✦ Francesca Albanese. “The common enemy of humanity is the system that has enabled the genocide in Palestine — including the financial capital that funds it, the algorithms that obscure it, and the weapons that enable it. It is a system that normalizes destruction as security, occupation as defense, starvation as policy, and silence as diplomacy. It is sustained not only by bombs and bullets, but by boardrooms, media narratives, diplomatic shields, and public indifference. The tragedy is not only that Palestinians are being erased — it is that international law is being hollowed out in plain sight. When accountability becomes optional for the powerful, humanity itself becomes collateral damage. The question before us is not merely about Palestine. It is about whether the world still believes in justice, or whether power has finally replaced principle as the highest law.” ✦ The System Is the Crime There is something deeply unsettling about what said. Not because...
Nearly six decades after Israel occupied the West Bank in the aftermath of the , the territory is witnessing its largest civilian displacement since that war. According to reporting by Fatima AbdulKarim and Patrick Kingsley (Feb. 17, 2025), roughly 40,000 Palestinians have fled their homes following a weeks-long Israeli military operation across northern West Bank cities including Jenin, Tulkarem, and areas near Tubas. For Palestinians, this is not just a military episode. It is a historical echo. A Displacement Measured in Generations Many of those now displaced are descendants of refugees uprooted during the 1948 war — the event Palestinians call the Nakba . Entire neighborhoods known as “refugee camps” were originally built to house families expelled or forced to flee during Israel’s creation. Now, history is repeating itself. Residents describe soldiers using loudspeakers to order evacuations. Families left carrying whatever they could hold — bags, blankets, documents, c...