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Gallery|Israel-Palestine conflict

Photos: Memories of Nakba inspire Palestinian artist’s work

Abed Abdi, 81, is a Palestinian visual artist who was expelled from Haifa in 1948 and returned three years later.

Abed Abdi, Haifa artist
Artist Abed Abdi sits in his studio in the neighborhood of Wadi Nisnas in the northern city of Haifa [Zena Al Tahhan/Al Jazeera]
By Zena Al Tahhan
Published On 29 May 202329 May 2023
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Wadi Nisnas, Haifa – Visual artist Abed Abdi was expelled from Haifa – a major port city on the Mediterranean Sea – along with tens of thousands of fellow Palestinians by Zionist militias in 1948.

Memories of displacement and dispossession that started at age six inspire the art Abdi produces even today, at 81 years of age.

“Those scenes are very painful,” Abdi tells Al Jazeera from his art studio, located at the edge of the neighbourhood of Wadi Nisnas on the northern outskirts of Haifa.

“My memory of those moments is like a treasure to me,” added Abdi – a soft-spoken, meticulous man. “I remember the masses of people at the Haifa port. I remember the suffering of the people.”

On April 22, 1948, three weeks before Israel was declared a state, Abdi was forced to flee from the neighbourhood of Wadi Salib in Haifa with his mother and four siblings due to intense shelling by Zionist militias and attacks on residents.

More than 750,000 Palestinians were forcefully displaced from their homelands as Zionist militias went on a rampage, killing Palestinians and destroying their society and homelands in 1948.

At least 110 Palestinian men, women and children were slaughtered in the Palestinian village of Deir Yassin on April 9, 1948, and Zionist militias killed 60 to 70 Palestinians in the Balad al-Shaykh village, 7km (4 miles) east of Haifa city months prior.

Palestinians observed the 75th anniversary of the organised and violent ethnic cleansing of Palestine – which is marked as Nakba, or catastrophe – on May 15, 2023.

“Most of Haifa’s residents took to the port for shelter, thinking that it could save them. Even if they would be away for a week or two, they would be back,” says Abdi, who returned to his homeland three years later.

“Some people carried their mattresses with them. My mother took cooking tools such as her mortar, even though it was heavy. We took it and came back with it. She also asked someone to carve her name into one of her pots that she took with her,” Abdi continues.

His father managed to remain in Haifa during the cataclysmic events. After three years in refugee camps across neighbouring Lebanon and Syria, Abdi, his mother and three of his siblings became one of the few Palestinians allowed to return to their city for family unification in 1951.

Between December 1947 and April 1948, the Zionist forces expelled more than 95 percent of Haifa’s Palestinian residents. Originally a city of some 75,000 Palestinians, only 3,000 to 4,000 of them remained after the Nakba. The rest became refugees, mainly in neighbouring Lebanon and Syria, and they are barred from returning to this day.

Those who remained were concentrated in the neighbourhood of Wadi Nisnas and prevented from returning to their homes or retrieving their property.

“Our suffering continued – we returned to hardship and a hostile environment. The homes and properties of the Abdi family owned were all confiscated. My father moved into his aunt’s house, the ownership of which also went to the state,” he says.

“I was in a situation where I realised it was critical for me to activate my visual memory,” says Abdi. During his time in refugee camps, he recalled one attempt to displace his family again.

“I remember, and my sister Zahra remembers, there was an attempt to evict us or displace us once again, in a truck, to Baghdad. We escaped from the camp and we went to my sister Lutfiyeh’s house in Damascus.”

At 22, Abdi moved from Haifa to Germany, where he was accepted into a visual arts school. Upon his return in 1972, he found that “there were few Palestinian artists”, he says. “I was in an environment where people were struggling for bread, not for creativity and nonessentials.”

Abdi worked as the chief graphic designer and illustrator of Al-Ittihad newspaper based in Haifa and Al Jadid literary journal – two key publications in Palestinian society at the time – for more than a decade, starting in 1972.

He drew illustrations and prints for notable names in the Palestinian literary scene at the time, including Emile Habibi, Toufiq Zayyad, Samih al-Qassim, Mahmoud Darwish and Salman Natour.

Besides producing countless pieces of art exhibited around the world, Abdi also gave art courses and workshops in Palestinian towns across Israel including Shefa-Amr, Kufr Yasif and Daliyat al-Carmel.

“I work towards creating a new cadre of Palestinian artists,” says Abdi, explaining, “It is important the new generations understand fully the truth of our expulsion from our city Haifa in 1948.”

Abed Abdi, Haifa artist
Many of Abdi's paintings depict Haifa's neighbourhoods before, during and after the Nakba. Abdi told Al Jazeera he practices visual art 'both as a participation of existence and to improve our cultural production'. [Zena Al Tahhan/Al Jazeera]
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Abed Abdi, Haifa artist
The painting by Abdi shows the masses of Palestinians pushed to Haifa port before becoming refugees during the Nakba. The violent campaign by Zionist militias to capture Haifa and its surrounding villages began in December 1947, days after the United Nations announced a plan to partition Palestine between Palestinians and Jews on November 29, 1947. [Zena Al Tahhan/Al Jazeera]
Abed Abdi, Haifa artist
Abdi holds up a family portrait of himself, second from left, and his siblings with their mother, taken one year after their return to Haifa in 1952. [Zena Al Tahhan/Al Jazeera]
Abed Abdi, Haifa artist
Abdi's memories of displacement inspire his art. He told Al Jazeera he recalls that the separators between the families at the Mieh Mieh refugee camp in Lebanon were made out of sackcloth, a fabric he has incorporated into his art pieces. [Zena Al Tahhan/Al Jazeera]
Abed Abdi, Haifa artist
During the Nakba, Zionist militias carried out dozens of massacres and destroyed more than 500 Palestinian villages, while three-quarters of the Palestinian population was expelled from their homes, the vast majority made refugees outside of Palestine. [Zena Al Tahhan/Al Jazeera]
Abed Abdi, Haifa artist
A painting by Abdi showing his father’s aunt’s house in the neighbourhood of Wadi Nisnas, where the family lived for 10 years in a single bedroom upon their return in 1951. The home they lived in before the Nakba in nearby Wadi Salib was destroyed by Zionist militia. [Zena Al Tahhan/Al Jazeera]
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Abed Abdi, Haifa artist
Upon his return to Haifa in 1972 after studying art in Germany, Abdi worked as an illustrator for Palestinian and other Arab newspapers and journals for more than a decade. [Zena Al Tahhan/Al Jazeera]
Abed Abdi, Haifa artist
Israel forced all the Palestinians remaining in Haifa into Wadi Nisnas after the Nakba and barred them from returning to their homes in the city. 'Before 1948, Wadi Nisnas was a beautiful, elegant neighbourhood. It was turned into a refugee camp for shelter with high density,' he says. [Zena Al Tahhan/Al Jazeera]
Abed Abdi, Haifa artist
Today, Abdi says, 'he is proud that there is a number of valuable Palestinian artists within the Arab [Palestinian] masses.' [Zena Al Tahhan/Al Jazeera]


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