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Live from Palestine
Diaries: Live from Palestine
Live from Palestine, EI's Diaries project, was launched during the violent March/April 2002 invasion of Palestinian towns by Israel, euphemistically described as "Operation Defensive Shield". Read the introductory article by EI's Arjan El Fassed which is reprinted with permission from the 2003 South End Press book Live from Palestine. Also see Life and Death in Palestine, an article by Stephanie Saldana that appeared in the Daily Star (Lebanon), which looks at the how Palestinians and internationals living in Palestine took reporting into their own hands during "Operation Defensive Shield". Quality submissions from people living in and visiting Palestine are welcomed.

The Nakba march
Jonathan Cook writing from Nazareth, Live from Palestine, 16 May 2008

Israel's Palestinian minority staged an alternative act of commemoration: a procession to one of more than 400 Palestinian villages erased by Israel in a monumental act of state vandalism after the fighting. In a sign of how far Israel still is from coming to terms with the circumstances of its birth, EI contributor Jonathan Cook reports that this year's march was forcibly broken up by the Israeli police who clubbed unarmed demonstrators with batons and fired tear gas and stun grenades into crowds of families that included young children. [MORE]

Gaza residents queue overnight for cooking gas
Rami Almeghari writing from occupied Gaza Strip, Live from Palestine, 13 May 2008

Gaza's 1.5 million residents need at least 300 to 350 tons of cooking gas on a daily basis, yet according to al-Khozendar, Israel is important less than half the necessary fuel. The shortage of gas has further restricted the movement of Palestinians in Gaza throughout the region, causing motorists to improvise their means of fuel and paralyzing the transportation sector. Late January of this year Israeli Prime Minister stated that "We will not let the residents of Gaza lead a comfortable and pleasant life" so long as rockets are fired from the Strip, EI correspondent Rami Almeghari writes from Gaza. [MORE]

Photostory: Total occupation, a journey around Hebron
Eddie Vassallo writing from Hebron, occupied West Bank, Live from Palestine, 12 May 2008

With 400 hard-line religious settlers packed tightly amidst more than 160,000 Palestinians in the center of Hebron's Old City, violence is not a probability, it is a given. Add to that the nearly 2,000 Israeli troops assigned to "protect" the settlers and you can begin to understand how peace is a little more than a word in this part of the West Bank. Eddie Vassallo's pictures tell a story of occupied Hebron. [MORE]

Sixty years ago in Battir (Part 2)
Hasan Abu Nimah writing from Amman, Jordan, Live from Palestine, 7 May 2008

For a long time any discussion of the "Arab-Israeli conflict" has skipped one basic fact: Israel, whether one loves or hates it, was created at the expense of the Palestinians. An entire people and hundreds of communities that had lived for centuries in tranquility had to be ruthlessly and unjustly shattered to make room for the Zionist state. The story of my village, Battir, southwest of Jerusalem, is only one of hundreds. EI contributor Hasan Abu Nimah recalls his village's story. [MORE]

No holiday for Gaza's labor sector
Rami Almeghari writing from occupied Gaza Strip, Live from Palestine, 5 May 2008

Since the Israeli government enforced the crippling closure of Gaza, the majority of Gaza's 1.5 million residents have become unable to afford basic commodities. The World Food Program estimates that 80 percent of Gaza's population is now dependent on food aid. Rami Almeghari writes from the occupied Gaza Strip.
[MORE]


No mercy
Najwa Sheikh writing from occupied Gaza Strip, Live from Palestine, 1 May 2008

In their simple house made of metal sheets, Myassar Abu Me'teq was sitting next to three of her children having breakfast and holding her one-year-old baby in her arms. She listened to their daily complaints and loving quarrels, trying to comfort them and keep them away from the sound of the Israeli shelling close to their home in Beit Hanoun in the northern Gaza Strip. Najwa Sheikh writes from Gaza. [MORE]

Sixty years ago in Battir
Hasan Abu Nimah writing from Amman, Jordan, Live from Palestine, 30 April 2008

One afternoon in May 1948, my village Battir fell under heavy fire from the opposite slopes, across the railway line to the west, which had fallen to the Jewish fighters. We carried whatever belongings we could and headed east a few miles where there were vineyards and a small spring. We thought it would be a short escape, but we camped in that vineyard with many other people from the village all summer, our hopes dimming as the heat rose. EI contributor Hasan Abu Nimah recalls his village in the first part of a two-part series. [MORE]

My Nakba
Najwa Sheikh writing from the occupied Gaza Strip, Live from Palestine, 17 April 2008

As a third-generation Palestinian refugee, the Nabka is more than fleeing the homeland, and losing your identity. It is not having a single memory of the homeland that once was for your grandparents, and your parents. It is not having anything to tell your children, like the taste of your land's fruits, the smell of its sand, about stories and experiences with your people. Najwa Sheikh writes from Gaza. [MORE]

In Gaza, fueling cars with cooking oil
Rami Almeghari writing from the occupied Gaza Strip, Live from Palestine, 16 April 2008

Amna Abu Sido was waiting for a ride at the so-called Universities Junction in the heart of Gaza City on Tuesday afternoon when she explained how difficult her commute has become: "I take at least two taxis to go back home to the Tal al-Hawa neighborhood from the school I teach at in Talatini street. Taxis are scarce nowadays and this is really adding to our difficulties." EI correspondent Rami Almeghari reports on how Palestinians in Gaza are coping with the latest Israeli measure of collective punishment. [MORE]

No checkpoints in heaven
Ramzy Baroud writing from the United States, Live from Palestine, 8 April 2008

My father was a man who always defied the notion that one can only be the outcome of his circumstance. Expelled from his village at the age of 10, running barefoot behind his parents, he was instantly transferred from the son of a landowning farmer to a penniless refugee in a blue tent provided by the United Nations in Gaza. Ramzy Baroud remembers his father who passed away on 18 March. [MORE]


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