To mark the 60th anniversary of the founding of the Institute for Palestine Studies in 2023 — which coincided with the 75th anniversary of the Nakba — the Institute for Palestine Studies is hosting its annual conference, titled “75 Years of an Ongoing Nakba: The Question of Knowledge Production.” The conference is set to open on Monday, May 20, in Beirut, with the participation of researchers, academics, and historians from Palestine and around the world. Additionally, sessions will take place in Birzeit, New York, and online. Originally slated to be held in late 2023, a new date for the conference was set, incorporating new content and themes.
This conference comes at a crucial moment for the Palestinian cause, given the relentless Israeli onslaught on Gaza, which has lasted over 200 days and has targeted every pillar of Palestinian life. This is why the Institute for Palestine Studies sees the commitment to continue scholarly and research work as a vital form of resistance against the Zionist project. The Institute also believes that the current war is a part of the ongoing Nakba.
The primary goal of this conference is to reassess the decades of intellectual and scholarly production about the Nakba — published in Arabic, English, French, and Hebrew — by examining the body of work comprehensively. The aim is to explore new perspectives on understanding this pivotal and foundational event in Palestinian history.
The Nakba isn't merely a historical issue: it's a pressing concern of the present and future, as the Zionist project continues in its attempts to erase the memory of the Nakba, which is a cornerstone of the national identity of the Palestinian people. Today, more than ever, Palestinian people understand the importance of keeping the memory of Nakba alive and teaching it in schools, universities, and beyond. This is vital for fostering unity, navigating current challenges facing the national movement, and injecting renewed vigor into Palestinian political resistance.
The conference is organized in collaboration with several research institutions in Palestine and worldwide, including Birzeit University, the American University of Beirut, Saint Joseph University of Beirut, the Orient-Institut Beirut, the Arab Council for Social Sciences, and the Center for Palestine Studies at Columbia University - New York.
Organized by the Institute for Palestine Studies, in partnership with Birzeit University, Center for Palestine Studies at Columbia University, The Palestine Land Studies Center (PLSC) at the American University of Beirut, Arab Council for the Social Sciences, Département d'Histoire-Relations Internationales de l'Université Saint-Joseph de Beyrouth, Orient-Institut Beirut (OIB).