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In 1948, Zionist militias expelled over 700,000 Palestinians from their villages and towns. The event, and the ongoing destruction and occupation of Palestine are referred to as the Nakba – the catastrophe. How did the events of 1948 shape Palestine and its diaspora? And generations later, how are Palestinians fighting to return home?
On this edition of Making Contact we reflect on the Nakba, the Naksa, and the future of Palestine.
- Rami Almeghari, FSRN reporter
- Ghazi Misleh, author of I Am from There and I Have Memories
- Rabab Abdulhadi, Professor of Ethnic Studies and Senior Scholar of the Arab and Muslim Ethnicities and Diasporas Initiative at San Francisco State University
- Dina from Rammun
- Mohannad from Ramle
- Remi Kanazi, poet and author of Before the Next Bomb Drops.
- Host: Marie Choi
- Producers: Marie Choi, Monica Lopez, Jasmin Lopez, R.J. Lozada
- Freelance reporter in Gaza: Rami Almeghari (originally produced for FSRN)
- Music: HOPE SPOKEN/BROKEN, Shajar Al-Ben instrumental without mix, Qnoun instrumental with out mix, Freedom instrumental without mix
- Photo: “Oakland Palestine Solidarity Mural,” Art Forces, Estria Foundation, NorCal Friends of Sabeel, Artists: VYAL and Emory Douglas,Photo by Hilary Hacker
Click here to learn more
- Rami Almeghari, Free Speech Radio News, “Profile: Refugee documents razed village’s history through memory of its displaced”
- Nakba Survivor, testimonials
- Remi Kanazi, poet and author of Before the Next Bomb Drops
- Oakland Palestine Solidarity Mural, Art Forces, Estria Foundation, NorCal Friends of Sabeel
- Institute for Middle East Understanding, “Nakba Museum Exhibit Opens in D.C.”