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Abu Toha was born in 1992 in the Al-Shati refugee camp, shortly before the signing of the Oslo Accords.He graduated in English from the Islamic University of Gaza.In 2017, he founded the Edward Said Library, an English-language public library in Beit Lahia, of which a second branch was opened in Gaza City in 2019.
Footnotes in Gaza is a journalistic graphic narrative by Joe Sacco about bloody incidents between Israelis and Palestinians in Gaza during the Suez Crisis. It was published in 2009 by Henry Holt and Company in the U.S. and Jonathan Cape in the UK.
How Kids Roll (Italian: I bambini di Gaza – Sulle onde della libertà, lit. ' The Children of Gaza – On the Waves of Freedom ') is a 2024 drama film directed by Loris Lai in his feature directorial debut , from a screenplay he co-wrote with Dahlia Heyman, freely inspired by the 2013 Italian novel Sulle onde della libertà ( lit.
One dead child, 100 dead children, 1,000 dead children, 10,000 dead children? “Two-thirds of Gaza war dead are women and children,” read a Nov. 22 headline in a United Nations security council ...
Children of Gebelawi (Arabic: أولاد حارتنا, romanized: ʾawlād ḥāratnā) is a novel by the Egyptian writer and Nobel laureate Naguib Mahfouz. Its Egyptian dialectal transliteration is Awlad Haretna. An alternative English title is Children of the Alley.
According to scholar Paula Bennett, “the bulk of Sarah Piatt’s poetry can be divided into five thematic categories: poems on the Civil War and its aftermath, North and South; poems of gender (romance and marriage); poems about motherhood and to/on children; poems inspired by the Piatt’s stay in Ireland (1882-1893) and travels on the ...
The play takes the form of a litany, repeating the phrases "Tell her", "Don't tell her" to reflect an ostensible tension within Israel and the Jewish community over how to describe events in the Israeli–Palestinian conflict: "Tell her for miles and miles all round they have lands of their own/Tell her again this is our promised land/Don't tell her they said it was a land without people/Don't ...
Qabbani as a youth. Nizar Qabbani was born in the Syrian capital of Damascus to a middle class merchant family. Qabbani was raised in Mi'thnah Al-Shahm, one of the neighborhoods of Old Damascus and studied at the National Scientific College School in Damascus between 1930 and 1941. [4]