PLEASE GO TO THIS LINK TO EXPLORE THIS MARVELOUS PROJECT IN FULL... but if per chance, the link no longer works, I have tried to include every part of the tapestry seen in 2021.
https://www.palestinianhistorytapestry.org/
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The key for return
[59 x 37 cm]
Source of image: PHT design Embroidery: Hejar Abu Saleem [Ajjur, district of Hebron], Amman Jordan
When
700,000 Palestinians fled from or were thrown out of their homes during
the Nakba in 1948, they took their house keys with them, convinced that
they would come back after a week or two and re-open their front doors.
The keys have been passed on from generation to generation as a
reminder of their lost homes and as lasting symbols of their ‘right of
return’. The Palestinian right of return or compensation was
internationally recognised by the United Nations General Assembly
Resolution 194, adopted on 11 December 1948.
“One lovely word, and two lovely words, my homeland”
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
Further reading |
https://www.palestinianhistorytapestry.org/ The Palestinian History Tapestry
The award winning Palestinian History Tapestry
uses the embroidery skills of Palestinian women to illustrate aspects
of the land and peoples of Palestine – from Neolithic times to the
present. In the past, Palestinian embroiderers have mainly used cross stitch (tatreez) and geometric designs to decorate dresses and other items.
Although some of these designs have been used in parts of the
Palestinian History Tapestry, the Tapestry is a further development of
traditional Palestinian embroidery. It shows how the creativity and
imagination of Palestinian embroiderers has been used to represent the
complicated illustrative imagery required for a history tapestry.
The Palestinian History Tapestry was proposed in 2011 by Jan
Chalmers. Jan had worked for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency
in Gaza and was familiar with Palestinian embroidery. She had also
contributed to the creation of a 122-metre South African history
tapestry stitched by village women living in poverty on the Eastern Cape
of South Africa. The Keiskamma Tapestry, as it is known, illustrates
300 years of history leading to the end of apartheid, and it is now on
permanent display in the Parliament House in Cape Town.
Jan’s proposal for a Palestinian history tapestry led Palestinians
and friends to work together to establish and develop the Palestinian
History Tapestry Project. The work of the embroiderers has been funded
by charitable donations, and from sales of Palestinian embroidery.
The first phase of the Project was completed in 2018. Formal launch
events coincided with the 70th Anniversary of ‘The Nakba’ (‘The
Catastrophe’) – the ethnic cleansing of Palestine. This resulted in the
forcible removal of 750,000 Palestinians from their homes, and the
creation of the State of Israel.
The Tapestry was launched in London on 11 December, the day on which,
in 1948, the United Nations General Assembly adopted resolution 194.
This resolved that:
“refugees wishing to return to their
homes and live at peace with their neighbours should be permitted to do
so at the earliest practicable date, and [that] compensation should be
paid for the property of those choosing not to.”
The names of Palestinians who have contributed to the Project are
followed [in parentheses] by the names of the places in Palestine from
which their families originate, followed by their current locations.
Their involvement in the Palestinian History Tapestry is an expression
of ‘sumud’ (steadfastness). Their work, done in collaboration
with friends, will hopefully draw attention not only to Palestinian
history and heritage, but also to the internationally declared right of
Palestinians to return to their homes.
—————————————————————————————–
The Palestinian History Tapestry is owned by the Palestinian
History Tapestry Project. Images and texts, copyright of the Palestinian
History Tapestry Project.
Where not otherwise indicated, material in the Palestinian History
Tapestry is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
International License.
Era: Introduction
Neolithic Period (9,500—4,000 BCE)
Introduction of agriculture and the establishment of settled
farming communities and villages, with domestication of animals,
invention of pottery and the emergence of religious beliefs and cultic
practices, as represented in figurines and tools.
Jericho was developed as one of the earliest fortified settlements in the world.
Era: Neolithic Period (9,500—4,000 BCE)
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Pre-pottery statue
[59 x 41 cm]
Source of image: Google Arts & Culture Embroidery: Basma Al-Natoor [Tabariyeh], Ain al-Hilweh, Lebanon
The
painted plaster head of a Pre-Pottery Neolithic B statue discovered at
Jericho may have represented a divinity, an ancestor, a mythical figure,
or one of the deities of a Neolithic pantheon.
Era: Neolithic Period (9,500—4,000 BCE)
Further reading
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Walled Jericho
[59 x 77 cm]
Source of image: Dame Kathleen Kenyon, archaeologist Embroidery: Hekmat Ashour [Gaza], Gaza, Palestine
The
Neolithic wall of Jericho dates from approximately 8000 BCE. The
embroidered image comes from an artist impression of Neolithic Jericho.
If interpreted as an “urban fortification”, it is the oldest city wall
discovered by archaeologists anywhere in the world. Dame Kathleen
Kenyon was a leading British archaeologist of Neolithic culture in the
Fertile Crescent. She is best known for her excavations of Jericho
between 1952 and 1958, and has been called one of the most influential
archaeologists of the 20th century.
Era: Neolithic Period (9,500—4,000 BCE)
Further reading
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Stone-Copper Age (4,000-3,000 BCE)
Development of regional cultures based on pastoral life and agricultural production.
Introduction of copper and richer artistic and cultic traditions.
Era: Stone-Copper Age (4,000—3,000 BCE)
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Chalcolithic figurine
[59 x 39 cm]
Source of image: Yale University Art Gallery: The Whiting Palestinian Collection Embroidery: Janet Jameel Hamad [Silwad], Amman, Jordan
This
female figure dates from the Chalcolithic Period in Palestine, the
period of transition from prehistoric times to early civilization.
The figure’s large head and elongated nose may have been to evoke the idea of “life breath.”
Era: Stone-Copper Age (4,000—3,000 BCE)
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Chalcolithic ram
[59 x 94 cm]
Source of image: Israel Museum, Jerusalem Embroidery: Naama al Awawdah [Es Samu], Khalil District, Palestine
The
Chalcolithic ram was found in 1895 by farmers ploughing land near the
village of Yazur, 6 kilometres east of Jaffa. It is carved from a flat,
squarish piece of limestone. It was most probably an important object in
the religious life of the community.
Era: Stone-Copper Age (4,000—3,000 BCE)
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Bronze Age (3,000 — 1,200 BCE)
Emergence of urban life and the establishment of the first fortified cities under Egyptian rule.
Canaanites, a group of Semitic people, settled in Palestine/Canaan
and along the Syrio-Palestinian coast. They established semi-independent
city-states, as reflected in Tell al-Amarna Letters; maintained
maritime and land trade with the eastern Mediterranean, Egypt and
Mesopotamia; invented the alphabet writing; developed a multi-deity
religion common to Semitic peoples of the ancient Near East; and
manufactured bronze tools.
Frequent rebellions by Canaanite city states prompted Egyptian military campaigns in Palestine.
Era: Bronze Age (3,000—1,250 BCE)
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Electrum jug
[59 x 37 cm]
Source of image: Christie's Auction House, New York Embroidery: Basma Al-Natoor [Tabariyeh], Ain al-Hilweh, Lebanon
A Western Asiatic electrum jug hammered from a single sheet of bronze. Syro-Palestine, early 2nd millennium BCE.
Era: Bronze Age (3,000—1,250 BCE)
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Beni Hasan mural (1)
[59 x 140 cm]
Source of image: Journal of Ancient Egyptian Interconnections Embroidery: Amina Abu-Rabia', Drejat, Naqab
The
temple mural (1892 BCE) at Beni Hasan, Middle Egypt, depicts Asiatic
herdsmen with three children coming to trade with a local Egyptian
ruler. They are recognisable by their dress, pulled back hair, and short
pointed beards. In addition to the humans, the mural portrays donkeys,
weapons, goods, and tools. The designs on the women’s clothing are
suggestive of designs used by Palestinian women today.
Era: Bronze Age (3,000—1,250 BCE)
Further reading
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Beni Hasan mural (2)
[59 x 115 cm]
Source of image: Journal of Ancient Egyptian Interconnections Embroidery: Amina Abu-Rabia', Drejat, Naqab
The
temple mural (1892 BCE) at Beni Hasan, Middle Egypt, depicts Asiatic
herdsmen coming to trade with a local Egyptian ruler. They are
recognisable by their dress, pulled back hair, and short pointed beards.
In addition to the humans, the mural portrays gazelles, weapons, goods,
and tools.
Era: Bronze Age (3,000—1,250 BCE)
Further reading
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Iron Age (1,250 — 721 BCE)
Massive population migrations led to the establishment of regional kingdoms in Palestine.
Phoenicians (descendants and heirs of the Canaanites)
were seafarers and founded city states along the Syrio-Palestinian
coast and maritime colonies along the southern shores of the
Mediterranean.
Philistines (after whom Palestine was named) migrated from
the Mediterranean, established a confederation of city states along the
southern coast of Palestine, and manufactured iron arms and tools .
Hebrews (Israelites), a semi-nomadic Semitic people, settled in the central mountains of Palestine. They were culturally influenced by the Canaanites and were in conflict with the Philistines.
Era: Iron Age (1,250—721 BCE)
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Philistine warrior
[59 x 37 cm]
Source of image: https://claudemariottini.com/2012/08/15/the-philistines/ Embroidery: Iman Shehaby [Tabariyeh], Ain al-Hilweh Lebanon
A
Philistine warrior, as depicted in the Luxor Temple in Egypt. The
Philistines are believed to have been part of a group of people known as
the Sea Peoples, who came to Canaan from the eastern Mediterranean.
They ruled the five coastal plain cities of Gaza, Ashdod, Ashkelon,
Ekron, and Gath. Philistine civilization disappeared after its cities
were conquered by the Assyrian Empire in the late eighth century BCE.
Era: Iron Age (1,250—721 BCE)
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Philistine migration to Palestine
[59 x 80 cm]
Sketch: Laila Tibi [Taybeh] Palestine Embroidery: Amine Abu Rabia', Drejat, Naqab
Philistines
appear in Assyrian sources in the 9th century BCE. Palestine was
mentioned in early Greek sources as a place – ‘Palaestina’ – and as a
people, ‘Palaistinoi’. Palestine as a geographic name appears in the 5th
century BCE histories of Herodotus. Third century BCE Hellenistic
sources referred to ‘Palaistin’ to describe the entire area between
Phoenicia and Egypt. This panel is based on a sketch drawn by Laila Tibi
[Taybeh].
Era: Iron Age (1,250—721 BCE)
Further reading
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Philistine pottery, swans
[59 x 92 cm]
Source of image: Decorative motifs on Philistine pottery Embroidery: Hadeel Abu-Rabia', Drejat, Naqab
Decorated
Philistine pottery is known for some of the most beautiful motifs on
early Iron Age decorated pottery. Stylistic representations of birds in
the Mycenaean style were considered to be sacred. They are also featured
on the Philistine ships in the reliefs in Ramesses III (20th Dynasty)
mortuary temple at Medinet Habu, Thebes (modern Luxor), Egypt. They
depict his battle with the Sea Peoples around 1175 BCE.
Era: Iron Age (1,250—721 BCE)
Further reading
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Philistine pottery, bird
[59 x 99 cm]
Source of image: Decorative motifs on Philistine pottery Embroidery: Basma Al-Natoor [Tabariyeh], Ain al-Hilweh, Lebanon
This
panel is based on the largest Philistine bird shard image known, from
12th/11th century BCE, which was found at Tel Miqne-Ekron.
Era: Iron Age (1,250—721 BCE)
Further reading
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Assyrian siege of Lachish, 701 BCE
[ 59 x 84 cm]
Source of image: British Museum Sketch: Shaymaa Abu-Hasanain [Gaza], Gaza, Palestine Embroidery: Khawla Dahrouj [Bir Seb’a], Gaza
A
set of Assyrian palace reliefs narrate the Assyrian victory over the
kingdom of Judah. Lachish was an important city in Judah, second only to
Jerusalem. In 701 BCE, the Assyrian army attacked the city from the
south because of the steepness of the northern side, where the Jewish
defenders situated themselves on the walls.
Era: Iron Age (1,250—721 BCE)
Further reading
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Babylonian/Persian period (721 — 332 BCE)
Palestine was brought under Mesopotamian hegemony, and was
conquered in 721 BCE by the Assyrians and in 586 BCE by the Babylonians,
who exiled much of the population. During this time, the name Palestine
in the form of Plistu appeared for the first time in Assyrian
documents.
The Persian emperor Cyrus conquered Palestine and allowed Hebrews to
return from exile. Many of the characteristic ideas and institutions,
including the term Jews, emerged during this time. Much of the Hebrew
Bible was re-written and completed.
The name “Palestine” was mentioned by the Greek historian Herodotus
and appeared later in the Old Testament in the Hebrew form “Pleshet”,
originating from “Pleshteem” (Philistines).
Era: Babylonian/Persian Period (721—332 BCE)
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Ba’al, God of Storm Cloud
[59 x 38 cm]
Source of image: Damascus Museum, Syria Embroidery: Janet Jameel Hamad [Silwad], Amman, Jordan Supported by: Layfield Family, Stroud, UK
Ba’al
was a title and honorific meaning “lord” in the Northwest Semitic
languages spoken in the Levant during antiquity. From its use among
people, it came to be applied to gods. Scholars previously associated
the theonym with solar cults and with a variety of unrelated patron
deities. However, inscriptions have shown that the name Ba’al was
particularly associated with the storm and fertility god Hadad and his
local manifestations.
Era: Babylonian/Persian Period (721—332 BCE)
Further reading
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Babylonian destruction of 1st Jewish Temple, 587 BCE
[59 x 80 cm]
Source of image: Wikimedia Commons. Nebuzaradan burns down the temple2 Embroidery: Imam Shehaby [Tabariyeh], Ain al-Hilweh, Lebanon
The
first Jewish temple (Beit HaMikdash), was destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar
II after the Siege of Jerusalem in 587 BCE. The embroidery is based on
an image by an unnamed illustrator of Petrus Comestor’s ‘Bible
Historiale’, France, 1372.
Era: Babylonian/Persian Period (721—332 BCE)
Further reading
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Hellenistic Period (332 — 63 BCE)
Alexander the Great conquered Palestine in 332 BCE, bringing
it under the influence of Hellenistic culture, which impacted all
aspects of life, art and architecture, philosophy and religion.
After Alexander’s death, his Middle East Empire was divided between
two of his generals: Syria and Palestine under the Seleucides, and Egypt
under the Ptolemies.
Jews led by the Maccabees revolted against the enforced
‘hellenization’, and an independent Hasmonean kingdom was established in
129 BCE. The Hasmoneans forcibly converted the Idumeans (early Arabs of
southern Palestine) to Judaism.
Era: Hellenistic Period (332—63 BCE)
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Hellenistic rooster
[59 x 34 cm]
Source of image: Marisa Tomb Paintings Embroidery: Alia Abu-Rabia', Drejat, Naqab
One
of a pair of roosters, whose heads are turned backwards, straddling a
doorway to the main tomb chamber at Tell Sandahannah, an excavated mound
one mile south of Beit Gibrin.
Era: Hellenistic Period (332—63 BCE)
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Alexander the Great, 356-323 BCE
[59 x 104 cm]
Source of image: House of the Faun Pompeii Embroidery: Alia Abu Rabia', Drejat, Naqab
Alexander
III of Macedon (356-323 BCE), commonly known as Alexander the Great,
created one of the largest empires in the ancient world. He conquered
the Persians, who had earlier subjugated Palestine. The land came into
his hands with the rest of the Persian Empire.
Era: Hellenistic Period (332—63 BCE)
Further reading
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Roman Period (63 BCE — 325 CE)
Conquest of Palestine by the Romans in 63 BCE and establishment of cities such as Jerusalem, Caesarea, Sabastiya, and Beisan.
Appointment in 37 BCE of a vassal king, Herod the Great (an Idumean Arab), as ruler of Judaea.
During this time the ethnic make-up of the country included Jews,
Samaritans, Idumeans and Nabatean Arabs, Greeks and Phoenicians.
Birth of Jesus Christ and spread of Christianity based on his teachings, and creation of the New Testament.
Two Jewish revolts against the Romans were suppressed. The first, in
70 CE, led to the destruction of the Jewish Temple in Jerusalem; the
second, in 135 CE (the Bar Kochba revolt), led to the razing of
Jerusalem and the creation of a Roman colony – Aelia Capitolina – in its
place.
Era: Roman Period (63 BCE—325 CE)
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Roman Judea
[59 x 35 cm]
Source of image: https://tinyurl.com/76dbbi70 Embroidery: Jan Chalmers UK
Sponsored by: Chalmers Family UK
The Roman conquest of Judea in 63 BCE was solidified when Herod was
appointed King of Judea. In 132 CE, the Roman Emperor Hadrian joined
Judea and Galilee to form Syria Palaestina, so reviving the ancient name
of Philistia, combining it with that of the neighbouring province of
Syria.
Era: Roman Period (63 BCE—325 CE)
Further reading
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Roman aqueduct, Caesarea, c. 25–13 BCE
[ 59 x 71 cm]
Source of image: https://tinyurl.com/292je65y Sketch: Shaymaa Abu-Hasanain [Gaza], Gaza, Palestine Embroidery: Mayyada Abu Sitta [Bir Seb’a] Gaza
The
aqueduct at Caesarea is on the coastal plain south of Haifa. The town
and aqueduct were built by Herod the Great around 25–13 BCE, as the port
city Caesarea Marittima. It served as an administrative centre for the
province of Judea in the Roman Empire.
Era: Roman Period (63 BCE—325 CE)
Further reading
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Birth of Jesus in Bethlehem
[59 x 90 cm]
Design: Hamada Atallah [Al Quds], Al Quds, Palestine Embroidery: Suhair Handal, Bethlehem; Marcel Rabie, Randa Abu Ghattas, Beit Jala, Palestine
The
birth of Jesus of Nazareth in Bethlehem. “And so it was… that Mary gave
birth to a son in a stable. She called him Jesus and wrapped him in
strips of cloth and laid him in a manger of hay”.
Era: Roman Period (63 BCE—325 CE)
Further reading
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Roman destruction of 2nd Jewish Temple, 70 CE
[59 x 90]
Source of image: The Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs Embroidery: Amina Abu-Rabia’, Drejat, [Naqab]
The
siege of Jerusalem was the decisive event of the first Jewish–Roman
War. The Roman army besieged and conquered the city after the Jerusalem
riots of 66 CE. The Second Temple was destroyed in 70 CE, and the
Menorah taken to Rome.
Era: Roman Period (63 BCE—325 CE)
Further reading
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Byzantine Period (325 — 638 CE)
Palestine came under the rule of the Byzantine Empire and
Emperor Constantine legitimized Christianity and declared it the
official religion of the state.
Palestine gradually became Christianized and many churches and
monasteries were built at traditional sites associated with the life of
Christ, among these the Church of the Resurrection (Holy Sepulchre) in
Jerusalem and the Church of the Nativity in Beth Lehem. An influx of
pilgrims visited the holy sites.
Era: Byzantine Period (325—640)
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Helena Augusta
[59 x 35 cm]
Source of image: https://orthodoxwiki.org/Helen Embroidery: Alia Abu Rabia', Drejat, Naqab
Helena
was the mother of Constantine the Great, who became Emperor of the
Byzantine Empire. Constantine honoured his mother by granting her the
imperial title “Augusta.”
Era: Byzantine Period (325—640 CE)
Further reading
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Church of the Holy Sepulchre, 325 CE
[59 x 80 cm]
Embroidery: Barbara Haj Hassan, Jordan Supported by: Haj Hassan Family, Jordan
Sponsored by: Haj Hassan Family, Jordan
The Church of the Holy Sepulchre is believed to have been built on
the site at which Jesus of Nazareth is said to have been crucified and
buried, and from which he was resurrected. The church dates from 325/326
CE, when Emperor Constantine ordered that it replace a Roman Temple.
Era: Byzantine Period (325—640 CE)
Further reading
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Early Islamic Period (638 — 1099)
Muslim Arabs conquered Palestine and arabised and islamicised
the local population. The Umayyads based in Damascus (661–750)
transformed Jerusalem (which became the third holiest Islamic city);
built the Haram al-Sharif, which includes the Dome of the Rock and the
Aqsa Mosque; and developed Ramla as capital of Palestine.
Under the rule of the Abbassids based in Baghdad (750–969), the
Fatimids in Cairo (969–1073) and the Saljuqs in Damascus (1073-1098),
Palestine continued to flourish and Jerusalem became a destination for
Islamic pilgrimage and learning.
Era: Early Islamic Period (640—1099 CE)
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No God but Allah
[59 x 38 cm]
Design: Ibrahim Muhtadi [Al Quds], Gaza, Palestine Sketch: Shaymaa Abu-Hasanain [Gaza], Gaza, Palestine Embroidery: Awatif Bader [Karatyya], Gaza, Palestine
Islam
was brought to the region of Palestine during the Early Muslim
conquests of the 7th century, when armies of the Rashidun Caliphate
defeated the armies of Persia and the armies of the Byzantine Empire.
Era: Early Islamic Period (640—1099 CE)
Further reading
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Haram Ash Sharif (Noble Sanctuary), 691 CE
[59 x 96 cm]
Sketch: Razan Hassouna [Gaza], Gaza, Palestine Embroidery: Iman Shehaby [Tabariyeh], Ain al-Hilweh, Lebanon
The
Haram Ash Sharif (Noble Sanctuary) contains the Al-Aqsa Mosque – the
third holiest site in Islam – and the Dome of the Rock. The latter was
initially completed in 691 CE at the order of Umayyad Caliph Abd
al-Malik. It was built on the site of the Roman temple of Jupiter Capitolinus, which had in turn been built on the site of the Second Jewish Temple, destroyed during the Roman siege of Jerusalem in 70 CE.
Era: Early Islamic Period (640—1099 CE)
Further reading
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Khirbet El-Mafjar, 734 CE
[59 x 86 cm]
Source of image: Window in Khirbet El Mafjar Embroidery: Hekmat Ashour [Gaza], Gaza, Palestine
Khirbet
El-Mafjar is an Umayyad hunting lodge 3 km north of Jericho, built in
734 CE. It is known as Hisham’s Palace because it was thought to have
been built by the Umayyad Caliph Hisham bin Abdul Malek (724-743 CE).
Era: Early Islamic Period (640—1099 CE)
Further reading
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Mosaic at Khirbet El-Mafjar, 734 CE
[59 x 90 cm]
Source of image: Mosaic at Khirbet El Mafdjar Embroidery: Basma Al-Natoor [Samaria], Ain al-Hilweh, Lebanon
The
mosaics at Khirbet El-Mafjar, built in 734 CE by the Umayyad Caliph
Hisham bin Abdul Malek (724-743 CE), are fine examples of Umayyad period
art. All of the mosaics are of very high quality. The most famous
depicts the “tree of life”, in the diwan of the bath complex.
Era: Early Islamic Period (640—1099 CE)
Further reading
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Crusader Period (1099 — 1291)
The Crusaders (Franks) conquered Palestine in 1099, followed by a process of colonization.
Jerusalem was sacked and its population massacred, and the Latin
Kingdom of Jerusalem was established, along with military orders to
protect it.
The Franks established many cities, rural settlements, castles, churches, monasteries and industrial installations.
Era: Crusader Period (1099—1291)
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Crusader soldiers
[59 x 36 cm]
Source of image: Wikimedia Commons, Siege of Jerusalem 1099 Embroidery: Shayma Waheidi [Bir Seb’a], Gaza, Palestine
Sponsored by: Shayma Waheidi [Bir Seb’a], Gaza, Palestine
On 15 July 1099, the First Crusade reached Palestine and entered the
port city of Acre, massacring Jewish and Muslim civilians and pillaging
or destroying mosques and the city itself. As a result of this conquest,
several small Crusader states were created, notably the Kingdom of
Jerusalem. This lasted until 1291 CE, when its original and last
possession – Acre – was taken by the Mamluks.
Era: Crusader Period (1099—1291)
Further reading
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Godfrey de Bouillon and crusaders
[59 x 96 cm]
Source of image: Bridgman images, Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris Embroidery: Dowlat Abu Shaweesh [Ne’ane], Ramallah, Palestine
The
First Crusade began in 1099 when Pope Urban II called for a military
expedition to help the Byzantines take control of the Holy Land. This
inaugurated a period of two centuries in which Christians and Muslims
often fought one another.
Era: Crusader Period (1099—1291)
Further reading
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Ayyubid Period (1187—1250)
Following the Zangids, the Ayyubids waged a ‘holy war’ against the Crusader states in the Levant. Salah al-Din defeated the Crusaders at the Battle of Hittin in 1187 CE.
Palestine and Jerusalem were recovered, Islamic holy sites were
restored and consecrated, and Islamic art and architecture were revived.
In 1229 CE, al-Kamil surrendered Jerusalem to the Crusaders within a peace treaty.
In 1244 CE, Jerusalem was recaptured by the Khawarizmians.
Era: Ayyubid Period (1187—1250)
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Ewer of Saladin
[59 x 35]
Source of image: Louvre Museum, Paris. Embroidery: Naama al Awawdah [Samoaa’], Khalil District, Palestine
The
Ewer of Saladin is named after Sultan Salah Al Din Yusuf. Saladin was a
Kurd, who established the Ayyubid Dynasty, which unified Egypt and
Syria under one Sultan from 1171 to 1260 CE.
Era: Ayyubid Period (1187—1250)
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Ṣalaḥ ad-Din Yusuf al-Ayyubid, 1187 CE
[59 x 83 cm]
Source of image: Artist Amjad Ghannam [Al Quds], Al Quds Design: Artist Amjad Ghannam [Al Quds], Al Quds Embroidery: Dowlat Abu Shaweesh [Ne’ane], Ramallah, Palestine
Salah
ad Din Yusuf (Saladin) was a Kurd and the first Sultan of Egypt and
Syria. His forces defeated the Crusaders in 1187 CE at the Battle of
Hittin, and went on to re-capture Jerusalem, which had been seized by
the Crusaders from the Egyptians 88 years earlier.
Era: Ayyubid Period (1187—1250)
Further reading
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Mamluk Period (1260—1517)
The Mamluks overthrew the Ayyubids, and ruled Palestine from
Cairo. They defeated the Mongols at the battle of ‘Ain Jalut (near
Nazareth) in 1260. Baybars conquered most of Palestine from the
Crusaders by the time of his death in 1277.
The Mamluks were great patrons of the arts and sponsored a large
number of religious and secular buildings, constructed in a distinctive
style. They also established an extensive
network of khans (caravanserais) and postal stations, linked by a
network of roads and bridges.
Jerusalem was further confirmed as a destination for Muslim pilgrimage and a centre of learning.
Era: Mamluk Period (1260—1516)
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Armed Mamluk warrior
[59 x 38 cm]
Source of image: Wikimedia Commons, Bassin Syrie Embroidery: Janet Jameel Hamad [Silwad], Amman, Jordan
An armed Mamluk warrior copied from an early 14th century Mamluk brass basin from Egypt or Syria (now in the Louvre), Paris.
Era: Mamluk Period (1260—1516)
Further reading
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Makam Hassan er Ra’ai, 1270 CE
[59 x 97 cm]
Source of image: Bible walks Embroidery: Alia Abu-Rabia, Drejat, Naqab
This
Makam (resting place) was dedicated to a shepherd (Ra’ai) named Hassan.
The tomb of Hasan ar-Ra‘i (مقام Øسن الرعيعي) is located several hundred
meters south of Nebi Musa.
The structure is enclosed within a wall, has six arches on four sides
and topped with two domes. The Jerusalem-Jericho road was one of the
primary roads passing Nebi Musa, an ancient holy site. Mediterranean
Arabs made pilgrimages to Mecca past this point, and many-domed
buildings mark the end of the first day’s march.
Era: Mamluk Period (1260—1516)
Further reading
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Madrasa al-Ashrafiyya Al Quds, 1482 CE
[59 x 40 cm]
Source of image: Museum with no frontiers Embroidery: Nawal Ibrahim Al-Ahmad Ain al-Hilweh, Lebanon[Tabariyeh]
Sultan
al-Malik al-Ashraf Qaytbay, one of the greatest patrons of Mamluk
architecture, founded the al-Ashrafiyya Qaytbay, described as the third
jewel of the Haram al-Sharif, after the Dome of the Rock and al-Aqsa
Mosque, in Jerusalem.
Era: Mamluk Period (1260—1516)
Further reading
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Mamluk embroidery, 15th C
[59 x 37 cm]
Source of image: https://tinyurl.com/y2dhkoma Embroidery: Kifah Kurdieh [Lubya, Tabariyeh], Ain al-Hilweh, Lebanon
This
panel has been copied from a 15th century fragment measuring 11″x
3-3/8”. Perhaps Mamluk embroidery influenced the patterns used today by
Palestinians.
Era: Mamluk Period (1260—1516)
Further reading
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Ottoman Period (1516—1917)
The Ottoman Turkish sultan Selim I conquered Palestine in
1516 CE, and incorporated it in the Ottoman Empire. Under Sultan
Suleiman the Magnificent an extensive programme of works was carried
out, including rebuilding the walls of Jerusalem and the restoration of
the Dome of the Rock and the Aqsa Mosque.
Palestine was divided by the Ottomans into the districts (sanjaks) of
Jerusalem, Nablus, and Acre. Heavy taxation and repressive measures by
the Ottoman authorities led to several revolts, with local leaders
declaring ‘autonomous’ rule, such as Zahir al-‘Umar in northern
Palestine, with his capital in Acre.
In 1801, a French invasion of Egypt and Palestine led by Napoleon was
repelled at Acre by Ahmad Pasha al-Jazzar. Muhammad ‘Ali declared
independence in Egypt and occupied Palestine (1831-1840).
The first wave of Jewish immigration to Palestine was in 1881. The
aim to establish a Jewish homeland in Palestine was declared by Herzl at
the 1st Zionist Congress in Basel in 1897.
In 1916, the British and French agreed to divide the defunct Ottoman
Empire between them. Jerusalem was captured by British forces led by
General Allenby in 1917.
Era: Ottoman Period (1516—1917)
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Suleyman the Magnificent, 1520-66 CE
[59 x 37 cm]
Source of image: Suleiman the Magnificent Embroidery: Hekmat Ashour [Gaza], Gaza, Palestine
Suleyman
the Magnificent ruled the Ottoman Empire between 1520 and 1566, during
which time the territory of the Empire doubled in size and reached the
apogee of its military, economic and political power. Popularly known as
“the Magnificent” or “the Lawmaker,” he was the 10th Ottoman sultan and
the 4th to rule from Istanbul. He was religiously tolerant, insisting
that the Jewish and Christian sites in Jerusalem should be included
within his rebuilt city walls.
Era: Ottoman Period (1516—1917)
Further reading
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Bab al-Amud [Damascus Gate], Al Quds, 1537-51 CE
[59 x 73 cm]
Source of image: https://tinyurl.com/1qd5ykng Embroidery: Khawla Dahrouj [Bir Seb'a], Gaza, Palestine
Damascus
Gate (Bab al-Amud) is one of seven main gates in the walls of
Jerusalem. Built by the Ottoman Sultan Suleyman between 1537 and 1541
the walls are 4,018 meters long, at an average height of 12 meters and
average thickness of 2.5 meters. The walls have 34 watchtowers.
Era: Ottoman Period (1516—1917)
Further reading
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Thobe embroidery
[59 x 37 cm]
Source of image:Traditional design Embroidery: Nawal Ibrahim Al-Ahmad [Tabariyeh], Ain al-Hilweh Lebanon
Palestinian
embroidery has a rich history going back at least 200 years.
Traditional Palestinian women’s dresses, or thobes, took different forms
in different regions of the country. The various stitches, designs and
colours of the embroidery indicate the regional origins and in some
cases, women’s status. Beyond the beauty of this intricate work, and
particularly in the aftermath of the 1948 Nakba, embroidery has played
an important role in preserving Palestinian identity, becoming a symbol
of heritage and endurance.
Era: Ottoman Period (1516—1917)
Further reading
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Camel caravan
[59 x 95 cm]
Source of image: Designer, Alia Abu-Rabia, Drejat, Naqab Embroidery: Alia Abu-Rabia, Drejat, Naqab
Before
the development of modern modes of transport, camels (‘ships of the
desert’) were used to transport people and goods to and from Palestine.
Era: Ottoman Period (1516—1917)
Further reading
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Coffee
[59 x 35 cm]
Source of image: Designer Alia Abu Rabia', Drejat, Naqab Embroidery: Alia Abu Rabia', Drejat, Naqab
Coffee
was on the Palestinian table before breakfast, after lunch and during
evening hours, and it still graces all social events.
Era: Ottoman Period (1516—1917)
Further reading
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Napoleon’s failure at Acre, 1799
[59 x 110 cm]
Source of image: Unsuccessful siege of Acre (1799) Embroidery: Hadeel Abu Rabia', Drejat, Naqab
Advancing from Egypt, Napoleon
Bonaparte tried to capture the key port of Acre between 18 March and 20
May 1799. His plans received a setback when his siege artillery was
lost to the British Navy.
Era: Ottoman Period (1516—1917)
Further reading
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‘The Land of Sad Oranges’
[59 x 36 cm]
Source of image: Inspired by the writings of Ghassan Kanafani Embroidery: Suheer Abu Rabia, Drejat, Naqab
The
title of this image is inspired by a short story by Ghassan Kanafani, a
Palestinian writer who was assassinated in 1972 by Mossad, the Israeli
secret service. “The Land of the Sad Oranges” describes the influence of
deportation on Palestinians when Israeli troops took over their country
in 1948. Jaffa oranges were cultivated by Palestinian farmers from the
mid-19th century, and take their name from the port city of
Jaffa. Mention of Jaffa oranges being exported to Europe first appears
in British consular reports in the 1850s.
Era: Ottoman Period (1516—1917)
Further reading
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Port of Jaffa
[59 x 158 cm]
Source of image: An Empire Marketing Board advertisement for Jaffa oranges. Embroidery: Hadeel Abu-Rabia', Drejat, Naqab
Jaffa oranges were cultivated by Palestinian farmers from the mid-19th
century, and take their name from the port city of Jaffa. Mention of
Jaffa oranges being exported to Europe first appears in British consular
reports in the 1850s.
Era: Ottoman Period (1516—1917)
Further reading
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Qanun player, Jerusalem, c.1859
[59 x 56 cm]
Source of image: https://tinyurl.com/yuwsv26h Embroidery: Jan Chalmers
This image of a Qanun player is based on a woodcut published by William McClure Thomson in 1860 (The Land and the Book: Or, Biblical Illustrations Drawn from the Manners and Customs, the Scenes and Scenery, of the Holy Land Vol II, p. 577).
The qanun is a stringed instrument with origins in Assyrian Mesopotamia in 19th
century BCE. The name of the instrument derives from an Arabic word
meaning “rule, law, norm, principle”, which is borrowed from the ancient
Greek word κανών
(rule), canon in Latin. The qanun is either played solo, or more
usually as part of an ensemble in much of the Middle East, North Africa,
West Africa, Central Asia, and south eastern regions of Europe. Arabic
qanuns are somewhat larger than Turkish qanuns, allowing the three and a
half octave range to be extended to include extreme bass and extreme
treble strings.
Era: Ottoman Period (1516—1917)
Further reading
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Oud player, Jerusalem, c.1859
[59 x 56 cm]
Source of image: https://tinyurl.com/e468qsx2 Embroidery: Jan Chalmers
This image of an oud player is based on a woodcut published by William McClure Thomson in 1860 (The Land and the Book: Or, Biblical Illustrations Drawn from the Manners and Customs, the Scenes and Scenery, of the Holy Land. Vol II, p. 578).
Instruments of the lute family were known to have existed in
Mesopotamia at least as long ago as 3000 BCE. A short almond-shaped lute
developed in the Sasanian Empire (224–651) came to be called the barbat or barbud, and this instrument was developed later into the Islamic world’s oud or ud.
When the Moors conquered Andalusia in 711, they brought their oud into a
country that had already known a lute tradition under the Romans.
During the 8th and 9th centuries, many musicians from across the
Islamic world flocked to Iberia. By the 11th century, Muslim Iberia had
become a centre for the manufacture of instruments. These goods spread
gradually to Provence, influencing French troubadours, and eventually
reached the rest of Europe. While Europe developed the lute, the oud remained a feature of Arab and Ottoman music.
Era: Ottoman Period (1516—1917)
Further reading
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Ottoman Palestine, 1875
[59 x 42]
Source of image: PHT design based on publications by Fred M Gottheil, Nur Masalha, and Salman Abu Sitta Embroidery: Jan Chalmers, UK
Sponsored by: Chalmers Family, UK
For well over a century it has been suggested that Palestine was “a land without people, for a people without a land”.
This claim was repeated despite the evidence that it was a fiction.
After a careful assessment of the available evidence, Fred M Gottheil
estimated that, around 1875, the population of Ottoman Palestine was
492,675 (Middle Eastern Studies 1979;15:310-321). In addition to
Gottheil’s report, the map stitched for the Palestinian History Tapestry
draws on a map of “modern Palestine”, represented by the
Mutasarrifiyatal-Quds al-Sharif (Mutasarrifate of Noble Jerusalem),
which incorporated the sanjaks (provinces) of Akka and Nablus (Nur
Masalha. Palestine. 2018. London: Zed, p 262). Palestinian
cities, towns and large villages at that time have been identified from
Gottheil’s article and Salman Abu Sitta’s Atlas of Palestine. 1917-1966. London: Palestine Land Society 2010.
To mark their locations, silk crosses have been added to the
embroidered Tapestry panel to indicate the locations (from North to
South) of Tarshiha, Safad, Akka, Haifa, Tabariyeh, Nasirah, Beisan, Jenin, Tulkarm, Nablus, Qalqilya, Yaffa, Ramallah, Ariha, Ludd, al Quds, Yibneh, Ramleh, Beit Lahm, Majdal, Beit Jibrin, Gaza, Khalil, and Bir Saba.
Era: Ottoman Period (1516—1917)
Further reading
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British Military Administration (1917—1920)
1917 The Balfour Declaration promises Palestine to the Jews of the world.
1917 British capture of Jerusalem from the Ottoman Turks.
1919 The Treaty of Versailles ends the First World War and marks the defeat of Germany and its allies, including Turkey.
1920 Treaty of Sevres strips the Ottoman Empire of its Arab provinces, including Palestine.
Era: British Military Administration (1917—1920)
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Palestine, 1917
[59 x 36 cm]
Source of image: Justin McCarthy. The Population of Palestine. New York: Columbia University Press, 1909. Embroidery: Almaza Al-Helou [Al A'abasiyeh] Ramallah, Palestine
Palestine
had been part of the Ottoman Empire for 400 years, but had retained its
distinctive regional identity as Palestine, with an indigenous Arab
population and culture. In the secret Sykes-Picot agreement, Britain and
France separated Palestine from the rest of Greater Syria and
designated it for international status.
Era: British Military Administration (1917—1920)
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The Balfour Declaration, 1917
[59 x 41 cm]
Source of image: https://tinyurl.com/1jwa5f2q Embroidery: Jan Chalmers UK Supported by: Chalmers Family UK
Sponsored by: Chalmers Family, UK
In 1917, the British Foreign Secretary, Arthur Balfour, stated in a
letter to Lord Rothschild, a British Jew, that the British government
viewed with favour the establishment of a “national home for the Jewish
people in Palestine”, then an Ottoman region in which only 10 per cent
of the population was Jewish, “it being clearly understood that nothing
shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of
existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine, or the rights and
political status enjoyed by Jews in any other country.”
Era: British Military Administration (1917—1920)
Further reading
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British capture of Jerusalem, 1917
[59 x 83 cm]
Source of image: British capture of Jerusalem, 1917 Embroidery: Janet Jameel Hamad [Silwad], Amman
After
the Allied occupation of Jerusalem in 1917, and until the Treaty of
Sevres had been signed, Ottoman territories came under Allied military
control, commanded by General Edmund Allenby.
Era: British Military Administration (1917—1920)
Further reading
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Embroidery sampler
[59 x 27 cm]
Source of image:Traditional design Embroidery: Nawal Ibrahim Al-Ahmad [Tabariyeh], Ain al-Hilweh, Lebanon
Traditional
patterns used in Palestinian embroidery are designs of geometric
shapes, but also include designs which were most familiar to Palestinian
women as impressions of their daily surroundings. These patterns
symbolize good health, hope, prosperity and protection, among other
attributes of positive beliefs.
Era: British Military Administration (1917—1920)
Further reading
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British Mandate (1920—1948)
1920 The League of Nations ‘awards’ Britain the Mandate of Palestine.
1920 Increased Jewish immigration and settlement with British support.
1936 — 1939 Palestinian Arab Revolt against British authorities, protesting increasing Jewish immigration.
1940 — 1948 Zionist terrorism and sabotage against the British authorities.
1947 UN Partition Plan to divide Palestine into separate Jewish and Arab states.
1947 — 1949 Ethnic cleansing of more than 700,000 Palestinians by Zionists – The Nakba (Catastrophe).
1948 Zionist declaration of the State of Israel.
1948 UN General Assembly Resolution 194 declaring right of return to their homes or compensation for Palestinian refugees.
Era: British Mandate (1920—1948)
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The League of Nations Mandate for Palestine, 1922
[59 x 106 cm]
Source of image: https://tinyurl.com/1kv1abm3 Embroidery: Hejar Abu Saleem [Ajjur district of Hebron] Baqa'a Refugee Camp. Amman Jordan
In 1922, the newly-formed League of Nations
decided the fate of the former Ottoman Empire. It ratified British
control of Palestine in the form of a ‘mandate’. This document required
Britain to lead Palestine towards independence, and create a ”national
home” for Jews, and incorporated the wording of the 1917 Balfour
Declaration.
Era: British Mandate (1920—1948)
Further reading
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“One Palestine, complete”
[59 x 35 cm]
Source of image: https://tinyurl.com/1vet31p0 Embroidery: Jan Chalmers, UK
Sponsored by: Chalmers Family, UK
The 1st Viscount Herbert Samuel, who was Jewish and a Zionist, was
appointed to the position of High Commissioner of Palestine in 1920 and
served until 1925. He received the post from Sir Louis Bols, of the
‘Occupied Enemy Territory Administration’, who handed over Palestine.
In return, Samuel signed a “receipt” acknowledging that he had received
“one Palestine, complete”, as described by the Israeli historian Tom
Segev in his book entitled “One Palestine Complete”. The abbreviation on
the bottom left of the letter stands for “Errors and Omissions
Excepted” (Seebag Montefiore S (2001). Jerusalem, p 431).
Dr Ghada Karmi, Founding Patron of the Palestinian History Tapestry Project, reflects here on this 3-word acknowledgement of the British theft of the homeland of the Palestinian people.
“On 30 June 1920, this parody of a receipt of merchandise (complete with E&OE – Errors and Omissions Exempted),
was drawn up one hundred years ago. It appears on official British
government headed paper, written by the head of the British military
administration in Palestine, Major General Sir Louis Bols, and addressed to Herbert Samuel,
Britain’s first High Commissioner in Palestine. The ‘merchandise’ in
question was the country of Palestine, and Bols added the word,
‘Complete’, on the receipt, possibly to make the point that the country
he was handing over also included an unwilling and rebellious population
of Palestinian Arabs, with all the strife and troubles that would
entail for Samuel.
“Appointing Samuel, a practising Jew and ardent Zionist, to such a post was controversial at the time and regarded as illegal. A conquered people could not have their fate decided ahead of a peace treaty, as was the case in Palestine.
In addition, the British Mandate over the country did not commence
until 1922. In these circumstances no one in Britain was in favour of
appointing a civil administrator, let alone a Jewish and Zionist one, to
take charge in Palestine. Only the Zionists supported Samuel’s
appointment.
“The receipt of ‘One Palestine, complete’ should be seen as
an angry and sarcastic expression of the resentment that British
military commanders felt towards the Zionists. In their view, Britain’s
soldiers had not achieved the conquest of Palestine in order simply to
hand it over to the Zionist movement. It was a tension that persisted
throughout the years of the British Mandate.
“However strongly felt these sentiments may have been among the
British occupation forces, they were of no use to the indigenous
Palestinians. For them, the reality was that their homeland was being
passed, cynically or not, from one foreign group to another, neither of
which had legal title to it.
“The real lesson of the story of ‘One Palestine, complete’ is the light it throws on Zionism’s influence over the development of British policy, as early as 1920.”
Era: British Mandate (1920—1948)
Further reading
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Postage stamp
[59 x 36 cm]
Source of image: Postage stamp of Palestine Embroidery: Janet Jameel Hamad, Amman, Jordan [Jerusalem]
The
Palestine postage stamp had English, Arabic and Hebrew text. Hebrew
was given equal status to Arabic and English even though the Jewish
population was only around 10 per cent. The special treatment of that
population was written into the terms of the Mandate with the Balfour
Declaration.
Era: British Mandate (1920—1948)
Further reading
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Tahriri embroidery
[59 x 33 cm]
Source of image:Traditional design Embroidery: Amari Women's Group Ramallah, Palestine
An
example of tahriri embroidery with traditional cross stitch. The
tahriri sample here has been stitched by the Amari Women’s Group in
Ramallah. The Women’s Child Care Society in Bet Jala is maintaining the
traditional Bethlehem tahriri stitching by training local women to
produce embroidered items for the tourist market, providing income for
women working from home. Tahriri stitching is also known as couching,
and is used to preserve golden threads used in the decoration of church
raiments.
Era: British Mandate (1920—1948)
Further reading
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Palestinian henna party
[59 x 112 cm]
Source of image:Traditional design Sketch: Amal Abu Hussain [Bir Seb’a] Gaza, Palestine Embroidery: Ruba Al Behery [Bir Seb’a], Gaza
Palestinian
wedding ceremonies start the night before the wedding day, when women
from the bride’s family and her friends gather to sing, dance, and apply
temporary tattoos with henna, a plant dye. Older women decorate the
skin of the bride and her guests with designs that often take hours to
complete. Decorations put on the bride’s legs represent the return of
the dove to Noah, as evidence that the flood’s destruction was over. The
women wear traditional, hand-embroidered dresses, with that of the
bride being the most beautiful.
Era: British Mandate (1920—1948)
Further reading
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Palestinian wedding
[59 x 158 cm]
Source of image:Traditional design Embroidery: Mothers’ Embroidery Group, Al Deheishe Refugee Camp, Bethlehem, Palestine
This
panel displays a typical Palestinian country wedding with its rituals,
dabkeh folk dance, the bride on a horse, and traditional music. The
dabkeh dance is characteristic of the whole of the Levant, with the
music and the dance steps differing slightly from place to place.
Palestinian cuisine is the cuisine of the Levant – msakhan, maftoul, kibbeh, hoummous, and mansaf, for example – which have become very widely known and appreciated.
Era: British Mandate (1920—1948)
Further reading
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‘Mawtini’ (My Homeland), 1930s-96
[59 x 87 cm]
Source of image: Ibrahim Muhtadi [Al Quds], Gaza, Palestine Design: Ibrahim Muhtadi [Al Quds], Gaza, Palestine Embroidery: Jamela al-Bura’ai [Kawkaba], Gaza, Palestine
‘Mawtini’
is a popular poem written by the Palestinian poet Ibrahim Tuqan. In the
1930s it was set to music composed by the Lebanese composer Mohammed
Flayfel. It served as Palestine’s de facto national anthem until 1996,
when it was officially replaced by ‘Fida’i’.
Murad Swaity, Mawtini
Era: British Mandate (1920—1948)
Further reading
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The Palestinian Arab Revolt, 1936-1939
[59 x 83 cm]
Source of image: PHT design Embroidery: Naama al Awawdah [Es Samu], Khalil District, Palestine
The
Arab Revolt in Palestine between 1936 and 1939 was a nationalist
uprising against the British administration. The revolt began on 19th
April 1936 with a national strike throughout Palestine which continued
until 12th October. This demanded Arab independence and an end of the
policy of open-ended Jewish immigration and land purchase. The general
strike lasted from April to October 1936 and initiated a violent,
peasant-led resistance movement in 1937. White and black kufiyahs were
worn for the first time as a symbol of steadfastness. The rebellion was
brutally suppressed. Over ten percent of the adult male Palestinian Arab
population between 20 and 60 was killed, wounded, imprisoned or exiled.
The revolt caused the British to give crucial support to pre-state
Zionist militias.
Era: British Mandate (1920—1948)
Further reading
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Palestine population, 1918-1947
[59 x 66 cm]
Source of image: PHT design Embroidery: Jan Chalmers, UK
Sponsored by: Chalmers Family, UK
This panel shows the growth in the population of Palestine between
1918 and 1947, and the gradually increasing proportion of Jewish
immigrants, referred to as ‘Jewish Palestinians’ during the British
Mandate.
Data sources:-
1918: Palestinians – S. Abu Sitta (pers. com.); Jews – J. McCarthy (1990).
1919: Palestinians and Jews – R. Shamir (2000).
1920: Palestinians and Jews – S. Abu Sitta (pers. com.)
1921: Palestinians and Jews – S Abu Sitta (pers. com.)
1922-1946: Total population and Jews – S. Abu Sitta (2010).
1947: Palestinians – S. Abu Sitta (pers. com.); Jews – S. Della Pergola (2001).
Acknowledgements: The Palestinian History Tapestry Project is indebted to Professor Salman Abu Sitta for help in compiling the data on which the embroidered infographic has been based.
Era: British Mandate (1920—1948)
Further reading
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Olive harvest
[59 x 110 cm]
Design: Hamada Atallah [Al Quds] Al Quds, Palestine Embroidery: Dowlat Abu Shaweesh [Ne’ane], Ramallah, Palestine
Olives
and olive oil symbolize Palestinian land, identity and culture. The
olive tree is seen by many Palestinians as a symbol of nationality and
connection to the land, particularly due to the slow growth and
longevity of the tree. The destruction of Palestinian olive trees has
become a feature of the Israeli occupation, with regular reports of
damage and destruction by Israeli settlers.
Era: British Mandate (1920—1948)
Further reading
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Safad
[59 x 96 cm]
Source of image: Designed by Fatma Abu Owda [Hamama], Gaza, Palestine Design: Fatma Abu Owda [Hamama], Gaza, Palestine Embroidery: Awatif Bader [Karatiyya], Gaza
Sponsored by: Sabbagh Family, UK
Safad is one of the oldest cities in historic Palestine, and has been
home to adherents of Judaism, Christianity and Islam. Archaeological
excavations of the Crusader castle there uncovered remains of an Iron
Age settlement.
THE PLEA (Sue Sabbagh UK)
To find me you must stop the noise;
Silence the guns and the tanks,
The shouted orders
And the shouts of defiance,
The screaming and weeping,
And listen.
My voice is very weak.
You must try to hear it.
You will have to come close
And pick away the tumbled stones
Carefully, gently.
When you find me, lift me out,
Help me to breathe;
Set my broken limbs
But don’t think it’s enough
To give me back a fragile existence.
[Verses on the panel in Arabic]
I need food and water,
I need a home that will last,
Health and hope and work to do.
I need love.
You must embrace me
And take me to your heart.
“My name is Peace”.
Era: British Mandate (1920—1948)
Further reading
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The Hand of Fatima/Mary/Miriam
[59 x 48 cm]
Source of image: Selected from traditional designs by Riham Khalil Embroidery: Iman Shehaby [Tabariyeh], Ain al-Hilweh, Lebanon
This
image is familiar in three religions. Jews refer to it as the hand of
Miriam, to commemorate the sister of Moses and Aaron. Levantine
Christians refer to it as the hand of Mary, mother of Jesus. In Islam,
it is known as the hand of Fatima, so named to commemorate Fatima Zahra,
Muhammad’s daughter.
Era: British Mandate (1920—1948)
Further reading
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Land ownership, 1946
[59 x 36 cm & 59 x 33 cm]
Source of image: Disappearing Palestine Embroidery: Almaza Al-Helou [Al A'abasiyeh], Al Amari Ramallah, Palestine
Under
the British Mandate, land purchases and Jewish migration increased. In
1946, Jews owned 7 per cent of the land of Palestine.
Era: British Mandate (1920—1948)
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UN partition plan, 1947
[_59 x 36 cm]
Source of image: Disappearing Palestine Embroidery: Embroidery: Almaza Al-Helou [Al A'abasiyeh], Al Amari Ramallah, Palestine
In
1947 the UN Partition Plan allocated the Jewish population in Palestine
55 per cent of the country, including much of the best agricultural
land. Unsurprisingly, this division was rejected by the Palestinian
population and by neighbouring Arab states. Jerusalem was intended as a
‘corpus separatum’ [‘separated body’] by the Partition Plan, which
conferred a special status on it due to its shared religious
significance.
Era: British Mandate (1920—1948)
Further reading
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Sumud-Steadfastness, from 1948
Sumud – Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
“The list of Palestinian losses is depressing…. That Palestinians do
not give up is precisely what is so historic and inspiring about their
resistance. For more than 100 years, the Palestinian people have been
resisting and fighting for Palestine, holding on to what they have left
of it, clinging on to the hope of one day reclaiming what they have
lost.
Attention is often given to the armed resistance, but far more
numerous, diverse, and long-standing is the unarmed Palestinian
resistance. Labour strikes, boycotts, legal actions, political and
community organising, demonstrations, marches, hunger strikes, passing
the keys of demolished homes from one generation to the next, the
formation of Palestinian societies and cultural groups in exile and
refugee camps, lobbying politicians across the world, building creative
local and sustainable economies, and everyday acts of resistance are all
peppered throughout the history of the struggle.
Resistance also comes in the form of cultural productions that
narrate and communicate the suffering of Palestinians; intellectual and
academic studies that illuminate the history and lived realities of
Palestinians; the development of political manifestoes and ideologies
that pave a path forward towards freedom and liberation”.
From: Mark Muhannad Ayyash. ‘Fighting for Palestine’. Al Jazeera Opinion, 10 Oct 2020.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
Further reading
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The ethnic cleansing of Palestine, 1948
[59 x 85 cm]
Source of image: Salman Abu Sitta Embroidery: Nawal Ibrahim Al-Ahmad [Tabariyeh], Ain al-Hilweh, Lebanon
Palestinians
refer to the ethnic cleansing of Palestine as the Nakba (Catastrophe),
illustrated by these maps. One shows the hundreds of Palestinian
villages before 1948, the other map shows refugee camps in which
expelled Palestinians were forced to live in Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, the
West Bank and Gaza. The maps are based on meticulous documentation by
Salman Abu-Sitta.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
Further reading
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The Lone Refugee
[59 x 38 cm]
Source of image: Ahmad Canaan. Artist Design: Ahmad Canaan, Tamra, Palestine Embroidery: Iman Shehaby [Tabariyeh], Ain al-Hilweh, Lebanon
This
embroidery is based on a painting by the distinguished Palestinian
artist Ahmad Canaan, born in 1965 in Tamra. He now lives in Jerusalem,
and his painting of the lone refugee symbolises the Nakba [Catastrophe].
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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UN Resolution 194, 1948
[59 x 45 cm]
Source of image: United Nations General Assembly Embroidery: Jan Chalmers, UK
Sponsored by: Chalmers Family, UK
United Nations General Assembly Resolution 194 [53] on 11th December
1948 declared the right of Palestinians, who had be displaced by Zionist
forces, to return to their homes or to receive compensation for their
losses.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
Further reading
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The Right of Return
Source of image: Design by Fatma Abu Owda [Hamama], Gaza, Palestine Embroidery: Hanan Al-Behery [Karatiyya], Gaza
In
the hope of returning to their homes, Palestinian refugees retain the
keys to the houses from which they were forcefully displaced during the
Nakba in 1948. The key symbolizes the inheritance of successive
Palestinian generations of the right of return to their homes and their
rejection of the policy of resettlement. This embroidery illustrates the
right of return by featuring images of over 30 house keys of different
shapes and sizes which Palestinian families have retained over the
generations.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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Disappearing Palestine
[59 x 33 cm]
Source of image: Disappearing Palestine Embroidery: Almaza Al-Helou [Al A'abasiyeh], Ramallah, Palestine
In
March 1948, the Haganah and other Zionist militias began the forcible
expulsion of 250,000 Palestinians, destroying their communities. The
British Mandate of Palestine ended on 15 May 1948 and Jewish leaders
declared the establishment of the State of Israel. War broke out and
Israeli forces defeated the Arab armies. At the time that the armistice
agreements had been signed in 1949, over 750,000 Palestinians had been
displaced and 531 Palestinian villages and 11 urban neighbourhoods had
been destroyed. The West Bank and East Jerusalem came under the control
of Jordan while the Gaza Strip came under Egyptian control. In June
1967, Israel launched the Six Day War and occupied these territories,
together with the Golan Heights in Syria.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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UNRWA founded, 1949
[59 x 85 cm]
Source of image: https://tinyurl.com/3htl75um Sketch: Shaymaa Abu-Hasanain [Gaza], Gaza, Palestine Embroidery: Karema Nasser [Barbara], Gaza, Palestine
The
United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA)
was established in 1949. The following year, it began providing
nutritional, health, and educational services to about 750,000 Palestine
refugees displaced as a result of the ethnic cleansing of Palestine.
Today, due to lack of international support, UNRWA struggles, to provide
services to over 5 million Palestinian refugees.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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Pal. Liberation Organisation, 1964-
[59 x 75 cm]
Source of image: PHT design Embroidery: Nawal Ibrahim Al-Ahmad [Tabariyeh], Ain al-Hilweh, Lebanon
The
Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) was established in 1964 and has
been the embodiment of the Palestinian national movement. It is an
umbrella organization comprised of numerous organizations of the
resistance movement, political parties, popular organizations, and
independent personalities and figures from all sectors of Palestinian
life. The Arab Summit in 1974 recognized the PLO as the “sole and
legitimate representative of the Palestinian people”. Since then the PLO
has represented Palestine at the United Nations, the Movement of
Non-Aligned Countries, the Organization of the Islamic Conference, and
in many other fora.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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Check point, 1967-
[59 x 85 cm]
Source of image: Hannah Ryggen tapestries Design: Hannah Ryggen (Norway) Sketch: Shaymaa Abu-Hasanain [Gaza], Gaza, Palestine Embroidery: Karema Nasser [Barbara], Gaza, Palestine
During
the 1967 war, Israel occupied what remained of Palestine. Hundreds of
military checkpoints were established in the West Bank and East
Jerusalem, and in Gaza. These are used to entrench Israel’s occupation
of all of historic Palestine. Movement of Palestinians is restricted
within the occupied Palestinian territory, with dire consequences for
access to education, health care, and the economy. The design of this
panel is influenced by “The Death of Dreams”, a tapestry woven by Hannah
Ryggen at the time of the German occupation of Norway during the second
World War.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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Popular resistance
[59 x 102 cm]
Source of image: Design by Ibrahim Muhtadi Design: Ibrahim Muhtadi [Al Quds], Gaza, Palestine Sketch: Shaymaa Abu-Hasanain, [Gaza], Gaza, Palestine Embroidery: Khawla Dahrouj [Bir Seb’a] Gaza, Palestine
In his 2011 book Popular Resistance in Palestine,
Mazin Qumsiyeh documents the many ways in which the indigenous people
of Palestine have resisted oppression – by the Ottoman Empire, the
British Empire, and the Zionist colonial project. Non-violent resistance
has been far more common and enduring than violent resistance. It has
involved petitions, strikes, demonstrations, civil disobedience,
non-cooperation, boycott, divestment and sanctions. Many Palestinian
towns and villages have organised resistance initiatives, but the media
have ignored most of these. This panel includes the names of some that
have been reported.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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“Handala”, born 1969
[59 x 41 cm]
Source of image: Handala.org Design: Naji al-Ali [Palestine] Embroidery: Jan Chalmers, UK Supported by: Chalmers children UK
Despite
the suffering endured by Palestinians since the occupation of their
homeland, steadfastness and hope for justice survive. These qualities
are symbolised in the determined stance of ‘Handala’, a creation of the
Palestinian cartoonist Naji al-Ali. In Arabic, ‘handala’ means
‘medicinal bitter desert fruit’. According to Naji, “Handala was born
aged ten – the age Naji was when he was expelled from his village,
Al-Shajara, in 1948. Handala will remain that age and will become normal
again only when the Palestinian homeland is restored. Naji was
assassinated in 1987 in London.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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Land Day inaugurated, 30 March 1976
[59 x 131 cm]
Embroidery: Haneeyeh Abu Saleh, Galilee, Palestine
Land
Day, March 30, is an annual day of commemoration. In 1976, in response
to the Israeli government’s announcement of a plan to expropriate
thousands of dunams of land for state purposes, a general strike and
marches were organized in Arab towns, from the Galilee to the Negev. In
the ensuing confrontations with the Israeli army and police, six unarmed
Palestinian citizens of Israel were killed, about one hundred were
wounded, and hundreds of others arrested. This was the first time since
1948 that Palestinian Arabs in Israel had organized a response to
Israeli policies as a Palestinian national collective. Land Day is
marked not only by Palestinian citizens of Israel, but also by
Palestinians all over the world.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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International Women’s Day, 8 Mar 1981
[59 x 45]
Source of image: The Palestinian poster project archives Embroidery: Iman Shehaby [Tabariyeh], Ain al-Hilweh, Lebanon
International
Women’s Day, in Palestine and the rest of the world, is marked each
year in early March. Palestinian women have participated in every stage
of the Palestinian struggle for well over a century. They have stood
side-by-side with Palestinian men, defying the Israeli occupation. They
have had extra responsibilities within Palestinian society to struggle
to advance their rights, their daughters’ rights, and women’s roles in
the community.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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Sabra and Shatilia remembered, 16-18 Sept 1982
[59 x 79 cm]
Source of image: Design by Ibrahim Muhtadi [Al Quds], Gaza, Palestine Sketch: Shaymaa Abu-Hasanain [Gaza], Gaza, Palestine Embroidery: Khawla Rubi [Yibne], Gaza, Palestine
On
16 September 1982, right-wing Lebanese militiamen allied to Israel
perpetrated the massacre of an estimated 2,000 Palestinian and Lebanese
civilians in the refugee camps of Sabra and Shatila in South Beirut.
Those murdered were mostly women, children and elderly, and many of the
victims’ bodies were found mutilated and raped. Soon after the killing
began, Israeli forces surrounded Sabra and Shatila and provided
bulldozers that were used to dispose of the bodies of the victims’.
Years on, the Sabra and Shatila massacre continues to be commemorated,
marking one of the most traumatizing events in modern Palestinian
history. Remembering also, the lesser known siege of Tel al-Zaatar
(Hill of Thyme) in 1976. As part of a wider campaign to expel
Palestinians from Lebanon, a siege of a fortified UNRWA administered
Palestinian refugee camp in northeastern Beirut, was carried out by
Christian Lebanese militias led by The Lebanese Front. Approximately
50,000 Palestinians lived in Tel al-Zaatar refugee camp and an
estimated 4,000 were massacred.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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Home schooling, 1987—1992
[59 x 86 cm]
Source of image: Design by Shaymaa Abu-Hasanain [Gaza], Gaza, Palestine Embroidery: Khawala Dahrouj [Bir Seb’a] Gaza, Palestine
This
panel shows school children being taught at home in Gaza after the
Israeli occupation forces had cut electricity supplies and closed
schools in response to the first Palestinian Intifada [uprising]. The
Intifada, which began in 1987, was a protest against Israeli “beatings,
shootings, killings, house demolitions, uprooting of trees,
deportations, extended imprisonments, and detentions without trial”. It
involved civil disobedience consisting of general strikes, boycotts, of
Israeli institutions, an economic boycott and widespread throwing of
stones and Molotov cocktails at the Israeli army.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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Gaza fishermen and gunboats, 1967-
[59 x 109 cm]
Source of image: Design by Adham Jaber [Hirbiya], Gaza, Palestine Design: Adham Jaber [Hirbiya], Gaza, Palestine Embroidery: Shireen Fouad Atallah [Gaza, Palestine] Germany
The
Mediterranean Sea has, for centuries, yielded its fruits to Gaza
fishermen, and fish has been a mainstay of the Gazan diet. Israeli
gunships hinder Palestinians fishing off the Gaza coast. This has
severely affected both the work of the fishermen and food security for
Palestinians in the Gaza Strip. Tens of thousands of people are
currently dependent on Gaza’s fishing industry. Israeli naval forces
have harassed Palestinian fishing boats that have dared to venture too
far from the Gaza coast. Israeli gunboats have made hundreds of attacks
on Palestinian fishing boats, forcing them back to shore, detaining
those on board, and in some cases sinking the boats.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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Parental protection, 30 Sept 2000
[59 x 70]
Source of image: BBC News Embroidery: Nawal Ibrahim al Ahmed [Tabariyeh], Ain al-Hilweh, Lebanon
On
Saturday 30 September 2000, the second day of the Second Intifada,
12-year-old Muhammad Al-Durrah was shot dead at the Netzarim Junction,
south of Gaza, as he took shelter with his father, Jamal. The image of a
father trying to protect his son was captured on camera and sent
shockwaves across the world. Muhammad’s father could be seen signalling
in an attempt to stop the firing. The result was a burst of gunfire that
put a premature end to Muhammad’s life and wounded his father.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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Faris O’deh, Standing Alone, 8 Nov 2000
[59 x 74cm]
Source of image: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faris_Odeh Embroidery: Nawal Ibrahim al Ahmed [Tabariyeh], Ain al-Hilweh, Lebanon
On
29 October 2000, during the second month of the Second Intifada, a
French photojournalist photographed 15-year-old Faris Odeh from the
Zeitoun quarter in Gaza City confronting an Israeli tank with a stone at
the Karni crossing into the Gaza Strip. Ten days later, on 8 November,
Odeh was again throwing stones at the Karni crossing when he was
fatally wounded by Israeli troops. The boy and the image subsequently
assumed iconic status as a symbol of opposition to Israel’s occupation
of Palestinian land.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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The Separation Wall initiated, 2002-
[59 x 76cm]
Source of image: https://tinyurl.com/7qf89tld Embroidery: Nawal Ibrahim al Ahmed [Tabariyeh], Ain al-Hilweh, Lebanon
Since
June 2002, Israel has separated Palestinians from their lands and
relatives by constructing a wall that stretches for more than 700
kilometers, annexing Palestinian land in the West Bank. On July 9, 2004,
the International Court of Justice ruled that construction of the wall
was “contrary to international law” because it involves the destruction
and confiscation of Palestinian property and imposes severe restrictions
on Palestinian movement. Israel claims that the separation wall is
necessary for its security. Palestinians use the wall as an artist’s
canvas.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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Boycott, Divestment & Sanctions movement inaugurated, 2005 —
[59 x 96 cm]
Source of image: BDS Movement Embroidery: Haya Al-Saadi [Al- Lyd], Ramallah, Palestine
The
Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) Campaign is a Palestinian-led
movement for freedom, justice and equality. BDS upholds the simple
principle that Palestinians are entitled to the same rights as the rest
of humanity. Israel is occupying and colonising Palestinian land,
discriminating against Palestinian citizens of Israel, and denying
Palestinian refugees the right to return to their homes. Inspired by the
South African anti-apartheid movement, the BDS call for restrictive
measures against Israel urges compliance with international law. BDS is
now a vibrant global movement made up of unions, academic associations,
churches and grassroots movements across the world. BDS challenges
international inaction on behalf of Palestinian rights and against
Israel’s occupation.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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Gaza rooftops
[59 x 106 cm]
Source of image: Design by Adham Jaber [Hirbiya], Gaza, Palestine Embroidery: Hekmat Ashour [Gaza], Gaza
This
panel features products of Gaza – oranges, dates, fish and earthenware
pots – and the 12th century Sayed al-Hashim Mosque (Masjid as-Sayed
Hashim). It is one of the largest and oldest mosques in Gaza, located in
the ad-Darraj Quarter of the Old City, off al-Wehda Street.
Long ago in Gaza
To have lived in Gaza is to have loved Gaza. In 1969 and 1970, when I
was in my early 20s, I worked for two years in the UNRWA Palestinian
refugee camp in Jabalia in the Gaza Strip. It was one the most
remarkable and enlightening times of my life. The people were among the
most generous, loving and fun people I have ever known.
The land along the length and across the breadth of The Strip was
cultivated with every fruit and vegetable imaginable. The soil was
lovingly tended by the farmers and their families with what little they
had to work with. The sea was plentiful with its fruits. Small
family-owned fishing boats could be seen on the horizon all day, and at
night, with their lights, they were known as ‘the road to Cairo’. The
Gaza Strip was a bustling, busy place with a food market, shops and
falafel stalls, and wonderful restaurants with delicious Palestinian
cuisine. The beach, with its sparkling yellow sand, was used by all to
eat al fresco and spend lazy afternoons sleeping in the sun.
The Strip was under military occupation by the Israeli Defence Force
(IDF) at that time, following the IDF’s attack on Egypt via Gaza in June
1967. By 1969, the Palestinian people had picked themselves up and had
begun to accommodate to the new reality of military occupation. The
darker side of life came after 6pm every day when the whole of the Gaza
Strip was placed under curfew. The IDF occupation, with its half-tracks,
tanks and guns roamed the streets of The Strip like prowling predators.
The night and darkness gave up sounds of rolling and roaring tanks and
of shooting and bombing. Flares were used to search for anyone who dared
to venture out into the streets. The occasional dog bark or human yell
would be heard. Of course, we who worked for the United Nations were
not subject to the curfew and were allowed to go out at night to visit
friends, and we certainly did so. Our UN-registered VW Combi was stopped
many times by jumpy, trigger-happy young soldiers who, with shaky
hands, took our UN passes to check our permits. The beach – sparkling by
day- -was patrolled at night by Israeli soldiers. Every evening, along
the whole of its length, the beach was raked by half-tracks. Any
footprints discovered by the IDF on this nocturnally forbidden land
would lead to attempts to track down the trespassers.
Over the half century since I lived in Gaza, the Palestinian people
have been crushed time and time again by Israel – their buildings
destroyed, their homes made unliveable, and their streets made dangerous
and unpassable. Since 2007, Israel and Egypt have imposed a siege, with
the result that there are shortages of food, medicines, water,
electricity and fuel, and yet, like a phoenix from the fire, Gaza people
rise. Admire them, salute them, and demand their right to live
peacefully in their land.
Jan Chalmers, Founder, Palestinian History Tapestry Project. (2021
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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Siege of Gaza, 2007 —
[59 x 72 cm]
Source of image: Al Jazeera. Life Under Siege Sketch: Shaymaa Abu-Hasanain [Gaza], Gaza, Palestine Embroidery: Safaa Abu-Dalu [Gaza], Gaza
Israel has imposed movement restrictions on the Gaza Strip since
the early 1990’s. Restrictions intensified in June 2007 following the
election of Hamas in 2006. Israel then imposed a land, sea and air
blockade on Gaza, citing security concerns. Despite relaxation of some
blockade-related restrictions in recent years, two million Palestinians
in Gaza remain ‘locked in’, denied free access both to the remainder of
the occupied Palestinian territory (oPt) and the outside world. The
blockade has undermined the living conditions in the coastal enclave and
fragmented the oPt and its economic and social fabric. The isolation of
Gaza has been exacerbated by restrictions imposed by the Egyptian
authorities on Rafah, its only passengers’ crossing.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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Gaza under siege, 2007-
[59 x 35 cm]
Source of image: PHT design Embroidery: Jan Chalmers, UK
Sponsored by: Chalmers Family, UK.
“Greetings to the one who shares with me an attention to the
drunkenness of light, the light of the butterfly, in the blackness of
this tunnel.” Mahmoud Darwish, Palestinian poet.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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Woman in rubble, Gaza assault, 2008-9
[59 x 88 cm]
Source of image: Peter Rhoades, Artist Design: Peter Rhoades, Oxford-UK Embroidery: Basma Al-Natoor [Tabariyeh], Ain al-Hilweh, Lebanon
On
27 December 2008, Israel launched a 22-day military assault on Gaza,
killing more than 1400 Palestinians and rendering homeless thousands who
had left their homes before these were destroyed. This new pattern of
Palestinian suffering continues decades after the trauma of the Nakba in
1948. The embroidery is based on a drawing by Peter Rhoades, an
Oxford-based artist, and illustrates a women sitting on the pile of
rubble that was once her home.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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Homeless family, Gaza assault, 2008—9
[59 x 92 cm]
Source of image: Peter Rhoades, Artist Design: Peter Rhoades, Oxford-UK Embroidery: Iman Shehaby [Tabariyeh], Ain al-Hilweh, Lebanon
On
27 December 2008, Israel launched a 22-day military assault on Gaza,
killing more than 1400 Palestinians and rendering homeless thousands who
had left their homes before these were destroyed. This new pattern of
Palestinian suffering continues decades after the trauma of the Nakba in
1948. The embroidery is based on a drawing by Peter Rhoades, an
Oxford-based artist, and illustrates a family looking for their
belongings in the rubble of Shejayiya, a neighbourhood of Gaza city at
the eastern border of Gaza with Israel.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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Destruction of Bedouin villages
[59 x 72 cm]
Source of image: From a painting by Bashir Abu-Rabia' Design: Bashir Abu-Rabia (Naqab) Embroidery: Naama al Awawdah [Es Samu], Khalil District.
This
panel draws attention to the cycle of destruction and reconstruction of
many Bedouin villages, including Al-Arakeeb, Aum Al-Heran, and
threatened Khan Al-Ahmar in the Jordan Valley. These villages have been
destroyed by the Israeli Army in a policy of further ethnic cleansing
to establish Jewish-only settlements. The panel is inspired by a
painting by Bashir Abu-Rabia’, the first Bedouin artist in the Negev,
who began featuring Palestinian embroidery in his paintings in 1969.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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Palestine becomes UN Non-Member Observer State 2012
[59 x 85]
Source of image: PHT design Embroidery: Jan Chalmers, UK
On
29 November 2012, the General Assembly of the United Nations accorded
Palestine non-Member Observer State status by an overwhelming majority —
138 in favour to 9 against (Canada, Czech Republic, Israel, Marshall
Islands, Micronesia, Nauru, Panama, Palau, United States), with 41
abstentions.
The meaning of the Pan-Arab colours of the Palestinian flag come from
the poem ‘al-Fakhr Hillis’ (Boast) by Safi Al-Din Al-Hilli
(1278-1349). Safi was a famous 13th century poet born in Hillah, in
modern day Iraq.
“Red are our swords, Green are our fields, Black are our battles, White are our deeds”
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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Sumud (Steadfastness)
Source of image: Samar Alhallaq [Majdal], Gaza, Palestine Embroidery: Samar Alhallaq [Majdal], Gaza, Palestine Supported by: Alhallaq Family, Gaza, Palestine
Palestinian
prisoners in Israeli jails use hunger strikes to protest against
prolonged administrative detention without trial. This embroidery, based
on an image by an unnamed illustrator, was disseminated widely among
activists on social networks in an expression of solidarity with the
mass hunger strike. The image endeavoured to raise awareness of the
suffering of Palestinian women prisoners and their steadfast
determination to attain their rights. The Arabic lettering reads
‘Samedoun’ (‘We are steadfast’). The Hebrew lettering reads ‘Shabas’,
the Israeli Prison Service. The panel was stitched in Oxford by Samar
Alhallaq in 2013. She was killed by Israeli shelling in Gaza in 2014.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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Boys on the beach, Gaza assault, 16 July 2014
[59 x 80 cm]
Source of image: Amir Schiby, Artist, Israel Design: Amir Schiby, Artist, Israel Sketch: Shaymaa Abu-Hasanain [Gaza], Gaza, Palestine Embroidery: Mayyada Abu Sitta [Bir Seb’a], Gaza, Palestine
During
the 2014 Israeli assault on Gaza, Ahed Atef Bakr, Zakaria Ahed Bakr,
Mohamed Ramez Bakr, and Ismael Mohamed Bakr were playing on the Gaza
beach and were killed by fire from an Israeli gunboat. Israeli artist
Amir Schiby created an image of the boys to honour their tragically
short lives. It depicts a lone soccer ball in the surf, with the shadows
of children playing nearby. Schiby wrote on Facebook that the image was
created “as a tribute to all children living in war zones.”
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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Deaths from Gaza hostilities, 2000-2016
[59 x125 cm]
Source of image: Statistics provided by B’Tselem, Israel Embroidery: Jan Chalmers, UK
Sponsored by: Chalmers Family, UK
This embroidered infographic displays data on all 6691 Palestinian
and 228 Israeli deaths from Gaza-related hostilities between October
2000 and August 2016. The first column (black) displays deaths of
Israeli military personnel and definite and possible Palestinian
combatants. The other columns display deaths of civilians, from left to
right, adult men (deep gray), youths aged 10-17 (mid-gray), women (pale
gray), and children under the age of 10 (white).
Acknowledgments:
The Palestinian History Tapestry Project is indebted to B’Tselem, the
Israeli Information Center for Human Rights in the Occupied
Territories) for providing these data.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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Illegal colonisation of Jerusalem and West Bank, 1967-2017
[59 x 125 cm]
Source of image: Statistics provided by Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics and B’Tselem, Israel Embroidery: Jan Chalmers, UK
In
1967, Israel illegally colonised Jerusalem and the West Bank. The panel
shows the gradually increasing proportion of illegal colonists in these
parts of Palestine.
Sponsored by: Chalmers Family, UK
Data sources:-
1967, 1977, and 1987:
United Nations Conference on Trade And Development (UNCTAD)
1997-2017:
Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics; and B’Tselem
Acknowledgements: The Palestinian History Tapestry
Project is indebted to Abla Sami (Institute of Community and Public
Health, Birzeit University), and B’Tselem (the Israeli Information
Center for Human Rights in the Occupied Territories
https://www.btselem.org/) for help in assembling the data represented in
this panel.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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Disappearing Palestine
[59 x 34 cm]
Source of image: Disappearing Palestine Embroidery: Almaza Al-Helou [Al A'abasiyeh] Ramallah, Palestine
Since
occupying the West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza in 1967, Israel has
unilaterally declared tens of thousands of hectares of so-called ‘State
Land’ for Israeli settlements. In 2005, Israel closed its settlements in
Gaza but has maintained its occupation there, controlling airspace, and
access by land and sea. Israeli settlements, checkpoints, military
zones, the separation wall and other access restrictions have turned the
West Bank into a series of disconnected cantons. Over 520,000 Israeli
Jews live in illegal settlements, flouting the provisions of the 4th
Geneva Convention and international law. Successive Israeli governments
have used economic incentives to encourage families and businesses to
move to the illegal settlements.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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The Great March of Return, 2018-
[59 x 81 cm]
Source of image: Inspired from video, (see link below) Design: Ibrahim Al Muhtadi [Al Quds], Gaza, Palestine Embroidery: Karema Nassar [Barbara], Gaza, Palestine
The Great March of Return, a series of protests at points near the
fence between Gaza and Israel, began on 30 March 2018. The protests were
initiated by Palestinian activists independently from Palestinian
political factions. The protesters demand that Palestinian refugees and
their descendants be allowed to return to the land from which they were
displaced in 1948. Many non-violent protesters, including children,
medics and journalists, were killed and maimed by Israeli snipers using
live ammunition, creating life-long disabilities. The theft of
militarily occupied Palestinian land for the use of Jewish Israeli
settlers is still ongoing and continuous despite being in violation of
international law.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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‘Jerusalem, you are beloved’
[59 x 105 cm]
Source of image: Design by Haroon Haj Amer, Drejat, Naqab Design: Haroon Haj Amer, Drejat, Naqab Embroidery: Yasmeen Haj Amer, Drejat, Naqab Supported by: Haj Amer, Family, Drejat, Naqab
Sponsored by: Haj Amer, Family, Drejat, Naqab
“You have a great place in our hearts. Oh Jerusalem, you are beloved.” From a poem by Lutfi Zaghloul.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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The dove
[59 x 42 cm]
Source of image: Mary Knoll Office for Global Concerns Embroidery: Nawal Ibrahim Al-Ahmad [Tabariyeh], Ein al-Hilweh, Lebanon
The
dove has been a symbol of peace for thousands of years in many
different cultures, including Palestinian culture. It was Pablo Picasso
who made the dove a modern symbol of peace when he used it on a poster
for the World Peace Congress in 1949.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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Olive branch
[59 x 40 cm]
Source of image: PHT design Embroidery: Iman Shehaby [Tabariyeh], Ein el Hilweh, Lebanon
The olive branch, a symbol of peace.
Nothing symbolizes Palestinian land, identity and culture as olives
and olive oil do. Olive trees are the hallmarks of national pride and
the veritable heart of Palestine’s agricultural economy
Palestinian olive oil production contributes millions annually to
some of the poorest, most disadvantaged families and communities in the
occupied West Bank. It is a primary source of revenue for the economy
and nearly half of all agricultural land use is devoted to olive trees.
As one of the territory’s major exports, the extent to which olives and
olive oil contribute to employment opportunities and income for 100,000
Palestinian farming families cannot be overstated.
Yet, the Israeli government deliberately prevents access to land where olive farms are located.
Physical barriers such as checkpoints and road blocks have restricted
the free movement of people and goods within the West Bank and
obstructed access for Palestinian agricultural produce, including olives
and olive oil, to internal, Israeli and international market.
Settler attacks and harassment against Palestinian olive farmers are common.
The Israeli government overlooks settler violence against the groves
and their owners, which includes stealing their fruits, torching or
uprooting tens of thousands of trees, and attacking farmers to
intimidate them, and prevent them from harvesting their olive crops.
It’s a tragedy that the olive branch – a symbol of peace – has become a casualty of settler violence.
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
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The key for return
[59 x 37 cm]
Source of image: PHT design Embroidery: Hejar Abu Saleem [Ajjur, district of Hebron], Amman Jordan
When
700,000 Palestinians fled from or were thrown out of their homes during
the Nakba in 1948, they took their house keys with them, convinced that
they would come back after a week or two and re-open their front doors.
The keys have been passed on from generation to generation as a
reminder of their lost homes and as lasting symbols of their ‘right of
return’. The Palestinian right of return or compensation was
internationally recognised by the United Nations General Assembly
Resolution 194, adopted on 11 December 1948.
“One lovely word, and two lovely words, my homeland”
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
Further reading
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“On this land”, Mahmoud Darwish, Palestinian National Poet
[59 × 102 cm]
Source of image: Design by Ibrahim Muhtadi [Al Quds], Gaza, Palestine Design: Ibrahim Muhtadi [Al Quds], Gaza, Palestine Embroidery: Hekmat Ashour [Gaza], Gaza, Palestine
“We have on this land that which makes this life worth living”. Mahmoud Darwish, Palestinian National Poet.
Poetry is popular in all Arab societies. Palestinian families
sometimes compete in reciting classical poems, for example, by
concluding a verse with a letter from which it is difficult for the next
person to continue. Mahmoud Darwish’s poem “On this land those who
deserve to live” is well known to Palestinians.
Recitation by: Mahmoud Darwish
Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)
Further reading
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Future of the Palestinian History Tapestry
Development of the Palestinian History Tapestry
Palestinian embroiderers will continue to be commissioned to stitch
additional illustrative panels relevant to events and themes, from the
Neolithic period to the present. The Palestinian Subcommittee for Panel
Image Selection, will remain responsible for prioritizing additional
images for stitch.
The Palestinian History Tapestry is owned by the Palestinian
History Tapestry Project. Images and texts are copyright of the
Palestinian History Tapestry Project.
Where not otherwise indicated, material in the Palestinian
History Tapestry is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
International License.
Era: Future of the Project