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June 19, 2025

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Dear Friends,

Earlier this year (2025), I was very lucky to spend three months in the West Bank. I’m on sabbatical from my university this year, and I decided to use the time to learn about Palestine by being there. I wrote a blog while I was there, called Postcards from Palestine. Here are links and brief descriptions of each Postcard so far.

Please reach out to me anytime - with questions, concerns, suggestions, or anything else. You can send an email to me at stern.nancy@gmail.com. I’ll be happy to hear from you.


A person's head  in shadow above water and sky, all glowing orange from the recent sunset
1. First postcard from Palestine: About the Dead Sea in Jordan, and my travels across the King Hussein/Allenby/Dignity Bridge to the West Bank

A fruit stand with a giant pile of huge strawberries, and some other fruit (oranges and grapes)
2. Scenes from Ramallah: Some of the beautiful food and other sights of the city, along with a description of segregated roads in the West Bank. Those strawberries are as delicious as they look.

A vintage typewriter with keys in Arabic
3. Lavender Boutique Hotel: A wonderful small hotel in Ramallah with a rich family history

Passport with photos of a woman and a 9-year-old boy, with German print and handwriting, and stamps that include swastikas
4. Why am I here?: I’ve come to Palestine to continue learning and to unlearn the mythology that I grew up with. I dedicate this trip to my family, who taught me that never again means never again for anyone.

Produce for sale on a busy street, a Palestinian flag flying, and a large building on the far side of the street
5. Do I feel safe?: Yes. Palestinian people are exceptionally kind and always available to help - which I saw whenever I was lost, which happened often

A paper coffee cup with the logo of Coffee Lab and a round decal of a Palestinian flag, on a plate with a croissant
6. Just a nice day: Enjoying myself at Coffee Lab and Nelson Mandela Square

A photograph of a big box of oranges, with a box of lemons in the background
7. Gaza’s Riviera?: Local reactions to the orange man’s plans

Two young women posing for a selfie in front of a mirror with pottery
8. Haya: A story about a young woman from Jerusalem

A beautiful young woman with long brown curly hair and a big smile, holding a bouquet of flowers
9. Majdal: Love in the West Bank

on a bench in a room made of cinderblocks, people seated and two people playing musical instruments
10. The Edward Said National Conservatory of Music: Bringing music to Palestinians everywhere, with a special focus on the steadfast people of Gaza

Three women standing in red academic regalia; the woman on the right holds a laptop with an image of a fourth woman via videoconference
11. Defense and celebration of scholarship: Serving on the thesis committee for a master’s student at the Arab American University of Palestine

A light stone building against a blue sky with white clouds, with an art installation of the arms of two back hoes
12. The Palestinian Museum: This museum celebrates Palestinian culture - past, present, and future. The current very moving exhibition features works from Palestinian artists in Gaza.

An adult with a hijab bends down in a field to show an egg to a little girl dressed in pink
13. The Palestine Museum of Natural History: An oasis of hope under occupation; children and adults learn about and connect with the beauty and importance of the natural world

A concrete barrier with barbed wire at the top, and a military tower with 360 degree windows at the top. The wall is part of a parking lot, and has graffiti painted on it
14. Bethlehem: The separation wall (also known as the apartheid wall) snakes through the city, towering above streets and separating people from their own land, from neighbors and family members, from schools, and even from hospitals

A vaulted church ceiling with a dome containing writing in Arabic, and below that, stained glass windows
15. Easter in Bethlehem: I attended a beautiful and very moving service here in the birthplace of Jesus. From the pastor, Rev. Munther Isaac: “If Jesus were to be born today, he would be born under the rubble in Gaza.”

A long cobblestone street with just a few people, shops on the sides of the street. Lights strung atop the walkway.et
16. Dinner with a family in Bethlehem: a lovely evening, with delicious Palestinian food, warm company, and eye-opening conversation

A photograph of a sign with large Hebrew writing, followed by the words in English:  SECURITY FACILITY / PHOTOGRAPHY PROHIBITED!  And then Arabic writing at the bottom
17. Going home: leaving Bethlehem via the King Hussein/Allenby/Dignity Bridge to Jordan

A pile of rocks on the street, with a brown and black cannister with Hebrew writing
18. War with Iran: the West Bank and Jerusalem since Israel’s attack on Iran

Please do let me know if you have comments on anything you’ve read so far and/or suggestions for future Postcards.

Salaam,

Nancy

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