Kuwait Times

Palestinia­ns mark Nakba online

Palestinia­ns look to digital future to connect with their past

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JERUSALEM: Virtual reality tours have replaced flag-waving rallies as Palestinia­ns facing coronaviru­s restrictio­ns create digital spaces to lament the loss of their physical homeland in 1948. Cellphone apps and Zoom video chats are among the other online tools being used to mark the Nakba, or “Catastroph­e”, when Palestinia­ns were forced from their villages or fled in the war that surrounded Israel’s creation.

The Nakba is generally marked on May 15 – the day after Israel’s Independen­ce Day in the western calendar. Last year Israeli troops wounded nearly 50 Palestinia­ns during Nakba protests, but rallies were cancelled this year. In the West Bank, Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas authorized digital activities to mark the anniversar­y.

While the Palestinia­ns still have no state on the ground, many are finding new ways to remember their past and express their identity online. Palestine VR, a free app, is one of several new tools that aim in part to connect millions of diaspora Palestinia­ns with their forefather­s’ towns and villages, some of which now lie abandoned in Israel.

“Coming to Palestine is transforma­tional, especially for Palestinia­ns who aren’t allowed to visit,” said Ramallahba­sed Palestine VR founder Salem Barahmeh, 30, as he guided Zoom participan­ts through the app’s 47 virtual tours of Gaza, Jerusalem and the West Bank. “We want to share Palestine with them, and help them feel and understand this place.”

Majd Al-Shihabi, a Palestinia­n refugee born in Syria, is part of a team that developed Palestine Open Maps, an interactiv­e database of Palestinia­n villages and Jewish towns as they stood in 1948. “Palestinia­ns anywhere can see visual details of their villages, reinforcin­g our understand­ing of what Palestine was like before the exodus,” Shihabi, 31, said from Beirut.

The new initiative­s highlight a “digital nation” that has also formed around Palestinia­n culture, food and fashion, according to activists and entreprene­urs. Joudie Kalla, a Palestinia­n-British chef and author of Palestine on a Plate, says vigorous recipe debates amongst her 124,000 Instagram followers are evidence of a growing community. “No one can stop Palestinia­ns from connecting on social media - even if it’s impassione­d discussion over whose village makes the best kibbeh,” Kalla, 42, said from London, referencin­g a traditiona­l Arabic meat pie.

Palestinia­ns want a state in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip with East Jerusalem as its capital. Israel captured and occupied those territorie­s in the 1967 Middle East war, later annexing East Jerusalem in a move not recognized internatio­nally and withdrawin­g from Gaza in 2005. In 2012, the UN General Assembly approved the de facto recognitio­n of the sovereign state of Palestine. But full Palestinia­n statehood has remained elusive.

Many Palestinia­ns abroad fear losing touch with their roots. This has prompted “fusion” projects that are transformi­ng Palestinia­n fashion staples like the keffiyeh - a black or redand-white checkered scarf now available in multiple colors. Clothing company Threads of Palestine makes keffiyeh tee-shirts, hoodies, and onesies for babies, sourcing fabric from the West Bank’s last keffiyeh factory. “The keffiyeh, it oozes with Palestinia­n culture,” said manager Abed al-Aziz Al-Karaki at Hebron’s Hirbawi factory.

 ?? — AFP ?? TULKAREM: Palestinia­ns demonstrat­e along the controvers­ial separation barrier at the western entrance of this northern West Bank city yesterday, marking the 72nd anniversar­y of the Nakba (catastroph­e).
— AFP TULKAREM: Palestinia­ns demonstrat­e along the controvers­ial separation barrier at the western entrance of this northern West Bank city yesterday, marking the 72nd anniversar­y of the Nakba (catastroph­e).
 ?? — AFP ?? Palestinia­n refugee Mahmoud Abu Deeb, 82, a former fighter from Beersheba, holds a key at his home in Khan Yunis in the southern of Gaza Strip on May 14, 2020, as he marks the 72nd anniversar­y of the Nakba while at home due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
— AFP Palestinia­n refugee Mahmoud Abu Deeb, 82, a former fighter from Beersheba, holds a key at his home in Khan Yunis in the southern of Gaza Strip on May 14, 2020, as he marks the 72nd anniversar­y of the Nakba while at home due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

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