Tag: Palestinian

  • What is ‘Dreams on a Pillow’, the Palestinian game about the Nakba? | Al-Nakba News

    What is ‘Dreams on a Pillow’, the Palestinian game about the Nakba? | Al-Nakba News


    Can a video game make you feel the weight of history? That’s the ambitious goal of a new pseudo-3D stealth adventure game called “Dreams on a Pillow”, launched by Palestinian game developers.

    The game is inspired by the events of the 1948 Nakba or “catastrophe”, referring to the ethnic cleansing of 750,000 Palestinians from their homes located in what is now the state of Israel.

    It is slated to be released in 2026.

    So what do we know about the game that is launched at a time when Palestinians are hoping this week’s ceasefire deal between Hamas and Israel for Gaza, where more than 46,000 people have been killed in the 15-month-long Israeli bombardment of the strip, will actually hold?

    Who is behind the game and what is its goal?

    The game is the brainchild of Rasheed Abueideh, a developer based in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

    “We are trying to make this game a masterpiece,” Abueideh, the game’s director and designer, told Al Jazeera. His last game, Liyla and the Shadows of War, based on the 2014 Israeli offensive in Gaza, was a huge hit.

    “It’s a heavy story. And we want to inject all of these pieces of information through a gameplay that resonates with the players,” he said.

    Abueideh, who is based in Nablus in the West Bank, says he would like the world to understand that the Israeli war on Gaza is a direct result of previous events and decisions beyond the event of October 7, 2023.

    Dreams on a pillow
    Concept art shows images from the new game based on the Nakba [Courtesy of Dreams on a Pillow]

    The game, he says, is also an attempt to highlight and share the rich history of Palestine.

    Despite his past success, he has struggled to get funding from conventional sources. So he crowdsourced on LaunchGood, a global crowdfunding platform focused on supporting Muslim communities worldwide. Dreams on a Pillow reached its funding goal of $194,800 on January 7. At the time of writing, the video game project has raised $218,272.

    The current funding for the game is enough to start development and should cover costs for the first year including salaries, outsourcing and asset creation.

    According to Abueideh, LaunchGood emerged as one of the few viable options for fundraising efforts, as many mainstream crowdfunding platforms refused to help.

    Palestine-related content often faces heightened scrutiny and, in some cases, outright prohibition. The censorship or even the shadow banning of pro-Palestine content has been well documented.

    In May 2023, a YouTube video made by Palestinian officials, which was meant to be presented at a United Nations Human Rights Council meeting, was removed from the platform. The platform has been accused of violating the digital rights of Palestinians.

    Investigations by rights organisations and media outlets have revealed the removal and suppression of pro-Palestinian content from social media platforms such Instagram and Facebook.

    Netflix removed nearly all 32 films about Palestine on its platform. The streaming giant attributed the removal of the films to the expiration of three-year licensing agreements. However, this sudden deletion prompted an outcry from human rights groups and individuals across social media platforms, according to broadcaster TRT World.

    What’s the story behind Dreams on a Pillow?

    The central theme of the game is based on Palestinian folklore around the legend of Omm, a young mother who flees the 1948 Israeli massacre in Tantura, a Palestinian town now part of Israel.

    While escaping through other Palestinian villages and refugee camps on her way to Lebanon, she witnessed events that unfolded in these communities and cities along the way.

    According to Abueideh, this journey serves as a lens through which we observe the broader historical context and personal experiences of displacement during this tumultuous period.

    Omm’s husband falls victim to Israeli invaders. Frantically, she rushes home to save her newborn child. In her haste and terror, she flees the town, only to discover later that she had mistakenly grabbed a pillow instead of her baby.

    The story’s conclusion varies significantly depending on the storyteller and audience. In most renditions, the mother descends into madness. Other versions depict either her murder or her successful evasion of Israeli patrols and military units, leading to her escape from her homeland – a place she might not see again.

    In a recent Ask Me Anything (AMA) live on Reddit, Abueideh states why Omm was chosen:

    “The young mother’s experiences highlight how devastating the Nakba was, particularly the psychological impact it had on her. This adds a deeper layer to understanding what happened, shedding light on the emotional and mental toll that is often overlooked when discussing the crimes committed,” explained Abueideh.

    Zionist militias committed more than 70 massacres that resulted in the killing of more than 15,000 Palestinians leading up to the creation of Israel in 1948.

    Dreams on a pillow
    Concept art for the game which is set in historic Palestine [Courtesy of Dreams on a Pillow]

    What was the theme of Liyla and the Shadows of War?

    In 2016, Abueideh’s small team of developers in Palestine released Liyla and the Shadows of War for PC and mobile platforms, which was based on Israel’s 2014 Gaza offensive.

    The Israeli military operation, named Operation Protective Edge, resulted in the killing of 2,300 Palestinians and 73 Israelis.

    According to Abueideh, Liyla and the Shadows of War was quite successful receiving millions of downloads and was awarded first place for Excellence in Storyboarding for the International Mobile Gaming Awards for Middle East North Africa.

    The game was built around a Palestinian family’s harrowing experience during Israel’s military campaign in Gaza, as they fought to stay alive amid the conflict and destruction.

    “We followed a story of a young girl who lives in Gaza. During these attacks, we try to build an emotional story. We connect people with what’s happening in Gaza, and we show them the decisions that you have to take as a Palestinian during the war, and regardless of your decision that you are taking, it’s hard to survive,” Abueideh says.

    Apple initially rejected the Game but later reversed its decision after public pressure. Abueideh says Liyla and the Shadows of War faced rejection due to its potent political themes.

    “Players must deal with the stark realities of life amid conflict, challenging them to navigate through relentless bombings and gunfire in search of sanctuary. The game mechanics operate no different than other games, although it is set in the Gaza Strip,” he says.

    dreams on a pillow
    Concept art from the new game, which is set during the 1948 Nakba when 750,000 Palestinians were ethnically cleansed from the land now called Israel [Courtesy of Dreams on a Pillow]

    How is Dreams on a Pillow different from his previous games?

    Although Dreams on a Pillow is based in Palestine like Liyla and the Shadows of War, the game dynamics are different.

    “For the gameplay element you are playing with this character [Omm] holding the pillow which limits her ability to do stuff in the environment, but this pillow gives her safety,” stated Abueideh.

    The psychological effects of the Nakba are vividly portrayed through the game’s narrative story-building and mechanics.

    Omm finds solace and safety when carrying the pillow, which symbolises her childhood. However, when she sets it down, her mental state deteriorates rapidly. She can become plagued by nightmares and hallucinations, a reflection of the constant danger and trauma she experiences.

    Her psychological fear manifests through the game’s mechanics. At each level, set during the Nakba, she enters a dream state. In this dream, which also takes the form of a game, we witness Omm’s life before the Nakba, providing a stark contrast with her current experience.

    “This is our opportunity to show the culture of Palestine, the nature of Palestine. The habits of people before the Nakba, and how beautiful nature was. There is a lie about Palestine that’s been said in the Western media, ‘land without a people, for a people without land’”, Abueideh says.

    “We need to show that Palestine was rich in history and culture, filled with its people and their habits before what happened in 1948.”

    According to Abueideh, the game will require two years of development with a planned release due in 2026. Due to the sensitive nature of the subject matter, it’s unclear from the development team which platforms will accept the game.

    dreams on a pillow
    Concept art from the game which also shows life before the Nakba [Courtesy of Dreams on a Pillow]

    What happened during the Nakba and the creation of Israel?

    On May 14, 1948, immediately following the expiry of the British Mandate, Zionist leaders proclaimed the establishment of the State of Israel. The announcement ignited the first Arab-Israeli war, after which the Zionist forces gained control of 78 percent of historic Palestine.

    The remaining 22 percent was split into two areas: the West Bank, which is now under occupation, and the Gaza Strip, which has been turned into rubble by more than 15 months of non-stop Israeli bombardment.

    Approximately 750,000 Palestinians were forcibly displaced from their homes and territories following the violence unleashed by Zionist militias.

    INTERACTIVE - NAKBA - What is the Nakba infographic map-1684081612
    (Al Jazeera)

    The continued Israeli military control over Palestinian territories for decades has a negative impact on the daily lives of Palestinians. The prolonged occupation and enlargement of Israeli settlements on Palestinian land have imperilled the viability of a two-state solution – Israeli and Palestinian states coexisting side by side.





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  • Israel-Gaza ceasefire deal: Which Palestinian prisoners could be released? | Prison News

    Israel-Gaza ceasefire deal: Which Palestinian prisoners could be released? | Prison News


    More than a thousand Palestinian prisoners, many held without charge for years within the Israeli prison system, are preparing for their first taste of freedom.

    The exact number of prisoners being released in exchange for Israeli captives held in Gaza is unclear. The text of the ceasefire deal has not yet been released, and details reported on by media outlets describe different ratios for the captive-prisoner exchange, depending on whether the Palestinian prisoners are serving life sentences or not.

    There are currently 10,400 Palestinians in Israeli prisons, not including those detained from Gaza during the last 15 months of conflict, according to the Palestinian Commission of Detainees and Ex-Detainees  Affairs and the Palestinian Prisoner’s Society.

    The Israeli Ministry of Justice has released a list of 95 Palestinian women and children set to be released on Sunday if the implementation of the ceasefire deal begins, but beyond that, no names of the prisoners to be released are known.

    According to the deal’s outline, their release will not take place before Sunday at 4pm local time (14:00 GMT).

    The list of names released by Israel shows that a vast majority were arrested after the Hamas attacks on October 7, 2023, according to media reports. Fewer than 10 were arrested before the attacks.

    Phase one

    During the first stage of the three-phase agreement between Hamas and Israel, more than 1,000 Palestinian prisoners will be exchanged for 33 of the remaining Israeli captives, who are estimated to number about 100 in total.

    Under the terms of the agreement, Palestinian prisoners will be released in exchange for Israeli captives according to ratios agreed upon by both sides and international mediators in Doha.

    According to reports, 110 Palestinian prisoners sentenced to life by Israeli courts will be exchanged for nine ill and wounded Israeli captives. In addition, Israeli men over the age of 50 will be released in exchange for Palestinian captives at a ratio of 1:3 for those sentenced for life sentences, and 1:27 for those serving other sentences.

    Previous prisoner exchanges

    Prisoners have long been used as currency in Israel’s dealings with Palestinian groups.

    During stalled 2013 peace talks, Israel agreed to the staggered release of more than 100 Palestinians in a move intended to bolster negotiations, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said at the time.

    However, closer parallels to the current exchange can be found in the prisoner exchanges of 1983, when more than 4,500 Palestinian prisoners were released in exchange for six Israeli soldiers. Similarly, in 1985, some 1,150 Palestinian prisoners were swapped for three Israeli soldiers. The current exchange is also similar in scope to perhaps the most famous prisoner swap, which involved the release of captured Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit in 2011.

    Gilad Shalit exchange

    1,027 Palestinian prisoners were exchanged in 2011 for Shalit, who was captured by Hamas in a 2006 cross-border raid and held for five years as negotiations for his release flailed.

    In 2014, the Israeli government admitted that it had rearrested 51 of those prisoners following the abduction and eventual killing of three Israeli teenagers in the occupied West Bank. Explaining those arrests afterwards, Netanyahu made no attempt to link those arrested to the missing teenagers, saying only that their abduction sent “an important message” to Hamas.

    High profile prisoners

    Israeli Army Radio has reported that Khalida Jarrar, a leader of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) in the occupied West Bank, is among the Palestinian prisoners who will be released on Sunday.

    Palestinians are also calling for the release of several other high-profile prisoners, including some who are serving life sentences.

    Among them is one of the Palestinian group Fatah’s leading figures, Marwan Barghouti, whose long-awaited release has been repeatedly blocked by Israeli authorities. The release of Barghouti, who in 2006 helped author the Palestinian Prisoners’ Document, drawing many of the disparate Palestinian factions together, could have important repercussions for Palestinian politics, as the unifying figure has repeatedly come out on top when Palestinians are asked who they would vote for in any future presidential elections.

    Contacted by Al Jazeera on Friday, representatives for Barghouti, including family members, said that while they were hopeful, they have received no information about his possible release.

    Another high-profile Palestinian prisoner is Ahmed Saadat, the head of PFLP, who was accused by Israel of ordering the assassination of Israeli Tourism Minister Rehavam Ze’evi in 2001, even though the Justice Ministry initially decided there was not enough evidence to charge him for the killing.

    What have the prisoners endured?

    While the locations many of the prisoners slated for release are being held in are unknown, rights groups have long voiced concern over conditions within the Israeli prison system.

    In August, the Israeli rights group B’Tselem published an extensive report detailing a network of Israeli detention facilities it described as “torture camps”. The global NGO Human Rights Watch also published reports on the Israeli prison system in July and August, detailing rape, the sharing of sexualised images of Palestinian prisoners, including children, and the systemic torture of detainees.

    In July 2024, the Israeli minister responsible for the prison system, far-right politician Itamar Ben-Gvir, boasted that “everything published about the abominable conditions” Palestinians were subjected to in Israeli jails “was true”.

    More than 3,000 Palestinian prisoners are also held under administrative detention, meaning that they are held without trial or charge.



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  • Palestinian security forces crack down on West Bank militants

    Palestinian security forces crack down on West Bank militants


    Shatha Sabbagh, a journalism student in her early 20s from Jenin in the occupied West Bank, was returning home from buying sweets with her mother and three other relatives when the gunfire erupted.

    The group dived to the ground, but for Shatha, it was too late. “She had her eyes open and she was looking at me,” her mother Nahed Sabbagh said, her voice beginning to break. “And then I saw something coming from her head. And in this moment, I realised that I had lost my daughter.”

    In recent years, the refugee camp in Jenin where Shatha was shot — a warren of narrow streets that has become one of the main strongholds of Palestinian militant groups in the West Bank — has repeatedly been the target of deadly and destructive raids by Israeli security forces.

    But Shatha’s death in late December took place in the middle of something far rarer: an operation by the security forces of the Palestinian Authority, which exercises limited self-rule in parts of the West Bank, against the camp’s militants.

    Palestinian officials say the operation — now in its sixth week, and by far the biggest the PA has mounted in its 30-year existence — is designed to restore law and order against “outlaws” in the restive camp, which has long been beyond the PA’s control.

    The operation has also been widely interpreted as an attempt by the PA to demonstrate to the international community that it has the capacity to take on a role in administering Gaza once the war between Israel and Hamas in the enclave is over — an idea backed by the US, Arab and European states, but vehemently opposed by Israel’s hardline government.

    Israel and Hamas this week finally reached a multiphase deal to halt the 15-month war and free the hostages still held in Gaza. But it is not clear whether it will lead to a permanent end to the war, with far-right ministers in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government demanding Israel resume hostilities.

    “The PA want to show . . . whoever is thinking about the day after that they can set rules and laws, and that they can play a role not only in the West Bank but also in Gaza,” said Adnan Alsabah, a political analyst from Jenin.

    But the killing of civilians such as Shatha, which her mother blames on the PA, and the PA on militants, has sparked outrage, and threatens to further erode the dwindling domestic legitimacy of the enfeebled PA. Founded as a stepping stone to a Palestinian state, it is now viewed by many Palestinians as a facilitator of Israel’s occupation.

    “The people in the camp used to have one enemy. Now they have two,” said Sabbagh. “[Israel] and the PA — they’re two sides of the same coin.”

    Palestinian police disperse demonstrators
    Palestinian police disperse demonstrators during a protest against clashes between Palestinian security forces and militants in Jenin © Jaafar Ashtiyeh/AFP/Getty Images

    The PA’s operation began in December after militants seized two PA vehicles, paraded them around the camp in protest at the arrest of two Islamic Jihad militants and fired shots at municipal buildings. Since then, the PA’s forces say they have arrested dozens of alleged militants, defused improvised bombs and seized large amounts of weapons and munitions.

    But the situation in Jenin remains volatile. When the Financial Times visited, approaches to the camp were blocked off by PA vehicles and checkpoints. There were repeated exchanges of gunfire, including one that claimed the life of a 50-year-old woman.

    Brigadier General Anwar Rajab, spokesperson for the PA’s security forces, said that in addition to restoring law and order, the operation was meant to prevent attacks by militants that would give the Israeli government a pretext for launching a massive operation in the territory.

    Netanyahu’s government, widely regarded as the most rightwing in Israeli history, is propped up by ministers determined to annex the West Bank, and who have been emboldened by the US re-election of Donald Trump.

    “We don’t want a comprehensive confrontation with [Israel],” Rajab said. “We will be the ones who lose in this confrontation. We don’t want to allow anyone to drag us there.”

    Smoke rises from Jenin
    Smoke rises from Jenin during clashes between militants and the Palestinian Authority’s security forces this week © Jaafar Ashtiyeh/AFP/Getty Images

    But others regard the PA’s latest operation, which Rajab said involved “a couple of hundred” troops, as far less calculated, and argue that it has left the authority in a bind.

    Ibrahim Dalalsha, director of the Ramallah-based Horizon Center for Political Studies, said: “The PA is not in a position to crack down on the camp using massive force, because if they did that, there would be mass casualties and its support would drop off a cliff, and that could also trigger unrest in other parts of the West Bank.”

    “But having sent all those troops, if the PA backs down now, it will fall, not only in the eyes of its international and regional partners, but also in terms of domestic politics,” he added.

    For now, both sides in Jenin appear to have been relatively restrained.

    Over the past six weeks, the hostilities have claimed the lives of six members of the Palestinian security services, and nine others. The PA said three were militants, but according to the UN, only one was armed.

    By contrast, a major Israeli operation in Jenin last year killed 21 people in nine days, according to Palestinian officials. Israel said at the time it had killed 14 militants. This week, two Israeli drone strikes in Jenin have killed 12 people.

    According to the latest UN data, Israeli forces have killed 795 Palestinians in the West Bank since the start of the war in Gaza, which was triggered by Hamas’s October 7 2023 attack on Israel.

    But even though the death toll from the PA operation has been relatively low, the fact Palestinians have been fighting each other — even as Israel’s military has been carrying out a devastating assault on Gaza — has provoked widespread soul-searching.

    “What is happening in Jenin is a black page in the history of Palestinians,” said Alsabah, the political analyst. “It is showing to the world that we are not in agreement, that we don’t have the same platform, that we don’t share the same vision.”

    As the operation has dragged on, public pressure for an end has grown. Community leaders in Jenin and Ramallah have appealed to the PA and the militants to end the stand-off, with further calls in the wake of the Israeli drone strikes and the announcement of a ceasefire in Gaza. On Friday, an effort was under way to mediate an end to the stand-off.

    Dalalsha said: “The Jenin situation is not going to defeat the PA militarily. It has more than 30,000 security forces. It has the guns and money to maintain its control. And it has international and regional support.”

    “The problem for the PA is that its standing with the public was lost, even before this operation. And the situation in Jenin has rendered it weaker still.”

    Cartography and data visualisation by Aditi Bhandari and Chris Campbell



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