- Mass demonstration on 11 May in front of PNA office in Hebron.
-
Celebration of Palestinian culture across the West Bank in Ramallah, Nablus and Jericho.
-
Popular festival begins in Mardid in solidarity with occupied Palestine and Iraq.
Events
in
Palestine
·
Intergenerational
Dialogue
and
Discussion
on
the
Nakba
and
the
Right
of
Return in
Tubas.
Contact:
Wajih
Atallah,
Union
of
Youth
Activities
Centers
in
the
Refugee
Camps,
tel.:
0599-255584,
mail:
uyac@uyac.org
·
Al-‘Awda
Camp,
Ramallah
Activities.
Popular
Arts
competitions
(Dabkah,
Zajal,
Poetry,
etc.)
with
participants
representing
Qaddura,
Am'ari,
Silwad,
Jalazon,
Shu'fat,
and
Qalandia
camps
as
well
as
Dar
Al-Mu'alimin
(Teachers'
Academy).
Contact:
uyac@uyac.org
·
West
Bank
cultural
events
including
popular
poetry
and
a
photo
exhibition
in
Nablus,
theatre
in
Jericho
and
children’s
painting
in
ten
camps
across
the
West
Bank.
Contact:
uyac@uyac.org
·
Beginning
of a
week
of
commemoration
for
neighbourhoods
destroyed
during
the
Nakba
in
Beit
Sahour.
Contact:
uyac@uyac.org
Events
internationally
·
Nakba
and
Right
of
Return
Amateur
Documentary
Film
Festival
in
Baddawi
refugee
camp,
Lebanon.
·
Popular
Festival:
Palestine,
60
Years
of
Exile;
Iraq,
5
Years
of
War.
12-14
May,
Madrid,
Spain.
Musical,
theatrical,
cultural,
and
educational
events
featuring
Rene
Aquarone,
Azmi
Bishara,
Leila
Khaled,
Jaber
Suleiman,
Teresa
Aranguren,
Rafael
Escudero,
Hana
Al-Bayati,
and
many
more.
For
more
information,
visit
www.culturaypaz.org.
Report
on
previous
events
·
Hebron
“Hunger
and
Anger”
demonstration:
An
estimated
1,500
people
demonstrated
in
front
of
the
government
offices
in
Hebron.
Men,
women
and
children
from
villages
and
towns
across
the
Hebron
district
turned
out
to
participate.
The
demonstration
aimed
to
mark
the
60
years
of
Nakba
and
dispossession
faced
by
the
Palestinian
people
as
well
as
send
a
message
to
the
PNA.
For
more
information,
see:
http://stopthewall.org/latestnews/1645.shtml
·
Right
of
Return
Demonstration
in
Aida
Refugee
Camp
in
the
Bethlehem
Camp:
On 9
May,
Over
700
people
participated
in
the
demonstration,
which
featured
the
unveiling
of
the
world's
largest
key.
The
key
is a
symbol
of
Palestinian
refugees
right
to
return
to
their
homes,
since
many
of
these
refugees
took
the
keys
to
their
homes
with
them
when
they
fled
in
the
1948
Nakba
The Palestinian Nakba on the ground
On
this
day,
1948
·
In
the
Haifa
district,
the
villages
of
Bureika,
Um
al-Shauf,
Auzeiba
and
Sabbarin
were
occupied
by
Zionist
forces.
In
Sabbarin,
20
people
were
killed
as
they
fled
their
homes
under
fire.
Those
who
did
not
flee
were
held
behind
barbed
wire
fences
for
a
few
days
and
later
were
forcefully
transferred
to
Umm
al-Fahm.
·
Beisan
was
occupied
today
and
out
of
5,000
inhabitants,
only
1,500
remained.
Today
there
is
no
sizeable
Palestine
population
in
the
city.
Other
villages
in
the
area,
al-Sakhina
and
Sirin,
were
depopulated.
Nakba
Today
Kafr
Bir’im
(Upper
Galilee) On
29
October
1948,
Israel
began
a
new
military
campaign
that
was
code-named
“Hiram”
and
whose
goal
was
to
occupy
Arab
villages
in
the
Upper
Galilee.
According
to
Israeli
estimates,
there
were
50,000
to
60,000
Palestinians
in
this
area
before
the
operation,
and
only
12,000
to
15,000
remaining
afterwards;
among
those
forced
out
were
the
1,050
villagers
of
Kafr
Bir’im.
The
Israeli
officer
responsible
for
the
operation
had
promised
the
villagers
that
they
would
be
allowed
to
return
after
a
two
week
period,
but
the
promise
was
never
fulfilled.
Three
months
after
the
villagers
were
moved
out,
Israeli
patrols
arrested
65
people
working
in
the
area.
When
the
villagers
realised
that
the
Israeli
military
authorities
were
not
going
to
fulfill
their
promise,
they
launched
a
protracted
legal
and
political
battle
to
return
to
their
land,
taking
their
case
to
the
Israeli
Supreme
Court
and
the
Knesset.
In
January
1952,
the
court
issued
a
decision
in
which
it
recognised
the
villagers’
right
to
return
to
their
village
with
the
permission
of
the
military
governor.
This
permission
has
never
been
granted.
In
an
attempt
to
ensure
that
Bir’im’s
villagers
would
not
return,
the
Israeli
air
force
bombed
the
village
in
1953,
destroying
all
its
buildings
except
the
church
and
school.
Since
1965,
site
of
the
village
has
been
turned
into
an
Israeli
National
Park.
For
more
on
Kafr
Bir’im,
see
Badil’s
2006
publication:
Returning
to
Kafr
Bir’im
at
http://www.badil.org/Publications/Books/birim.pdf
Background
Resources:
·
For
resources
on
the
history
of
the
Nakba,
information
about
Palestinian
refugees,
and
their
right
of
return
under
international
law,
see
the
Nakba-60
Resources
Info-Packet
at:
http://www.badil.org/Publications/badil-nakba-60-info-packet/index.html
·
For
information
about
selected
cases
of
ongoing
diaplacement,
please
visit:
http://www.stopthewall.org/activistresources/1583.shtml
For
information,
resources
and
links
to
organizations
working
on
the
growing
campaign
for
Boycotts,
Divestment
and
Sanctions
on
Israel
until
it
dismantles
its
military
occupation's
colonial
apartheid
system
in
the
West
Bank,
Gaza
and
Golan
Heights;
ends
systematic
discrimination
against
its
Palestinian
citizens;
and
implements
the
Palestinian
refugees'
right
to
return
to
their
homes
and
properties,
please
visit
the
website
of
the
Boycott
Divestment
Sanctions
Campaign
National
Committee
(BNC):
http://www.bdsmovement.net
-------------------------------------
For
more
information,
please
contact:
Palestinian
Grassroots
Anti-Apartheid
Wall
Campaign
Email:
global@stopthewall.org,
Tel.:
+972-2-297-1505
Badil
Centre
for
Palestinian
Refugee
&
Residency
Rights:
Email:
mediaenglish@badil.org,
Tel.:
+972-2-277-7086
*The
week’s
events
coordinated
by
the
National
Committee
to
Commemorate
the
Nakba.
The
National
Committee
represents
national
movements
and
networks,
including
the
Council
of
National
and
Islamic
forces,
the
Global
Palestine
Right-of-Return
Coalition,
the
Popular
Committees
and
youth
centers
of
the
refugee
camps
all
over
Palestine,
the
Anti-Apartheid
Wall
Campaign,
Badil
Center
for
Palestinian
Residency
and
Refugee
Rights,
Palestinian
NGO
Network
(PNGO),
the
Civic
Coalition
for
the
Defense
of
Palestinian
Rights
in
Jerusalem
and
the
PLO
Department
for
Refugee
Affairs
(DORA). |