LISTEN | Podcast Episode 2: Criminal Foods

In this episode, we explore the criminalization of three popular edible plants within Palestine with our guest Rabea Eghbariah. Zaatar, akkoub, and miramiya are staples in Palestinian cuisine, and yet there is currently a legal ban on their picking, possession, and trade. We discuss these plants' cultural and economic history within Palestine and the history and significance of their prohibition by the Israel Nature and Parks Authority.

This podcast is made in collaboration with Columbia University's Center for Palestine Studies, Lifta Volumes, Lena Mansour, and Cher Asad with support from The Society of Fellows and Heyman Center for the Humanities, the Center for Archaeology at Columbia University and the Columbia Global Center | Amman.

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ATTEND | The Politics of Defining: A Roundtable Discussion about the Jerusalem Declaration on Antisemitism

Nadia Abu El-Haj, Co-Director of the Center for Palestine Studies, is participating in the upcoming webinar, “The Politics of Defining: A Roundtable Discussion about the Jerusalem Declaration on Antisemitism,” hosted by the Harvard Divinity School on Tuesday, April 20, 2021, from 12 – 1:30pm.

An alternative to the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA), the recent Jerusalem Declaration on Antisemitism (JDA) endorsed by scholars of antisemitism, Jewish Studies, Holocaust Studies, and Middle East Studies challenges the politicization and litigation of antisemetism by rearticulating what is and is not antisemitism. This panel will feature some of the key framers of this alternative declaration as well as other interlocutors who navigate the legal, political, and cultural terrains consolidated by IHRA and similar discourses. The panelists will reflect on its strengths and weaknesses, illuminating pathways for productive reassessment. For more information on the Declaration, please visitwww.jerusalemdeclaration.org


For more info about the event and speaker bios, visit the event organizer’s website,
here.

Tuesday, April 20, 2021, 12 – 1:30pm
This event is free and open to the public, but registration is required.

READ | Interview with Raya Manaa, founder of Al-Ameen Archive

As part of 'Palestine, IN-BETWEEN' LIFTA x CPS further explore archiving practices inside Palestine and intergenerational outlooks on preservation, conservation, and adaptation. We interview Raya Manaa, the founder of Al-Ameen Archive, an archival photo project that pulls from her father Mahmoud Manaa's past home-run Studio Al-Ameen in Majd Al-Kurum. You can read the interview now at palestineinbetween.com. Mahmoud worked as an event photographer, focusing on weddings and engagement parties in the Galilee in northern Palestine between the 1950s and 1990s. He documented more than 2,500 weddings, and many indigenous and religious ceremonies that took place in the marginalized and peripheral areas of the Galilee, an area known for its pluralism and rich religious and ethnic diversity.


With a collection of more than 10,000 negatives, Al-Ameen Archive preserves the lesser-documented or explored elements of daily Palestinian life and culture. The images illustrate and document aspects of tradition, society, family, gender, and queerness and tell stories of a changing society. 'We have a gap in Palestinian archiving practices in general,' says Raya Manaa. 'You either get the Nakba photographs or pre-Nakba photographs, as if these are of only importance to the Palestinian story. We don't have enough pictures and enough archive materials to show us what happened during the 60s, 70s, and 80s. We don't have enough representation in Palestinian storytelling in general, especially in the '48 areas.'

This interview was created in collaboration with Columbia University's Center for Palestine Studies, LIFTA Volumes, Lena Mansour and Cher Asad with support from The Society of Fellows and Heyman Center for the Humanities and the Columbia Center for Archaeology.

Check out the interview and more at palestineinbetween.com, a blog and accompanying website to this program where we will be sharing original content and reposting content by Palestinians all over the world.

LISTEN | Palestine, IN-BETWEEN Podcast, Episode 1

As part of our Palestine, IN-BETWEEN program we present a podcast exploring land and food politics throughout Palestine.

In the inaugural episode of Palestine: In Between, Cher Asad speaks with Raya Ziada of Manjala, a grassroots cultural and agricultural initiative within Palestine as well as Yara Dowani, a manager and farmer at Om Sleiman farm, the first CSA in Palestine. They discuss the unique challenges faced by farmers within the Occupied West Bank's Area C, ancestral agricultural Palestinian practices being revived today, agroecology, and how sustainable farming can be a path to food sovereignty for Palestinians.

This podcast is made in collaboration with LIFTA Volumes , Lena Mansour, and Cher Asad with support from The Society of Fellows and Heyman Center for the Humanities and the Columbia Center for Archaeology.

LISTEN ON:
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WATCH | The Arab + Jewish Questions: Geographies of Engagement in Palestine + Beyond

Missed our book talk with Bashir Bashir, Gil Anidjar, Leila Farsakh, Sherene Seiklay and Nadia Abu El-Haj about The Arab and Jewish Questions: Geographies of Engagement in Palestine and Beyond, published by Columbia University Press in 2020? You can now watch the recording on the Center’s YouTube Channel.

A conversation with Bashir Bashir, Gil Anidjar, Leila Farsakh and Sherene Seiklay about The Arab and Jewish Questions: Geographies of Engagement in Palestine...

Nadia Abu El-Haj is the Ann Olin Whitney Professor in the Departments of Anthropology at Barnard College and Columbia University, and Co-Director of the Center for Palestine Studies at Columbia

Gil Anidjar is Professor in the Departments of Religion and the Department of Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African Studies (MESAAS)

Bashir Bashir is associate professor in the Department of Sociology, Political Science, and Communication at the Open University of Israel and a senior research fellow at the Van Leer Jerusalem Institute

Leila Farsakh is associate professor and chair of the Department of Political Science at the University of Massachusetts Boston

Sherene Seikaly is Associate Professor of History at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

ATTEND | The Arab Jacobins: The Lebanese National Movement, the Palestinian Revolution, + the Struggle for Popular Sovereignty in the Arab East

Nate George will give his talk, “The Arab Jacobins: The Lebanese National Movement, the Palestinian Revolution, and the Struggle for Popular Sovereignty in the Arab East,” on 15 MAR 2021 at 12pm EDT.

In his talk, Nate will begin to excavate the buried history—concealed and repressed by a string of bitter defeats—of the intertwined struggle to abolish sectarian political representation and liberate Palestine.

Nate is the 2020-21 IAL Fellow at the Center for Palestine Studies.

For more information about the talk, organized by Bard College, visit the event page.

Join Zoom Meeting
https://bard.zoom.us/j/87261751851?pwd=WWRDQ3JjNEwwdlBXQWJKTElnR0MxZz09
Meeting ID: 872 6175 1851
Passcode: 411734