
COVID-19 and Palestine’s “new normal”
All of these simple rights have become mere dreams for the Palestinian people who have hope that one day they will become reality.

All of these simple rights have become mere dreams for the Palestinian people who have hope that one day they will become reality.

These stories are only a small part of our daily life with settlers who live next door. If I want to talk about everything we face here, I will need several days.

Haroun remains in the hospital in a coma since his injury, and his body has been completely paralyzed.

Oppressors need to understand that they can’t bury people thriving for life and freedom, because the oppressed will always plant their seeds, knowing there will be a season for blooming.

Two stories of struggles that connect in sisterhood, and in so doing, they blur their borders.

Mawlid Nabawi, observed on 29 October this year, is an important day for Muslims all over the world as they celebrate the birth of the

Pray for the Palestinian landowners and farmers. It is olive harvest season in Palestine, a significant season for the Palestinian farmers and landowners, but this

Accompaniment is hard to measure but is fostered through the relationships that are grown through collaborative work.
Left to right, top row: Colombian farmer, girl from Grassy Narrows, migrant child on Lesvos. Left to right, bottom row: Kurdish farmer, children at migrant
5 September 2020 Sunrise in Hebron, Palestine Photo: Aseel ZM Wikmedia Commons by Esther Kern “Time to get up,” says the sleepy voice beside