The Nakba, commemorated annually on this day as “Nakba Day”, was the destruction of Palestinian society and homeland in 1948 following Israel’s creation. Nakba Day protests take place around the world and have been attacked by Israel.

The foundational events of the Nakba took place during and shortly after the 1947-1949 Palestine war, including 78% of Mandatory Palestine being declared as Israel, the exodus of 700,000 Palestinians, the depopulation and destruction of over 500 Palestinian villages and subsequent geographical erasure, the denial of the Palestinian right of return, and the creation of permanent, stateless Palestinian refugees.

Although May 15th had been used as an unofficial commemoration of the Nakba since 1949, Nakba Day was formalized in 1998 after Yasser Arafat proposed that Palestinians should mark the 50th anniversary of the Nakba during the First Intifada.

The Nakba was a key event in the development of Palestinian culture and is a foundational symbol of Palestinian identity, along with “Handala”, a ten-year old cartoon character developed by Naji al-Ali; the keffiyeh, a checkered black and white scarf worn around the head; and the “symbolic key” (many Palestinian refugees have kept the keys to the homes they were forced to flee).

On Nakba Day 2011, Palestinians and other Arabs from the West Bank, the Gaza Strip, Lebanon, and Syria marched towards their respective borders, or ceasefire lines and checkpoints in Israeli-occupied territories, to mark the event. At least twelve Palestinians and supporters were killed and hundreds wounded as a result of shootings by the Israeli Army.

“In resisting the Nakba, the Palestinians have struck at the heart of the Zionist project that insists that the Nakba be seen as a past event. In resisting Israel, Palestinians have forced the world to witness the Nakba as present action; one that, contrary to Zionist wisdom, is indeed reversible.” - Palestinian scholar Joseph Massad

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  • StalinStan [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    7 months ago

    So far I have spent over a thousand dollars cleaning up after my late boomer parents. I am filled with disgust over the endless pils of garbage. They weren’t horders. They were downwardly mobile middle class but the garage just had shelves of infinite decorative glassware. Stuff we never used. Stuff that was “going to be ours someday” or “worth something” after trying to sell the stuff and realizing everyone already had too much I tried to give it to like thift stores. They are downing in the stuff and no one wants it from them. It hurt to just throw it away. The waste is offensive. The waste they spent on keeping it all their lives. The waste it was produced. The fact I am wasting it because no one wants a mass produced princess house punch bowl. All my people I talk to tell me I am crazy and that the stuff must be worth something. However at best it could probably break even with transportation and handling. That would just be putting this infinite boomer shit problem someplace else. I did a yard sale where I ended up just trying to give it away and boomers were dutifully appraising the stuff to see if it could have some place in their hord. “Can you tell me about this one?” No, it was a shitty overpriced decorative teapot. Just take the damn thing. I am not even thinking about the fact this is what we did with the colonialism we spent everyone else’s lives on. It is so galling that capitalism can’t even be good at the shit it was designed for.

      • StalinStan [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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        7 months ago

        It offends me on so many diffrent levels. Like. It is hard to pick one. The fact that it is conspicuous consumption based on the preferences of dead people that only vaguely triggers the nostalgia of even worse slightly less dead people.

        • Frank [he/him, he/him]@hexbear.net
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          7 months ago

          It’s real weird shit. I was around for Beanie Babies. People genuinely, absolutely believed that cheap polyester toys stuffed with plastic pellets were going to be worth huge sums of money decades later. The same kind of thing we saw with crypto and NFTs. Folks buying “rare” mass produced cheap sweat shop plastic and making it their hope for the future. Marx would have loved it.

          • bigboopballs [he/him]@hexbear.net
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            7 months ago

            People genuinely, absolutely believed that cheap polyester toys stuffed with plastic pellets were going to be worth huge sums of money decades later.

            That was so weird. I don’t even know how that idea got into anyone’s head, much less like hundreds of thousands of people’s heads. But I’m sure capitalists spending tens of millions of dollars on controlling people’s thoughts had something to do with it.

            • Frank [he/him, he/him]@hexbear.net
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              6 months ago

              “Collectables” were a whole thing on cable TV and late night TV, and I guess there’d be adds in them in the back of magazines too. Like “Blah blah blah this will appreciate in value pass it on to your children once in a lifetime chance at a special discount” stuff. And all I can figure is, people without much understanding of economics and finance stuff, they get bombarded with this for years, I guess they believe it?

    • Commiejones [comrade/them, he/him]@hexbear.net
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      7 months ago

      I know someone like that who is millennial but their hoard is D grade movies and music albums. Literally thousands of albums from bands nobody will ever hear about (because they suck) it will cost hundreds of hours to find out if any of them are even worth tying to sell and at best maybe a few of them will become worth a couple hundred bucks in 20 years. But its their “legacy for their children”