On learning Palestine does not exist
The Real-life Captain Mageds: Stories of Neighborhood Soccer Teams and The Occupation
Weight
The Killed
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- Next Page »
Posted on
Philipe AbiYouness is a Lebanese-American writer and teaching artist. His work is featured in Muzzle Magazine, Porter House Review, Tinderbox Poetry Journal, and Fugue, among others.
Posted on
Fargo Tbakhi (he/him) is a queer Palestinian-American performance artist. He is the winner of the 2018 Ghassan Kanafani Resistance Arts Prize, a Pushcart nominee, and a 2020 Desert Nights, Rising Stars Fellow. His writing is published or forthcoming in Strange Horizons, Foglifter, Hobart, The Shallow Ends, Mizna, Peach Mag and elsewhere. His performance work has been programmed at OUTsider Fest, INTER-SECTION Solo Fest, and has received support from the Arizona Commission on the Arts. He is currently a Halcyon Arts Lab Fellow and works at Mosaic Theater.
Posted on
Hasheemah Afaneh, MPH is a Palestinian-American writer and public health professional based in New Orleans. The themes her works center on are social justice, identity, and day-to-day musings of the world. She has contributed to Glass Poetry, 580 Split Journal, Poets Reading the News, Shado Mag, This Week in Palestine, and others. You can find more of her work on norestrictionsonwords.wordpress.com. She tweets @its_hashie.
Posted on
Diaa Alsersawi is an undergraduate at Seattle Pacific University, double majoring in English Literature and Social Justice & Cultural Studies. He works as a Library Assistant at Ames Library and as a Writing Tutor for the Library’s Research, Reading, and Writing Studio. He was born and raised in Gaza, Palestine. He has published in Novell Gaza and Cultural Consent.
Posted on
Joumana Altallal is a Zell Fellow in Poetry at the University of Michigan’s Helen Zell Writers’ Program. She works with Citywide Poets to lead a weekly after-school poetry program for high school students in Metro-Detroit. Her work appears in Glass Poetry, Poets Reading the News, and Rusted Radishes, among others. She has received fellowships from the Bread Loaf Environmental Writers’ Conference, Napa Valley Writer’s Conference, and the Radius for Arab American Writers. You can follow Joumana on Twitter @joualt.
The Rachel Corrie Foundation for Peace & Justice
203 East Fourth Ave., Suite 402
Olympia, WA 98501
Phone: 360-754-3998
Click here to email us.