The long-awaited exhibition Palestine Uprooted: Nakba Previous and Current on the Canadian Museum for Human Rights (CMHR) in Winnipeg opens to the general public tomorrow (27 June) despite unprecedented opposition from sure members of Canada’s Jewish group—who deemed it “one-sided” when practically no details about its contents was publicly obtainable—authorized threats from an Israeli organisation and the resignation of the museum’s solely Jewish board member. Regardless of this opposition, the exhibition manages to transcend acquainted tropes by focusing not solely on the Nakba—the Arabic phrase for “disaster” utilized by Palestinians to explain the killing, dispossession and displacement within the area after Israel was based in 1948—but additionally on the magnificence and resilience of Palestinian tradition.
“What I say to the critics is ‘come and see it first’,” Isabelle Masson, the exhibition’s curator, tells The Artwork Newspaper.
Set up view of Palestine Uprooted on the Canadian Museum for Human Rights Photograph: Annie Kierans. Courtesy the Canadian Museum for Human Rights, Winnipeg, Manitoba
Palestine Uprooted spans three shows occupying two partitions on the museum’s fifth ground. Guests are greeted by three panels that includes the poetry of Mahmoud Darwish. That includes textual content in English, French and Arabic, the panels double as screens for projections tying his poetry to lived Palestinian expertise, photos of ladies and youngsters in addition to protests in opposition to the bombing of Gaza. One passage reads: “As you consider others far-off, consider your self / (say: ‘If solely I had been a candle in the dead of night’).” Flyers with the poems in translation and the unique Arabic can be found for guests to take house and share.
Members of the Palestinian Canadian group first approached the CMHR about organising an exhibition when the establishment opened in 2014, nevertheless it wasn’t till 2021 that curatorial efforts started in earnest, Masson tells The Artwork Newspaper. It was then that she started to fulfill with and interview members of Winnipeg and Montreal’s well-established Palestinian communities. “Their tales had been shifting,” she says.

Set up view of Palestine Uprooted on the Canadian Museum for Human Rights, exhibiting historic citrus wrapper Photograph: Annie Kierans. Courtesy the Canadian Museum for Human Rights, Winnipeg, Manitoba
On one event, a Palestinian girl from the Al Taji household confirmed Masson a paper wrapper for citrus fruits from her household’s once-thriving orchard within the village of Wadi Hunayn (now within the Israeli metropolis of Ramle), an merchandise her grandmother had stored for years as each a logo of loss and satisfaction. Round a curved wall that includes a print of Gazan tatreez (conventional embroidery that includes emblems of clans, villages and different figuring out patterns), the citrus wrapper is now a part of a show of reminiscence bins that fuse the digital with the tactile, the previous with the current.
The show circumstances additionally embrace a Gazan thobe—the normal embroidered Palestinian costume that, like tatreez, weaves narratives of id and belonging into its very threads—on mortgage from a Palestinian girl in Winnipeg, in addition to keys to her grandparents’ home that guests are inspired to the touch. Adjoining screens play video interviews of Palestinian Canadians speaking about lack of and love for his or her homeland.

Set up view of Palestine Uprooted on the Canadian Museum for Human Rights, that includes Rajie Cook dinner’s sculpture Curfews and Closures (2002) Photograph: Annie Kierans. Courtesy the Canadian Museum for Human Rights, Winnipeg, Manitoba
The exhibition options some up to date imagery and Palestinian artwork, together with a print of Malak Mattar’s 2020 work Certain Collectively in Gaza. The exhibition’s introductory panel juxtaposes a large-format {photograph} of Gazans fleeing Khan Yunis in 2024 with imagery and didactics explaining the historic and ongoing Nakba. Rajie Cook dinner’s 2002 sculpture Curfews and Closures, on mortgage from the Arab American Nationwide Museum in Dearborn, Michigan, includes a keffiyeh contained in a chook cage perched on high of two chipped legs of a figurine, offering a compelling visible metaphor for the tales advised by the Palestinian Canadians within the close by movies.
Masson’s curatorial objective for Palestine Uprooted was to “foreground and centre Palestinian voices which can be typically marginalised”, she says. “We got here into this undertaking fairly conscious that Islamophobia and anti-Palestinian racism influences who’s heard and whose struggling is seen as essential. We wished to humanise Palestinians not simply by focussing on their trauma however on the richness of their tradition.”

Set up view of Palestine Uprooted on the Canadian Museum for Human Rights Photograph: Annie Kierans. Courtesy the Canadian Museum for Human Rights, Winnipeg, Manitoba
Some Palestinian Canadians flew in from throughout the nation to absorb a particular preview of the exhibition, which was typically a really emotional expertise. Ramsey Zeid, a part of the Palestinian group advisory community the museum consulted, introduced his mother and father, who had been Nakba survivors.
“Seeing the exhibition introduced tears to my mother and father’ eyes,” Zeid says. Not solely as a result of it revived their trauma but additionally as a result of “for the primary time, in an internationally recognised museum, our tales—which have been silenced for therefore lengthy—had been advised and seen and heard and validated”.
He provides that the exhibition demonstrates that “it doesn’t matter what we undergo, our tradition lives on—handed from era to era. That’s how we maintain the Palestinian spirit alive.”
Palestine Uprooted: Nakba Previous and Current, 27 June 2026-30 November 2028, Canadian Museum for Human Rights, Winnipeg





