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Palestinians mark 78th Nakba anniversary amid ongoing displacement in Gaza

As millions observe the anniversary of the 1948 dispossession, displaced populations remain confined to a fraction of Gaza’s territory, underscoring the Nakba’s status as a continuing process rather than a historical event.

Author
Adrian Cole
Political Correspondent
Published
Draft
Source: Al Jazeera Global News · original
Millions of Palestinians mark 78 years since the Nakba
Third commemoration since outbreak of war highlights unresolved right to return and continued territorial confinement

Millions of Palestinians have marked the 78th anniversary of the Nakba on Friday, 15 May 2026, commemorating the mass expulsion and flight of approximately 750,000 people during the 1948 war surrounding the creation of Israel. The commemoration serves as a remembrance and a call for justice, self-determination, and the right to return, marking the third such anniversary since the outbreak of war in Gaza.

The term Nakba, Arabic for catastrophe, refers to the systematic dispossession and displacement of Palestinians between 1947 and 1949. Historians estimate that about 750,000 Palestinians, roughly one-third of the population at the time, were forced from their homes, and more than 400 villages and urban neighbourhoods were depopulated or destroyed to make way for new Jewish immigrants.

This year’s observance occurs as more than two million people in the besieged enclave remain displaced and confined to a fraction of their territory. More than six months after an October ceasefire, Gaza’s population is crammed into less than half of the 40km (25-mile) strip along the Mediterranean coast, hemmed in by an Israeli-controlled zone that encompasses the rest of the territory.

Hundreds of thousands of those expelled and their descendants now live in refugee camps in the occupied West Bank, Gaza and across the region, including Jordan, Lebanon and Syria. Many still preserve keys, deeds and documents to homes in what is today Israel, passing them down through generations as symbols of their displacement and of a future return.

Palestinian refugees continue to demand the right to return to the towns and villages from which they or their relatives were forced out. This right of return, enshrined in UN General Assembly Resolution 194, remains one of the core unresolved issues in the long-stalled negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians.

For many Palestinians, the ongoing war in Gaza and renewed displacement across the enclave underscore their belief that the Nakba is not a single historical event but a continuing process of dispossession. As they mark the 78th anniversary, activists and survivors say their commemoration is both an act of remembrance and a reassertion of their demand for justice, return and self-determination.

The source characterises the current conflict as a genocidal war on Gaza, framing the anniversary within the context of sustained military operations and humanitarian crisis.

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