The Palestinian Nakba: The Historical Disaster That Still Screams Today

By the time the war was over, some 700,000 Palestinians had left or been expelled from their homes.

The Nakba (Arabic for "total disaster") is the Palestinian story of getting violently booted from their homes when Israel was created in 1948. Imagine entire neighborhoods erased, families scattered like confetti, and generations stuck in refugee camps—this wasn’t just a bad year, it was the start of a never-ending fight for survival. Fast forward to today, and the Nakba isn’t just a history lesson—it’s the gasoline fueling every protest, negotiation, and war cry in the Israel-Palestine mess.

While politicians argue over maps and rights, real people are still living this nightmare. Refugee camps are packed, old keys to lost houses are kept like sacred relics, and every new conflict drags the past back into the headlines. The Nakba isn’t over—it’s on replay, and the world keeps hitting the "ignore" button.

(Source: Deutsche Welle – What is the Palestinian Nakba?)

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