Tumgik
#palestine dress
safije · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Native Americans march in solidarity with Palestine
Denver, Colorado USA
© Malek Asfeer 
20K notes · View notes
plomegranate · 7 months
Text
i love palestinian and arab culture so much.
my grandma wearing thobes around the house and making us tamriyeh. my cousins wedding when we all wore thobes and keffiyehs and took photos downtown and we danced with someone playing the guitar on the street and this lady stopping us to tell us we all looked so beautiful. walking the graduation stage in a thobe. the girl who liked to guess arab peoples ethnicities telling me "you're wearing tatreez... do you want me to write 'palestinian' on your forehead?" the keffiyeh my brother keeps on the drivers seat of his car.
my dad sending me off to my last semester of college with 2 pomegranates and a jar of palestinian olive oil. my cousins wife coming up with new ways to make zaatar and cheese pastries. me and my grandma sitting on the floor and making waraq 3neb- my job was to separate the leaves so she could roll them easier. my mom sending me and my brother to school with eid cookies for my teachers and tasking us with delivering some to the neighbors. my aunt glaring at me and piling more food on my plate and then asking if i was still hungry (i wasnt). my mom always telling me to invite my friends and cousins over for dinner and asking me what they like to eat. my family getting my dad knafeh instead of cake for his birthday. the man who told me i made the "best fetteh in the western hemisphere".
the man in the shawarma shop who gave me my fries for free and baklava i didnt order because we spoke about being palestinian while he took my order. the person on tumblr who i bonded with because we are from the same palestinian city. the girl i met on campus who exclaimed "youre palestinian? me too!" because i was wearing my keffiyeh. the girl in my class that showed me the artwork about palestine her dad made and donated for fundraising. the couple in the grocery store who noticed my palestinian shirt and talked with me for 20 minutes and ended up being a family friend. the silly palestinian kids i tutored sighing in disappointment when i told them i was born in america because they were hoping that id have been born "somewhere cooler". my friends family who bought me dinner despite me being there by chance and having met me for the first time the day before.
the boys starting uncoordinated dabke lines in my high school's hallways. the songs about the longing and love for our land. the festivals and parties and gatherings where everything smells like shisha and oud. memories of waiting in the car for an hour as my parents talked at the doorway of their friends homes. my cousins and i showing up at each others homes with cake or fruit or games as if it was the first time we ever visited even though we always say "you dont have to".
kids stubbornly helping to clean and make tea after a meal while being told to go sit down because they are guests. the necklaces in the shape of our home countries. people hugging and laughing and acting as if theyve known each other for years because they come from the same city or know people with the same last name. the day i finally got to bully my friends into letting me pay the bill because i had a job and they were still students. my moms friend who calls us every time she's at the grocery store to see if we need something
palestinian people are so resilient and hardworking and charitable. they love their culture and their community and are so quick to share and welcome anyone in. everyday i am so thankful and proud to be part of such a warm and lovely culture
2K notes · View notes
sidebee-hive · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Historical and modern examples of the Intifada thobe. Israel banned the Palestinian flag during the first Intifada, so women would sew it into their dresses.
2K notes · View notes
acqueli-anime · 3 months
Text
Palestine.
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
I like to express the beautiful culture and magic of this land through showing their traditional dress. My love for Palestine is endless.i love their food,dress and everything else to belong palestine.
.
.
.
From the river to the sea palestine will be free inshallah.🇵🇸❤️🇵🇸❤️
222 notes · View notes
leroibobo · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
when the homes in the depopulated palestinian village of lifta were originally built is impossible to tell and most likely varies from house to house. the area's been known since ancient times, including having been written about in the hebrew bible. it's retained multiple different names throughout history - lifta by romans, nephto by byzantines, clepsta by crusaders, then lifta again by arabs. in more recent times, the area saw battle in the early 19th century, when it saw a peasant's revolt against egyptian conscription and taxation policies. (egyptian-ottoman ruler muhammad ali had attempted to become independent from the ottoman empire, and sought to use the area of "greater syria" which palestine was apart of as a buffer state.)
the village was predominantly muslim with a mosque, a maqām for local sage shaykh badr, a few shops, a social club, two coffee houses, and an elementary school which opened in 1945. its economy was based in farming - being a village of jerusalem, farmers would sell their produce in the city's markets. an olive press which remains in the village gives evidence to one of the most important crops its residents farmed. the historically wealthy village was known for its intricate embroidery and sewing, particularly of thob ghabani bridal dresses, which attracted buyers from across the levant.
lifta also represents one of the few palestinian villages in which the structures weren't totally or mostly decimated during the 1948 nakba. 60 of the 450 original houses remain intact. from zochrot's entry on lifta:
Tumblr media
israel's absentee property law of 1950 permits the state to expropriate land and assets left behind, and denies palestinians the right to return to old homes or to reclaim their property. it's estimated that there's around 400,000 descendants of the village's original refugee population dispersed in east jerusalem, the west bank, jordan, and the palestinian diaspora.
like many depopulated palestinian houses, some of those in lifta were initially used to settle predominantly mizrahi immigrants and refugees, in this case 300 jewish families from yemen and kurdistan. the houses weren't registered in their names, and the area generally saw poor infrastructure and no resources including water and electricity provided by the government. most left in the early 1970s as a part of a compensation program to move out people who'd been settled in depopulated palestinian houses - if they didn't, they were referred to as "squatters" and evicted. (holes were even drilled in the roofs of evacuated buildings to make them less habitable). the 13 families which remain there today only managed to do so because they lived close to the edge of the village.
in 1987, the israeli nature reserves authority planned to restore the "long-abandoned village" and turn it into a natural history center which would "stress the jewish roots of the site", but nothing came of it. several more government proposals on what to do with the land had been brought up since then. this culminated in in 2021 when the israel land administration announced without informing the jerusalem municipal authorities that it issued a tender for the construction of a luxury neighborhood on the village's ruins, consisting of 259 villas, a hotel, and a mall. since 2023, they've agreed to shelve and "rethink" these plans after widespread objection.
the reasons for the objections varied significantly between the opposing israeli politicians - who see the village as an exemplar of cultural heritage and "frozen in time" model of palestinian villages before 1948 - and palestinians - who largely see the village as a witness of the nakba and a symbol of hope for their return. lifta is currently listed by unesco as a potential world heritage site, a designation netanyahu has threatened to remove several times.
many palestinians who are descendent from its former residents still live nearby. like with many other depopulated palestinian villages, they've never ceased to visit, organize tours of the village, and advocate for its preservation.
397 notes · View notes
tikki-wikki · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media
The ultimate he/him devil fruit user collab with @fifisfia <33
246 notes · View notes
nothingelsetobe · 3 months
Text
Remember the Palestinian genocide is still ongoing, even during Ramadan and while everyone is distracted by the Oscars. Make noise.
Tumblr media
They are going to worsen their strikes while people are looking away. It is already happening. Don't look away and use your voice for the people of Palestine.
189 notes · View notes
bebemoon · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media
you got it
Tumblr media Tumblr media
angelica mesisca barrientos wearing fashion
352 notes · View notes
Text
🎃🦇🕸️HAPPY HALLOWEEN🕸️🦇🎃
Tumblr media
But always remember, even in your celebration:
Tumblr media
147 notes · View notes
86 notes · View notes
beldaroot · 4 months
Text
it's actually wild how the west continues to paint resistance fighters as terrorists like we haven't seen the iof and its allies do some of the most terrorizing, depraved acts committed on humanity for the past five months with complete impunity
59 notes · View notes
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Dress
c.1850
Syria & Palestine
Royal Ontario Museum (Object number: 946.7.20)
297 notes · View notes
conqu3er · 1 month
Text
it's so surreal to watch all these unbelievably rich people prance around in their fancy clothes seemingly not giving a fuck, while i'm at my shitty 4,5 €/hour job, waiting for my paycheck so i can donate 3 euros to a few palestinian families
31 notes · View notes
gothgleek · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Hadal embroidered an Arabic love poem by Mahmoud Darwish, a Palestinian poet, on invisible tulle. The embroidery is custom typography created by a calligraphy artist. The poem reads:
قالوا: تموت بها حبـاًً، فقلـت لهـم
‏ألا اذكروها علـى قبـري فتحيينـي
English translation:
They asked “Do you love her to death?” I said “Speak of her over my grave and watch how she brings me back to life.”
64 notes · View notes
Text
genuinely anyone raving about the met gala this year and rating outfits — i don’t care if you did this in years past, if you are talking about the met gala and not also talking about the suffering in palestine right now, that is despicable. ESPECIALLY since there was a protest for palestine right outside those stupid, extravagant doors that celebrities payed $75k to get through.
27 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Does this dress look cute on me?🥺
22 notes · View notes