A place for wonder. A space for reflection. A path back to the light

Glittery Gaze

Every image you see is from my personal journey captured through my own lens; in places I’ve walked.

justice

  • A War on Perception

    Every time someone asks me how I feel about the ceasefire, all I can think of is: collective gaslighting.Gaslighting about the meaning of peace, about ethnic cleansing, about a slow, well-engineered genocide, and about colonization itself. One of the defining features of modern oppression is the battle over perception; the violence on the ground matched Read more

  • Salam Anas. You’ve been on my mind since yesterday. Like others, I was waiting for you to be alive, waiting for your voice to announce the ceasefire. I am sorry you are not. Anas, your friend Saleh woke up the rest just to tell them the ceasefire agreement was signed. He was near Al-Shifa’a hospital Read more

  • A few years ago, I worked in a humanitarian organization where it was painfully clear we had a senior leadership problem. Eventually, the organization hired a well-known consultancy firm to come in, assess the situation, and propose solutions. After three months of interviews, surveys, and analysis, they convened a meeting to present the findings to Read more

  • In my first term of my master’s in leadership studies, I was caught off guard when a professor referred to post-colonialism. “Post-what?” I wondered. When did colonialism end? No one told us?! As a Palestinian, I know we do not live in a “post” era! Our dispossession, our occupation, our erasure; these are not chapters Read more

  • For as long as I can remember, I’ve held a belief that guides how I see the world: I stand for humanity, I stand for justice, for the oppressed, and for the voiceless. I don’t believe anyone’s worth should be defined by their religion, skin color, culture, or nationality. As children, we instinctively reject injustice. Read more

  • The best people in my life are those who keep their humanity alive.When I check in with them and they say, “No, I haven’t gotten used to it” I breathe. People often ask me:“After all this time, you still get affected. You still get shocked by the cruelty in this world?”And my answer is Yes. Read more

  • My mother used to say:If we die, we die together.She held me and my brother close to her heart,flesh against flesh,not out of comfort,but to ensure our bodies would be found as one. In Lebanon, just like in Gaza… nowhere was safe.She would not take refuge in shelters“Rubble buries names,” she said.She wanted our bodies Read more

  • We carry the Nakba in our blood, not as a history lesson but as a lived inheritance. It echoes in my father’s voice, how his eyes light up when he talks about our village, Ain Karem. Our land is still there, stone by stone, tree by tree, but the people who built it are not. Read more

  • This piece is a call for truth. It speaks from the pain of displacement, the rage of injustice, and the sacred memory of those who were silenced. It demands justice before peace — because peace without justice is just another form of violence. Do you see them?The ghosts…do they follow you as you walk by?Do Read more