
Rebecca Stead
An MA graduate of SOAS University of London studying in Middle Eastern Studies with Arabic, Stead focuses on the history, culture and politics of Israel-Palestine specifically and the Levant more broadly. She has travelled in the region and studied Arabic in Jerusalem and Amman, and works in a freelance capacity for a number of journals and blogging platforms.
Items by Rebecca Stead
-
- September 23, 2019 Rebecca Stead
The Parisian
“Baris.” He sighed. “It is where my life is.” So Faruq Al-Azmeh, the “one other Arab on board the ship to Marseille”, told an impressionable Midhat Kamal as he embarked on his journey in 1914. En route from Nablus, Palestine, to study medicine at the University of Montpellier – a…
-
- August 21, 2019 Rebecca Stead
‘Gazans’ access to medical care is a basic human right’
Cycling4Gaza will travel across four countries to highlight the freedoms enjoyed by many in Europe but denied to Palestinians in the occupied territories In March 2018, Dr Zara Hannoun visited the Gaza Strip. “I can’t even begin to put the experience into words,” she tells MEMO. “From the start, you…
-
- August 19, 2019 Rebecca Stead
#MyPalestinianSitty trends after Tlaib refuses to enter Israel
Last week US Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib rejected an offer from Israel to visit her grandmother in the West Bank village of Beit Ur Al-Fouqa, after she and fellow Congresswoman Ilhan Omar were banned from taking part in a diplomatic visit. Though Israel said it would allow Tlaib to visit her…
-
- August 15, 2019 Rebecca Stead
Remembering Israel’s ‘disengagement’ from Gaza
What: Israel dismantled its illegal settlements in the Gaza Strip, withdrawing all settlers and ground troops from the enclave. Where: The Gaza Strip, occupied Palestine. When: 15 August 2005. What happened? On 15 August 2005, Israel began its disengagement from the Gaza Strip, which it had occupied since the Six…
-
- July 17, 2019 Rebecca Stead
How one German political party is fighting Israel’s BDS crackdown
“The idea of agitating against BDS played a big role here: to defame any kind of criticism of [Israel’s] reactionary, imperialist government as anti-Semitic and any kind of solidarity with the Palestinian liberation struggle as ‘terror support’,” Peter Weispfenning told MEMO. Weispfenning is a member of the Marxist-Leninist Party of…
-
- July 4, 2019 Rebecca Stead
Israel’s Labour Party just signed its own death warrant
The Israeli Labour Party on Tuesday elected a new leader, Amir Peretz, to lead the faction ahead of Israel’s upcoming general election on 17 September. Faced with a choice between the old guard and two young, dynamic candidates, the party membership opted for the former. In doing so, the ailing…
-
- May 31, 2019 Rebecca Stead
4 things to watch ahead of Israel’s September election
For the second time in a year, Israel is heading to the polls. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu – who only two months ago was celebrating a historic fifth term in office – now limps, battered and bruised, into his sixth election campaign, his Teflon image and “Bibi-can-fix-it” reputation severely…
-
- May 21, 2019 Rebecca Stead
‘Palestinian politics has collapsed; Arab-Israelis can rebuild it’
“Palestinian citizens of Israel have been ignored by the Palestinian national movement since the Nakba”, Professor As’ad Ghanem explains, “but from my point of view they represent a kind of hope for Palestinian politics”. A professor at the University of Haifa, Ghanem specialises in the history of the Palestinian national…
-
- May 18, 2019 Rebecca Stead
Israel’s brutal military occupation continues to crush West Bank Palestinians
During the 1967 Six Day War, the West Bank and East Jerusalem were occupied by Israel. Fifty-two years later this brutal military occupation remains in place, with the West Bank’s almost three million Palestinian residents subjected to a maze of military checkpoints, attacks by illegal Israeli settlers and a lack…
-
- May 18, 2019 Rebecca Stead
Discrimination, division and demolitions: Life as a Palestinian citizen of Israel
Palestinian citizens of Israel – who number around 1.8 million people and amount to just over 20 per cent of Israel’s population – are often ignored by the broader Palestinian narrative. Although unlike their compatriots in the occupied West Bank and besieged Gaza Strip, Palestinian citizens of Israel do not…
-
- May 3, 2019 Rebecca Stead
‘Israel’s system is galloping apartheid,’ says Israel professor
“I have coined quite a few terms,” noted Professor Oren Yiftachel, “but ethnocracy really captures the idea of a regime that creates a state for the benefit of an ethnic project”. In 2006, Professor Yiftachel published his book “Ethnocracy: Land and Identity Politics in Israel/Palestine”. In coining the phrase “ethnocracy”…
-
- April 16, 2019 Rebecca Stead
Meet the Arab-Israeli alliances’ new Knesset members
On 9 April, Israeli citizens went to the polls to elect the country’s 21st Knesset. Though incumbent Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu came out on top, his Likud party winning 36 seats, new faces and veteran politicians alike will soon form a new ruling coalition and opposition. Sitting among the opposition…
-
- April 13, 2019 Rebecca Stead
Netanyahu won Israel’s election, but his coalition will be fractious and unstable
This week Benjamin Netanyahu won a spectacular election victory, his fourth in the last decade. Yet though supporters have once again bowed down to King Bibi, his victory parade may not last long. Netanyahu’s new coalition represents little more than a reincarnation of its former self, and its first year…
-
- April 3, 2019 Rebecca Stead
‘Israel’s politicians are chickens. We need to shake up the system,’ says Hadash’s Jewish candidate
Ofer Cassif was, until recently, a relatively unknown figure in Israeli politics. Although he has been active in the country’s Hadash (Al-Jabha) party for decades, by day he is a political science professor at Jerusalem’s Hebrew University. Yet, since he was chosen as Hadash’s only Jewish representative ahead of the…
-
- March 30, 2019 Rebecca Stead
Remembering the Great March of Return
What: Thousands of Palestinians marched to the fence at the nominal border between the Gaza Strip and Israel, calling for the right to return to their ancestral homes and an end to Israel’s siege of the territory Where: The besieged Gaza Strip When: 30 March 2018 What happened? On 29…
-
- March 22, 2019 Rebecca Stead
Israel’s courts are under attack from the right-wing
This week, Israel’s Supreme Court ruled to ban Michael Ben Ari – the leader of the extreme-right-wing Otzma Yehudit party – from running in the country’s upcoming general election on 9 April. Onlookers breathed a sigh of relief, congratulating the court on making “the right decision” and narrowly avoiding the…
-
- February 25, 2019 Rebecca Stead
Remembering Hebron’s Ibrahimi Mosque massacre
What: Extremist Israeli settler Baruch Goldstein attacked Palestinian worshippers at Hebron’s Ibrahimi Mosque, killing 29 people and injuring 150 others Where: Hebron, the occupied West Bank When: 25 February 1994 What happened? Believed to be the burial place of the prophets Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, Hebron’s Ibrahimi Mosque is revered…
-
- January 30, 2019 Rebecca Stead
‘The conflict in Palestine has always galvanised people’
“I could not stomach the way the Arabs, who should really own this country, are being treated by not only the UN but by the government in Palestine,” a man who went by the name of Frank told a Chicago Tribune journalist in May 1948. Frank had been stationed in…
-
- December 27, 2018 Rebecca Stead
Remembering Israel’s 2008 War on Gaza
What: Israel waged a three-week military offensive against the Gaza Strip, killing almost 1,400 Palestinians and wounding thousands more. Where: The Gaza Strip When: 27 Dec 2008 – 18 Jan 2009 What happened? On 27 December 2008, Israel launched a massive military offensive against the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.…
-
- September 14, 2018 Rebecca Stead
Remembering the Jerusalem Intifada
What: After a group of extremist Israelis stormed Al-Aqsa Mosque, waves of violence broke out across Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza. Where: Jerusalem When: 14 September 2015 What happened? On 13 September 2015, the eve of Rosh Hashanah (Jewish New Year), a number of Jewish Israelis visited the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound. The…
-
- August 10, 2018 Rebecca Stead
11 things you should know about Israel’s siege of the Gaza Strip
For 11 years, Israel has imposed an unforgiving siege on the Gaza Strip. With severely restricted access in and out of the enclave — via land, air and, notoriously, sea — Gaza has effectively been sealed off from the world. The Strip is only 360 square kilometres in size,…
-
- July 31, 2018 Rebecca Stead
Remembering the arson attack that orphaned Ahmed Dawabsheh
What: Extremist Jewish Israeli settlers attacked the Dawabsheh family home, orphaning Ahmed and killing his parents and baby brother, Ali Where: Duma village near Nablus, occupied West Bank When: 31 July 2015 What happened? On 31 July 2015, Ali Saeed Dawabsheh was burned to death in his home. He was…
-
- July 12, 2018 Rebecca Stead
Remembering Israel’s 2006 war on Lebanon
What: Israel waged aerial, ground and naval war on Lebanon’s Hezbollah Where: Southern Lebanon and northern Israel When: 12 July – 14 August 2006 What happened? Between 12 July and 14 August 2006, Israel waged war on Hezbollah positions in southern Lebanon and the Lebanese capital Beirut, by land, air…
-
- February 24, 2018 Rebecca Stead
Remembering the First Gulf War
What: US-led ‘Operation Desert Sabre’ and the Iraqi withdrawal from Kuwait Where: Iraq and Kuwait When: 24 – 26 February 1991 What happened? On 24 February 1991, the United States of America and its coalition partners began “Operation Desert Sabre”, the ground invasion of southern Iraq and Iraqi-occupied Kuwait. The…