From Minneapolis to Venezuela, from Gaza to Washington, DC, this is a time of staggering chaos, cruelty, and violence.
Mary Richman is a Grande dame, longtime upper Manhattan resident, retired government lawyer, political activist since Women Strike for Peace 65 years ago.
Deema Hattab was born and raised in the Bureij refugee camp in central Gaza, where she continues to live during the ongoing genocide. She studies English literature online at the Islamic University.
Faced with endlessly narrowing possibilities, I return to my diary in an attempt to dream, to imagine a future.
Ad Policy As maps of Gaza’s destruction and occupation saturate the West’s media ecosystem, we lose our ability to extricate ...
Ihave lived long enough with Gaza to know that it refuses to hold still. It recedes and insists in the same breath, a place ...
Founded by abolitionists in 1865, The Nation has long believed that independent journalism has the capacity to bring about a more democratic and equitable world.
After their home was obliterated, Rasha Abou Jalal and her family remain determined to build a new one, even if it must be ...
These pictures are records of a genocidal war, but they are something more, too—they are fragments of Gaza itself ...
The street is broken, silent, waiting. But it refuses to die. From Minneapolis to Venezuela, from Gaza to Washington, DC, ...
Journalists in Gaza have bartered their lives to tell a truth that much of the world still doesn’t want to hear.
The language of ceasefire has been repurposed in Gaza: It no longer describes a pause in violence but rather a mechanism for managing it. This piece is part of A Day for Gaza, an initiative in which ...
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