs from Yassin’s visit to this center. Each of the shells, bullet casings, and projectiles featured in these images were collected over time by the members of this jam’iyya after they were used against unarmed protesters during the demonstrations in Bil’in. Israeli forces continue to use live ammunition, rubber bullets, and USA-made tear gas canisters against the Bil’in activists on a regular basis and have designated the area a military zone to allow soldiers to treat the civilians as hostile combatants.

[Read more...]

Palestine’s Speed Sisters racing cars, breaking barriers

I have a healthy obsession with cars and motor racing.

At age seven, like many children, I owned dozens of die cast cars that I’d line up on imaginary starting lines almost every evening before pushing them through championship races and subsequent demolition derbies.

At age ten, I began to arrange the cars into virtual parking lots so as to practice parallel parking for my future driving exam.

At age fourteen, I abandoned Hot Wheels and went for Jada Toys’ new Import Racer line-up which featured larger car bodies, rubber wheels, realistic headlights and taillights, custom body kits, and an overall greater level of sophistication.

At age fifteen, I made the foolish mistake of bringing a car to high school where, after meeting Michelle, it went flying into a wall. [Read more...]

Letter to Gilad Shalit’s family and supporters

To Gilad Shalit’s family and  supporters,

Your son has returned home; congratulations. I’m sure you are relieved, and deservedly so. You’ve waited five long years for this day, to be able to see your son in the flesh. Today he stands before you, and now I do too.

I want to ask you an honest question. Irrespective of the fact that Shalit is your son or your neighbor or a young man, has justice really been done? It doesn’t require a stretch of imagination to say yes. Shalit returned home, and within the coming days, so will 1027 Palestinians. But the real answer is no.

This prisoner swap has yet to challenge the status quo. Tonight, thousands of Palestinian Shalits, figuratively speaking, will sleep in Israeli jails. Tomorrow, they will wake up, still locked behind bars and basement walls. They will wonder why the world hasn’t taken them as seriously as the real Gilad Shalit, the Israeli one whose blood is apparently much more valuable than theirs. They will wait. Another day will pass; they will sleep and repeat.

I want to ask another question. Do you see anything wrong with this picture? Collectively, the freed Palestinians are painted as mass murderers concerned with nothing else but a second chance to target the Israeli state while Shalit is hailed as a champion, an innocent bystander uninvolved in the upkeep of the occupation and accidentally donning a military uniform the day he was captured. [Read more...]

Unforgotten keys: A walk through the West Bank

Guest contribution by Wedad Yassin

Abd, 64, has been a loyal worker in the Hirbawi family’s keffiyeh factory in Al-Khalil (Hebron) since it opened in 1961. This is the only authentic Palestinian keffiyeh factory in the world.

A Palestinian family’s home enclosed by Israel’s apartheid wall. [Read more...]

TEDxRamallah: “When I tally the time, money, and effort Palestinians spend just to exist…”

“When I tally the time, money, and effort Palestinians spend just to exist, I don’t know whether to laugh or cry.”

— Sam Bahour

Earlier this year, the popular and inspirational TED program came to Ramallah in the West Bank. The program featured a series of motivational and thoughtful speakers who discussed deep topics concerning social organization and human advancement. One speaker, Sam Bahour, spoke about the condition of Palestine’s current refugee crisis from both a personal and an observational point of view. His reflections force you to wonder how the humiliation and stresses of occupation and limited freedoms continues to go ignored.

Here is an excerpt from his speech (which can be found in the video at the end of this post):

We have all experienced having to leave in a hurry for a business or luxury trip: the rush to pack your luggage, picking the right clothes for two days, enough clean underwear, a good book, and at the last minute, forgetting your favorite toothbrush.

What if your two-day trip turned out to be four? You’d probably manage. Thank God for that book. You’d probably manage even for a week.

How about delayed for one month? Ten months? Ten years?

Over sixty years? [Read more...]

The Palestine Entries: 99-year prison term for being Palestinian

// Entry #23

His mother remembers the exact date: April 28, 2002. He was only 20 years old when Israel’s armed forces captured and arrested him, then sent him to an Israeli prison where to this day, he has yet to be formally indicted with a crime.

Hussain Mustafa Al-Loh missed out on his prime teenage years. His father was getting too old and too ill to work so in 1997, Hussain left school and joined the Palestinian Authority at age 15. According to his mother and youngest brother, he joined it for the paycheck, not to fight. For the next five years, he fed his family from his own hands. His other brothers were not yet ready for work.

Hussain’s work ethic propelled him up the ranks and by 1999, he was serving as one of Yasser Arafat’s personal body guards. Stationed in the West Bank city of Ramallah, Hussain was forced to travel through multiple Israeli checkpoints to reach Gaza City whenever he was able to visit family. He had been through the crossings and checkpoints multiple times over the years but in 2002, Israeli soldiers captured him in a seemingly arbitrary operation at the Erez Crossing and transported him to the maximum security Nafha Prison, notorious for having among the worst conditions in the Israeli prison system. [Read more...]

Reconciliation is a good thing but will it actually represent the Palestinian people?

Hamas and Fatah agreed on Wednesday to reconcile and end all infighting, and to begin work toward establishing a non-partisan-based interim government ahead of long overdue elections. The reconciliation comes over a month after Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip took to the streets to demand unity between the feuding political parties each operating under a different umbrella of policies and circumstances.

The agreement, which resulted from private talks held in the newly liberated Cairo, came as a surprise to unsuspecting Palestinian and international communities. The underlying premise is that division opens the door for occupation whereas unity moves Palestinians one step closer toward declaring statehood. Put this way, it has garnered significant amounts of praise – and justifiably so. But the praise is a bit premature.

There are those who will argue that optimism is the only way to endure decades of occupation. To a certain extent, sure. After all, if it serves as a coping mechanism, then it has proven effective. But blind optimism should never compel the Palestinian people to automatically sign off on a vague proposition as if it’s a last ditch effort for liberation. [Read more...]

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