Amid the graphic images, fierce polemics and endless media criticism that have dominated my social media feeds since the war in Gaza began late last year, I noticed a seemingly bizarre subplot emerge: skin cancer in Israel.
“You are not Indigenous if your body cannot tolerate the area’s climate,” one such post read, highlighting outdated news coverage claiming that Israelis had unusually high rates of skin cancer.
In the context of the ongoing slaughter in Gaza — more than 28,000 people dead, mostly women and children — such posturing may seem trivial.
But even, or maybe especially, at this moment, when things are so grim, the way we talk about liberation matters.
In this analysis, there are two kinds of people: those who are native to a land and those who settle it, displacing the original inhabitants.
Persons:
“, slinging, Frantz Fanon, Ghana’s Kwame Nkrumah, Jawaharlal Nehru, Fanon —
Organizations:
Palestine
Locations:
Gaza, Israel, Jordan, Palestine