The “A Cloud in My Hand” pavilion brings together works by Palestinian artists and their allies, transforming absence into presence and mourning into creative resistance.
Artists from Gaza and their works are largely unable to penetrate the occupation and its borderlines of open-air ghettoization, imprisonment and extermination.
Last year, AISA's Nitish Kumar won the president's post, while ABVP's Vaibhav Meena secured the joint secretary seat-the ...
Collective political education and organizing become particularly important during periods when the government is cracking ...
Author Maxim D. Shrayer, who divides his time between Chatham and Brookline, has released a new collection of poems, “Zion Square” (Ben ...
Palestinian poet Layla Salma shares how writing became her refuge and resistance amid the devastation in Gaza.
Poetry is not easy to compose, nor is it easy to write about. Like music, poetry requires a certain immersion into the composition one hears via their ...
One of the founders of Kibbutz Nir Oz, Amiram Cooper, was a poet born in Haifa before the founding of the modern State of ...
Susie has, of course, travelled to Gaza since the genocide began. She has made several trips, bearing aid, taking stock of the situation. She is a person of extraordinary moral and physical courage, ...
My grandmother left Jerusalem in 1948 with a key that never found its lock again. She believed she would return before the tea cooled in its cup. The ...
Nearly 45 pro-Palestine protestors gathered around the entrance of Barton Hall on Friday afternoon as the Trustee-Council Annual Meeting reception and dinner were held inside.
Istanbul Pavillion, themed “A Cloud in My Hand,” reflects Gaza artists’ quest for survival as well as their hopes for a ...