Sentences with phrase «palestinian villages»

Installation view of Emily Jacir's Memorial to 418 Palestinian Villages which were Destroyed, Depopulated and Occupied by Israel in 1948, 2000, at the Offenes Kulturhaus Oberösterreich, Linz, Austria.
It can take the form of simply spreading the word about university closings, deportations, house arrests or house demolitions, or it can mean developing data banks on violations of human rights — for example, in the careful documentation of the more than 500 Palestinian villages that have been destroyed by the Israelis since 1948; this information has been compiled by the Arab Study Society in East Jerusalem.
We know this drive well because it takes us through an Israeli checkpoint on our way to Zababdeh, the Palestinian village where we live.
During the delegation, Lord Warner recorded a short video from the small Palestinian village of Khirbet Sarra in the northern West Bank which you can watch below.
From Palestinian village wells shut down by Israeli troops on the West Bank, to Turkey's damming of the headwaters of the Euphrates, which will wash a quarter of a million angry Kurds out of their homes and reduce the river's flow through Iraq by up to 80 per cent.
Yaron Leshem analyzes Israeli war games under cover of a fake Palestinian village, Ricky Swallow turns the illusion of transience in still life into somber sculpture, Torbjørn Redland forces nature itself to dance to his tune, and Wolfgang Tillmans earns a retrospective for his large, mostly abstract photography.
Thumbnail image: © Shimon Attie, LAND LORD, Two on - location light boxes, looking onto the Israeli settlement Har Homa from the Palestinian Village Umm Tuba, annexed by Israel in 1967, 2014 digital c - print
Image above: © Shimon Attie, SOMETHING ABNORMAL, Two on - location light boxes, Lifta (former Palestinian village bombed and evacuated during 1948 war), 2014 / Courtesy of the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York.
Image above: © Shimon Attie, LAND LORD, Two on - location light boxes, looking onto the Israeli settlement Har Homa from the Palestinian Village Umm Tuba, annexed by Israel in 1967, 2014 digital c - print / Courtesy of the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York.
A group of youths wear them at the site of a destroyed Palestinian village in Israel.
The paintings and photographs are mostly enormous, and even when it ventures into miniature constructions, as in a model of a Palestinian village by Wafa Hourani, the work is conducted on a large scale overall.

Not exact matches

Despite controversy, even Israeli schoolbooks have been changed to acknowledge that Palestinians were in fact forced to leave their villages.
Israel is in the odd position of propping up a Potemkin village» the Fayyad administration of the Palestinian Authority» to which it is then supposed to make territorial concessions that threaten Israeli security.
The five cameras in question belong to Burnat, a Palestinian farmer who recorded the Palestinian protest to increasing Israeli settlement of his West Bank village.
The World Cinema Directing Award: Documentary was presented to 5 Broken Cameras (from Palestine, Israel, France), co-directed by Emad Burnat, Guy Davidi — A Palestinian journalist chronicles his village's resistance to a separation barrier being erected on their land and in the process captures his young son's lens on the world.
«5 Broken Cameras»: (Palestine, Israel, France) A Palestinian journalist chronicles his village's resistance to a separation barrier being erected on their land and in the process captures his young son's lens on the world.
The film opens in the early morning hours of September 5, 1972 as eight members of the Palestinian Black September group, disguised as athletes, are let into the Munich Olympic Village compound by a group of American athletes, believing the men are looking for the beer garden.
The village is a true rarity, as Jews and Palestinian Arabs live together in cooperation and respect.
No one in the family knows the fate that awaits them, a destiny that will be shared by a significant portion of the Palestinian population, as they are continuously displaced from one town or village to another, and from one country to another.
The project uses the trips taken by young Palestinians to sites of destroyed villages as an avatar to think about the possibility of using the site of wreckage as the very material from which to trace the faint contours of another possible time.
The claimant was a Palestinian citizen who lived in a village near to Bethlehem.
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