Bi-Weekly Brief--May24, 2026
We're Publishing Sally Rooney in Hebrew
Via Portside. This was written by +972
+972 Magazine is an independent, online, nonprofit magazine run by a group of Palestinian and Israeli journalists. Founded in 2010, our mission is to provide in-depth reporting, analysis, and opinions from the ground in Israel-Palestine. The name of the site is derived from the telephone country code that can be used to dial throughout Israel-Palestine.
It was five years ago that the bestselling Irish author Sally Rooney first declared her support for the Palestinian-led Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement. At the time, Rooney had already published Hebrew translations of two of her novels with the Israeli publishing house Modan, but refused to translate a third.
A wave of reports by leading international and Israeli human rights groups were concluding that Israel’s regime met the legal definition of “apartheid,” echoing what many Palestinian groups and experts had argued for years. Rooney, strongly impacted by these growing voices, decided to join the Palestinian campaign to pressure Israel by non-violently boycotting cultural institutions considered complicit in these crimes.
In her 2021 statement, Rooney noted that she would still be “pleased and proud” to have her books translated into Hebrew, as long as it was done in a way that respected the principles of the boycott. The goal of BDS, as the movement stresses, is to target complicity not identity. So we at +972 Magazine, together with Local Call and the independent Israeli publishing house November Books, decided back then to take up that challenge.
READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE HERE.
With bulldozers and bricks instead of bullets, Israel cements its control of Jerusalem
via The National
Thomas Helm Jerusalem. May 15, 2026
Almost 60 years ago, Israeli forces captured East Jerusalem in one of the most dramatic and consequential battles of the latter half of the 20th century. After days of fighting, Israel gained control of historical sites sacred to the billions of followers of the Abrahamic faiths.
On June 7, 1967, defence minister Moshe Dayan stood at the Western Wall, shortly after Israel had taken it from Jordanian troops, and declared that the Israeli military had “liberated Jerusalem this morning”.
“We reunited divided Jerusalem, the bisected capital of Israel. We have returned to our holiest places, we have returned in order not to part from them ever again,” he said. In 1980, Israel’s parliament, the Knesset, passed a law that stated “Jerusalem, complete and united, is the capital of Israel”.
Read the article here, complete with a map and photos
Gaza's water crisis: Families survive on less than 10 litres a day amid Israel's ongoing genocide
Before Israel's genocidal war on Gaza, the daily share of water per person in the Gaza Strip was around 80 litres, obtained simply by turning on a tap inside the home.
Now, with cities and towns destroyed and most residents displaced to shelters, securing water is no longer easy, and the daily per-person share has dropped to less than 10 litres.
As a result, water collection has become a daily struggle for displaced families across Gaza. Dozens of Palestinians — men, women and children — queue in front of small water outlets extending from a water truck parked outside a shelter for displaced people in central Gaza City.
Each person tries to fill the small water containers they carry, return them to the tent to empty them into a slightly larger container, and then go back again to refill the smaller ones.
Because water supplies are so limited, all members of displaced families help fetch water while the truck, carrying no more than 10,000 litres, remains at the camp.
