The Institute for Middle East Understanding

Visual Arts
"I come from there and remember..." exhibit to mark Nakba anniversary
Gina Benevento & Issam Nasser, UNRWA, May 12, 2008

unrwa-nakba-poster.jpg
"I come from there and rember..." opens May 14 in Jerusalem, Ramallah and Beirut, May 15 in Gaza City and Damascus, and May 18 in Amman.
On May 14, in commmemoration of the 60th anniversary of the Palestinian Nakba, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) will launch "I came from there... and remember", a multi-venue photo exhibition of images from pre-Nakba Palestine. Drawing on its own tremendous archives, UNRWA will exhibit a selection of photographs at venues in Jerusalem, Ramallah, Gaza City, Damascus, Beirut, and Amman. For more information, see below, or visit www.un.org/unrwa.

Looking over the photographs selected by Amani Shaltout, our dedicated archivist, my eyes linger on the faces.

What happened to the old man being helped aboard a departing boat? Where is the young woman staring out at us from the back of a Haganah truck?

There is almost a uniformity to these images. The faces inevitably express fear, confusion, sadness.

The bodies are in flight – walking, running, being carried – helped by trucks and boats. And there are always tents – single tents, then rows, opening up to reveal fields of tents as far as the camera and eye can see.

But one photograph makes me stop. It is a photograph of two young girls pushing carts stuffed with bedding. I've seen the frightened, sad faces before. But it is what is behind the young girls that stops me: two large stone buildings, built in a popular European style.

jaffa-nakba-unrwa.jpg
(UNRWA)


Palestinian refugee iconography focuses on that which is temporal – tents, trucks, mattresses slung over shoulders – all symbols of dispersion. But these buildings are permanent: homes and shops – part of what was once a stable and thriving Palestinian community. Only minutes earlier these young girls were not refugees. Their home, their school, their playground – everything familiar and dear – are still a few short blocks away.

I go back and look again at the first photos. Who were these people before they were turned overnight into refugees? I remember words from a poem by Mahmoud Darwish:

I come from there and I remember
Born as mortals are, I have a mother
And a house with many windows...


The old man and woman staring at us so stoically from the entrance to their tent: did their home have many windows? Had their life been a happy one? The 120,000 Palestinians who fled Haifa: whom had they loved and married? The 123,000 who fled Jaffa: what had they taught their children? What was their life a year, a week, a moment before? How many worlds had been lost?

And so began the work on "I Come from There and Remember" – a photo exhibition that evokes the life of pre-1948 Palestine – UNRWA's commemoration to mark the 60th anniversary of al-Nakba. The exhibit premieres simultaneously in six locations – Jerusalem, Ramallah, Gaza City, Amman, Beirut, and Damascus – on 14 May 2008.

Musical performances and lectures will focus on the exhibition's theme of Palestinian life before 1948, and it is planned that all six exhibits will later tour universities, municipalities, and refugee camps. The exhibition is also available for hosting and touring, regionally or internationally.

"I Come from There and Remember" is sponsored by the Swiss Development for Cooperation (SDC); the British Consulate General; the Arab Fund for Arts and Culture; and the A.M. Qattan Foundation.

Gina Benevento (conception and curating) is Chief of Public Information for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA). She can be reached at g.benevento@unrwa.org.

Issam Nasser (conception and curating) is a photo historian and university lecturer. He can be reached at irnassa@ilstu.edu.





"I come from there, and remember"

  • East Jerusalem:

    Wednesday 14th May
    5.30pm – French Cultural Centre
    7pm – Dar al-Tifl Museum

    Exhibition closes Wednesday 28th May

  • Ramallah:

    Wednesday 14th May
    7pm – Khalil Sakakini Cultural Centre

    Exhibition closes Wednesday 28th May

  • Beirut:

    Wednesday 14th May, 6pm
    6pm - UNESCO Palace

    Exhibition closes Thursday 15th May

  • Gaza:

    Thursday May 15th
    2pm – The Rehabilitation Centre for the Visually Impaired.

    Exhibition closes 8pm, Thursday May 15th

  • Damascus:

    Thursday May 15th
    11am - Yarmouk Camp Cultural Centre

    Exhibition closes Thursday 22nd May

  • Amman:

    Sunday 18th May
    12pm – Foresight Gallery

    Exhibition closes Sunday 1st June

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This page was printed out from the website of the Institute for Middle East Understanding (IMEU) found at www.imeu.net. The IMEU provides journalists with quick access to information about Palestine and the Palestinians, as well as expert sources, both in the U.S. and the Middle East.