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Oslo accords

Pathbreakers of Arab America—Noura Erakat

This is the thirty-eighth of Arab America’s series on American pathbreakers of Arab descent. The series includes personalities from entertainment, business, sports, science, academia, journalism, and politics, among other areas. Contributing writer, John Mason, reports on our thirty-eight pathbreaker, Noura Erakat, a noted Palestinian American activist, university professor, legal scholar, and human rights attorney. Noura’s research interests focus on human rights law, humanitarian law, national security law, refugee law, social justice, and critical race theory, emphasizing the Israel-Palestine conflict. Erakat has been especially vocal on the latest go-around of the Israel-Palestine conflict, namely the Gaza war.

Pathbreakers of Arab America: Edward Said

This is the nineteenth in Arab America’s series on American pathbreakers of Arab descent. The series includes personalities from entertainment, business, sports, science, academia, journalism, and politics, among other areas. Contributing writer, John Mason depicts our nineteenth pathbreaker, Edward Wadie Said. A Palestinian American, he was born in Jerusalem during the British Mandate period in 1935 to parents Wadie and Hilda Said, a business family. Said is a renowned scholar, literary critic, political activist, ad musician. As a professor of literature at Columbia University, he is known as one of the founders of postcolonial studies, a school of thought which is highly critical of the ill effects of western colonialism.

18 Terrorist Cows & ‘Intifada Milk’

By: Menal Elmaliki / Arab America Contributing Writer THE FILM The Wanted 18 is a Palestinian-Canadian animated documentary that incorporates both documentary-style filmmaking as well as traditional fictional animation. The film centers around the real-life tragedy of Palestinians in Beit Sahour, a Palestinian town that is located east of Bethlehem. It covers “the efforts of Palestinians … Continued

No One will be Celebrating the 25th Anniversary of the Oslo Accords

SOURCE: THE INTERCEPT BY: JON SCHWARZ, ALICE PERI ON SEPTEMBER 13, 1993, Israel and the Palestinian Liberation Organization signed the Oslo Accords on the lawn of the White House. Following some nudging from U.S. President Bill Clinton, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and PLO Chair Yasser Arafat shook hands, thrilling the 3,000 assembled potentates. The … Continued

Why Palestinians Like Me See Little Hope 25 Years After the Oslo Accords Opened the Door to Peace

SOURCE: TIME BY: MAEN HAMMAD Hammad is a Research, Campaigns, and Communication Assistant for Amnesty International, based in the Jerusalem Regional Office. Hammad was born in Jerusalem, lived most of his life in Detroit, Michigan, and is currently based in Ramallah, West Bank. “Before Oslo it was never like this habibi [Arabic for ‘my love’]. … Continued

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