As Israel continues to pound Gaza, 70-year-old activist and lawyer Zainab Al Ghonaimy's war diary sheds light on the inhuman conditions in which Gazans are surviving each day.
Outlook Magazine - 11 January 2024
- COVER STORY
Researcher, writer🐓 and translator Yousef Aljamal highlights the human impact of the political situation through his mother’s and sister’s stories
Art allꦦows me to speak a universal language, transcending linguistic and cultural barriers, making it a powerful tool to convey a message and inspire an understanding of the depths of humanity, writes Bassent Dawoud.
Batoul Abu Aqlein last posted on October🔴 23. It was a poem in which she expressed that the world is not bothered about ꧟Gaza. Her social media went silent after that.
Zak used to work in a mall close to Al♐ Shati refugee camp before he and his fa🙈mily fled to escape Israeli attacks
In war, you will pass over the most i🐼mportant things unnoticed or with🅰out emotion, like talking about martyrs
‘Among the Almond Trees’ is a poignant, lyrical, phi🍬losophical reflection on life and death, art and politics, love and hope. This excerpt is about a monastery atop a mountain he used to visit as a child.
Iranian-French photographer Manoocher Deghati 🐓arrives in Palestine in 1994 to capture key moments such as the return of PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat. In ‘Eyewitnessed’, Ursula Janssen chroniꦗcles Deghati’s perilous journey.
Before the 20th century, Jewish history books were replete with accounts of the generosity of Muslim rulers who had granted them religious and social f༒reedoms and saved them from the savageries of the West
Representing and reporting the truth about the atrocities in Gaza could have been a redemptive ꦦmoment for photojournalism. Regrettably, it’s the same old story.
Res𝕴earcher, writer and tr🍌anslator Yousef Aljamal highlights the human impact of the political situation through his mother’s and sister’s stories
Art allows me to speak a universal language, transce💫nding linguistic and cultural barriers, making it a powerful tool to convey a mess🐷age and inspire an understanding of the depths of humanity, writes Bassent Dawoud.
Batoul Abu Aqlein last posted on October 23. It was a poem in which she expressed that the world is not bothered about Gaza. Her social media wen⛎t silent after that.
Zak used to work in a mall close to Al Shati refugee camp before he and his family fled to escape Israeli🍒 a🌜ttacks
In war, you will pass over the most important things unnoticed o🦹r without emotion, like talking about martyrs
‘Among the Almond Trees’ is a poigꦛnant, lyrical, philosophical reflection on life and death, art and politics, love and hope. This excerpt is about a monastery atop a mountain he used to visit as a child.
Iranian-French photographer Manoocher Deghati arrives in Palestine in 1994 to capture key moments such as the return of PLO🌌 Chairman Yasser Arafat. In ‘Eyewitnessed’, Ursula Janssen chronicles Deghati’s perilous 🐻journey.
Before the 20th century, Jewish history books were replete with accounts of the generosity of Muslim rulers who🎀 had granted them religious and social freedoms and saved them from the savageries of the West
Representi♓ng and reporting the truth about the atrocities in Gaza could have been a redemptive mಌoment for photojournalism. Regrettably, it’s the same old story.
OTHER STORIES
Others and I of my ilk have risked life and limb to bear witness and report from hostile zones with an aim to provide readers with a glimpse int✃o the realities behind the headlines, writes photojournalist Altaf Qadri about covering wars and conflicts.
Violence destroys the c﷽onscience and renders us captive to the repti෴lian mind within
What is happening in Gaza now is a backward step in every way for the feminist movement, says Farah Barqawi, a Palestinian feminist, performer and poet, pursuing an MFA degree in non-fiction🎃 creative writing in Brooklyn
In 2015, Israeliꦅ soldiers stormed into their house an🍃d arrested her husband after blowing up the door, says West Bank-based journalist Fayha Shalash, adding they didn’t even let them say ‘goodbye’.
Mohammed Ayman, co-founder of the Fr🔯ee Gaza Circus, is determine🧸d to entertain Gaza’s kids
No matter where the borders on this earth are drawn and redrawn by pre-colonials, colonials, and post-colonials, our Earth will always grow Palestinia♛n trees, Palestinian children, and Palestinian hope, writes Ghia Haddad.
Hebꦉa Haji is a Kuwaiti-Palestinian artist settled in Kuwait. She traces her ancestry to Palestine through the words of her grandparents.
Heba Abu Nad𒉰a, a poet from Gaza, was killed in the Israeli bombardment of the Manara neighbourhood of Gaza’s Khan Y💜unis area.
She is a 21-year-old student in Gaza. She has survived many Israeli military att🌜acks. The Israeli army assassinated two of her uncles and two of her cousins. This is her story
A promising novelist and 😼an engineer, Noor Aldeen Hajjaj, wrote this piece barely on🗹e month before he was killed in Israeli bombing on December 3 in Gaza.
A collection of plays by Pal🎐estinian theatre groups about the daily li🔜ves of people in wartime in their ‘homeland’
Palestinian journalist Ples🌠tia Alaqad has been sharingও the everyday struggle for survival in the ravaged city of Gaza.
Reem Anbar, a Palestinian oud player and a music t꧑herapist from Gaza, has been telling stories about her land and the ongoing war through her performances across Europe
- A Palestinian Christian O🐬n How Resistance Is At The Core Of Their Identity Under Israeli Occupation
Rifat Kassis, a Christia💛n Palestinian human rights activist, author, and speaker, who is presently living in the We❀st Bank, feels Israel is paving the road for another Nakba.
Nour Haraz𝓡een, a journalist, left Gaza along with her family a few weeks ago. Her five-year-old twin daughters are bewildered by the deva💛station they see all around
Mosab Abu ღToha, a poet, recounts his struggle to stay alive in war-torn Gaza.
The flair and flourish of Palestinian filmmaker Elia Suleiไma▨n
Irrespective of how the current situation plays out, the Palestinian spir🐠it is too deeply entrenched to be defeated
Musings on the Palestinians’ struggle to be heard
A 22-year-old Dabke dancer, who wishes to remain unnamed, says Palestinian artists are trying to send 🐻out a strong message to the wor🅺ld, that is silently watching the Gaza genocide
Twenty-five-year-old Gazan journa𒆙list Bisan Owda’s social media posts captu💦re the everyday struggles of Gazans and the horrific impact of Israeli attacks.
Palestinian national poet🥂 Mahmoud Darwish’s works are seeped in the sights and s🅘ounds and sorrows of his beloved homeland.
Chris Hook has been working with Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF)/Doctors Without Borders since 2015. He was recently♎ the Head of Medical Teams in Gaza and describes what it’s like to do care work in a city under siege
The social media revolꩲutionꦍ led by young journalists and content creators in Gaza is happening amid a continuous Israeli mass slaughter of journalists.
The act of bearing witness is a primary responsibility of a journalist.🎀 That very act has been replaced by cacophony and othering of people in the media. This issue is polyphonic. That’s how we’d define it. A story of a pendant, a circus troupe, a theatre group, a dancer, a medical student and many more make up this issue. It is for the people, by the people and of the people.
- ‘We Are Packing For Exile...ꦇOr Death’: A Palestinian Family Prepares To Leave As I🎃srael Bombs Gaza
In the first we💫ek of December, the Aljazzar family was preparing for its forced emigration from Gaza. They didn’t know what to pack in their small backpacks.
Four-year-old Salma often wakes up late at night crying violently. She stares at the smoke of the boℱmbing until it fades away and asks, “People died?”
Fedaa Zeyad is a Gaza-based poet and cultural activist, wh🅠o wrote this on Facebook on December 13.
A clutch of Palestinian films masterfull🔯y use the visual motifs of the West Bank barriers and Israeli checkpoints to capture the cruelties of war
Refaat Alareer, a 44-year-old Palestinian poet and academic, was killed in a t๊argeted Israeli air strike in Gaza.
Ahlam Bsharat is a Palestinian novelist, poet, children’s author and creative writing teac💧her.
After risking hun🤡dreds of Isr෴aeli checkpoints to treat patients in Gaza, a 21-year-old medical student finds solace in dance ... and anonymity
A Palestinian lawyer returns to Ramallah only to become an ‘intern🦋al exile’
Palestinian poet Ghassan Z♑aqtan’s poems sing of losing the war and living for love.
In a longstanding game of one-upmanship, Israel𒉰 keeps banning harmless goods, snatching away the simple wants of Palestinians
Adel🔯 Al-Hawajri, a journalist from Gaza, says people are mentally and emotionally drained because this waꦆr is very different from the previous rounds of violence.
Palestinian artist 📖Ahmed ElKhalidi, who lives in Adelaide, uses his art to make pꦏeople around him become more aware of the Palestinian issue.
For Palestinians in the Gaza Strip and West Bank, it is about living through apartheid and ethnic cleansing for 75 years, writes Haneen Harara, a Palestinian journal෴ist from Gaza.
Haya Abu Nasser, a human rights activist and writer from Gaza, wa♌s slated to depart for Malaysia on October 17 to study international relations. These days, she is yearning for a cup of coffee and the routine melody of life
Hind Khoudary, who is associated with the World Food Programme in Gaza, recounts hard days in the Gaza Strip during and after the brieꦛf humanitarian pause
Palestinian doctor Izzeldin Abuelaish lost three of h💖is daughters when Israel bombed his house in Gaza. He is now a voice for 🔯peace and freedom
Italian artist Jorit painted a🔯 mural of Palestinian activist Ahed Tamimi while visiting Jerusalem. He was jailed for it, and he is banned from entering Israel for 10 years.
Khaled Abuqare says as𒁏 an activist, it has been difficult to put the Palestinian perspective on the table because in the initial weeks of the war, the focus was on the Israeli perspective
Palestinian journalist Shatha Hanay🐻sha missed death by a whisker last year during an Israeli raid, which killed fellow journalist Shireen Abu Akleh whom she had admired. But that has not stopped her from reporting on Israeli raids on Palestinian c🍎ommunities.
Cartoonisꦛt and visual artist Mohammad Sabaaneh w꧅as imprisoned in an Israeli prison for six months because his art depicts how Palestinians suffer Israeli atrocities daily.