Articles

  • Nov 27, 2024 | al-shabaka.org | Tareq Baconi |Yara Hawari |Abdullah Al-Arian

    Topics See our analysis on civil society and how it shapes culture, politics, and policies Read our insights on the shifting political landscape and what it means for Palestine Learn more about the policies and practices shaping the Palestinian economy Strengthen your understanding of the unique conditions for Palestinian refugees across the Middle East Analysis In-depth analysis on existing or potential policies that impact possibilities for Palestinian liberation. Insights and perspectives...

  • Oct 10, 2024 | fronterad.com | Tareq Baconi

    Declaración del autor (2024) Cuando en el año 2018 se publicó Hamás: auge y pacificación de la resistencia palestina, parecía que el bloqueo de Israel sobre la Franja de Gaza fuese inamovible. Sin embargo, poco después de la publicación del libro, se produjo un acontecimiento que hizo pensar que un futuro diferente era posible. La Gran Marcha del Retorno de 2018 y 2019 fue uno de los episodios más largos de movilización masiva de la sociedad civil palestina.

  • Oct 5, 2024 | capitanswing.com | Capitán Swing |Tareq Baconi

    Sinopsis Hamás gobierna Gaza y las vidas de los dos millones de palestinos que residen allí. Demonizado en los medios de comunicación y en los debates políticos, se han utilizado diversas acusaciones y presunciones criticables para justificar una acción militar extrema contra Hamás. Pero la realidad de Hamás es, por supuesto, mucho más compleja.

  • Sep 21, 2024 | nybooks.com | Max Nelson |Tareq Baconi

    Seventy-six years ago, Zionist militias drove more than 750,000 Palestinians from their homes during the war that established the state of Israel—a campaign of ethnic cleansing that came to be called the Nakba (catastrophe). Reviewing two memoirs of families haunted by that traumatic history in our October 3, 2024, issue, Tareq Baconi argues that in another sense the Nakba never ended.

  • Sep 12, 2024 | nybooks.com | Tareq Baconi

    In his memoir Going Home (2020), the Palestinian human rights lawyer Raja Shehadeh recalls taking a walk around Ramallah and standing outside the house where his father, Aziz Shehadeh, was murdered. “In my sixty-sixth year I’ve come back to visit where you last lived to tell you how much I miss knowing and befriending you,” he imagines telling him. I used to think that you and I had such different temperaments we could never get along. Now I realize how fundamentally similar we were….

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