A woman carries a girl through devastated streets after Israeli airstrikes hit the neighbourhood of Sheikh Radwan, Gaza City, Gaza, Ali Jadallah, October 2023
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A woman carries a girl through devastated streets after Israeli airstrikes hit the neighbourhood of Sheikh Radwan, Gaza City, Gaza, Ali Jadallah, October 2023
Palestinian families return their homes passing debris of destroyed buildings after Israeli forces’ withdrawal from parts of Khan Yunis, Gaza. (Photo by Ali Jadallah/Anadolu via Getty Images)
Khan Younis, Gaza
Charity workers distribute bread to people who fled to the al-Mawasi area of the city during an Israeli onslaught. Palestinians are struggling with extreme hunger as Israel’s attacks on the blockaded Gaza Strip continue
Photograph: Ali Jadallah/Anadolu/Getty Images
Ali Jadallah. Deir Al Balah, Gaza on February 06, 2025
Burned out cars outside Al-Ahli Arab Hospital, Gaza City, Ali Jadallah, October 2023
‘Irreplaceable’
Amid the chaos and devastation left by Israeli airstrikes in the Ridwan neighbourhood of Gaza City, an injured woman is overcome with grief beside the lifeless body of a loved one.
Photograph: Ali Jadallah
The Siena International Photo Awards
True collapse leaves no narrator. No one emerges to tell the story. The system reboots, and the storyteller doesn’t return.
So-called “awakened teachers” are post-collapse actors. They reconstitute a role "the one who knows". It’s comforting. Profitable. But it’s fiction.
If it’s content, it’s already concept. If it’s a podcast, a retreat, a quote carousel — it’s commodified. And freedom cannot be monetized.
True post-loop life is not transmissible. Because there’s no one left to teach. Only living. Working. Folding laundry. Without performative transcendence.
Mural Tribute to Palestinian Journalists Sparks Debate in London
A tribute mural dedicated to Palestinian journalists in Ilford, East London, has stirred both admiration and controversy. The artwork, painted in March by three artists from the collective Creative Debuts, honors four Palestinian reporters and photographers—Mohamed Al Masri, Ali Jadallah, Hind Khoudary, and Abdulhakim Abu Riash. The scene shows these journalists standing amidst the rubble in…