Nakba Explained: The Palestinian Catastrophe That Never Actually Ended

More than 750,000 Palestinian were forcibly expelled from their homeland by Zionist militia in 1948 (AFP).


Catastrophe—wasn’t just some historical event that happened in 1948 and then faded away. Nah, this was the start of a brutal, ongoing erasure. When Israel declared itself a shiny new state, over 750,000 Palestinians got forcibly removed from their homes—some at gunpoint, others fleeing massacres, whole villages straight-up demolished. And guess what? Those refugees and their kids and grandkids? Still waiting to go back, still stuck in camps, still getting treated like human bargaining chips.

Fast-forward to today, and the Nakba isn’t just a sad chapter in a history book—it’s the foundation of everything happening in Palestine right now. Every bulldozer tearing down a Palestinian home, every checkpoint, every bomb dropped on Gaza? That’s the Nakba still playing out in real time. And until the world actually deals with what went down (and keeps going down), this catastrophe ain’t over.

(Source: Middle East Eye – Nakba: The Palestinian catastrophe, explained)

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