Demonstrators gather at Oranienplatz to mark the 78th anniversary of the Nakba in Berlin, Germany on May 16, 2026. Protesters chanted slogans and carried Palestinian flags during the commemoration rally. [Halil Sağırkaya - Anadolu Agency]
Every year on 15 May, Palestinians mark the Nakba — the catastrophe of 1948. Yet to describe the Nakba as history is to misunderstand its enduring architecture. It was never a single event sealed in black-and-white photographs of frightened families clutching iron keys to homes they would never see again. It was, and remains, a political system: one of removal, replacement, legal erasure, and economic dispossession. The tragedy is not only that the world watched it begin, but that much of the world continues to watch it unfold in real time. In 1947, Palestinians privately owned roughly 94 per cent of the land in Mandate Palestine, while Jewish settlers held around 5–6 per cent, according to British surveys. Yet the […]

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