The Nakba in a Livestream: Empathic Encounters and the Solidarity of Shared Precariousness

Author:

Givoni Michal1

Affiliation:

1. Ben Gurion University of the Negev

Abstract

AbstractSince the summer of 2015, hundreds of Arab Palestinians from Israel have joined the massive number of volunteers who flocked to Greece and other locations in Europe to assist refugees from Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan, and other countries. Based on their stories about their experiences of volunteering, this essay examines how the affective regime of humanitarian action in crises mutates when such action is practiced by ordinary people who are living through their own protracted political crisis. Focusing on the empathy that Palestinian volunteers have practiced in their encounters with refugees, I show that the Palestinian relief actions and the solidarity of shared precariousness they embody challenge the premises of Western humanitarianism but also complicate the picture sketched by studies on “other humanitarianisms” from beyond the Western and universalist frame. I claim that empathy—one of the main humanitarian resources the Palestinian helpers have mobilized—has prompted a composite sense of affinity in which the similarities between the helpers and the refugees were both stressed and qualified. This affinity, as I further show, draws not just on the helpers’ traumatic memories and cultural and ethnic affiliations but also on their fears of the future.

Funder

Israeli Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

Reference57 articles.

1. What Does the Nakba Mean to Young Palestinians in Israel?;Abu Hanna-Nahhas;The Nakba Files,2017

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3. Disengagement from Politics: Nationalism, Political Identity, and the Everyday in a Palestinian Refugee Camp in Jordan.;Achilli;Critique of Anthropology,2014

4. The Status of the Palestinians in Israel: A Double Periphery in an Ethno-National State.;Al-Haj,2004

5. ‘This Is Not a Politics’: Solidarity and Subterfuge in Palestinian Refugee Communities in Lebanon.;Allan;South Atlantic Quarterly,2018

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