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Qalandia 2047

 

 

 

A large number of photographs have also been cut out and pasted to create “Qalandia 2047”, a very detailed scale model of how the artist visualizes everyday life in a Palestinian camp adjacent to the most important checkpoint that controls access to Ramallah in 2047 (that is, one hundred years after the camp’s residents were evicted from their homes following the division of Palestine in 1947). This is an image with lots of humor, although not without a certain bitterness, where beautiful cars move around on a backdrop of large mirror panels hanging on the separation wall just to give an illusion of space to those cooped up in there, in constant expectation of a change. 

 

Catherine David

 

Wafa Hourani - Palestinian Artist - Photography - Installation - Science Fiction

 

 

 

 

 

The Historical Timeline of Qalandia 1948 - 2047

 

1948

Israelis took over Palestine and ethnically cleansed hundreds of Palestinian towns and villages. Palestinian refugees were forced to settle in many refugee camps in the surrounding region. Qalandia camp was located in a piece of land between north Jerusalem and south Ramallah, becoming home to thousands of refugees. Qalandia was named after a nearby airport with the same name.)

 

1967

The Israelis occupied the rest of Palestine, and Qalandia airport became a remote military zone, except that it was located at the entrance of Ramallah, where many visitors from Jerusalem passed.

 

1987

The first Intifada erupted, and the airport became a confrontation line between Qalandia's residents and Israeli soldiers.

 

2001

The second Intifada broke out. The Israelis built a massive checkpoint next to the airport that overshadows the refugee camp. Qalandia checkpoint became the main crossing between northern and southern Palestine.

 

2003

The Israelis built the notorious Apartheid Wall to isolate the Palestinian population in the occupied West Bank. Qalandia became even more isolated by giant concrete blocks from its surroundings.

 

2005

Yasser Arafat, known to be an icon of the Palestinian national liberation struggle, died in a hospital in France, and the Palestinian people were to fill the void he left behind.

 

2016

A Palestinian from the camp by the name of Abu Jamil missed the sea and the fish so much, he dug a pool beside his home and brought a goldfish to swim in it. People in the camp say that Abu Jamil brought us the sea. The fish loved the camp so much, it got used to the people visiting her laying in the sun and having barbecues by its pond.

Soon Abu Jamil's goldfish became a local attraction for the refugees.

 

2019

After many years of living in what became an overcrowded open-air prison, the Palestinian Mirror Party (PMP) decided to cover the wall with mirrors to create the illusion of more space and seeing their reflection everywhere. They begin to wonder how they got in there.

 

2020

Qalandia School changed its name to Impossible School.

And the students closed the basketball rings; no goals in the game.

 

2023

An Israeli tourism company built a discothèque bar with an aquarium and one goldfish, near the checkpoint. They called it Checkpoint Bar to encourage trippy, political tourism. 

 

2025

Palestine made the Guinness Book of World Records for the biggest mirror in the world. It attracted many tourists from around the world to come and visit Palestine.

 

2028

Searches at the checkpoint changed from palm scanning to an audiovisual-check; you look into the blue light and say: Weehaa!

 

 

2030

The Israelis fixed laser lights on holes in the wall to tighten security. The Palestinians were furious as the holes were meant to remove the WALL not fix laser points in it.

 

2033.

The goldfish died. All the camp grieved and said: “The fish died, the sea died.” They took out the water and buried the fish and called it the Fish Tomb. The visits then changed from picnics, singing and dancing to a Martyr’s memorial, where flowers were laid by the grave and silence kept

 

2037

The Palestinians start talking about the revolution again. They built the Stone Garden to commemorate 50 years since the first popular Intifada in 1987.

 

2044

The Palestinians improved their economic situation after a complete boycott of Israeli products. This prompted many investors to move from Dubai to Ramallah.

 

2047

The Palestinians built a garden in the camp and called it the Flower Garden. It became a romantic meeting point for young and old lovers from the camp.

 

 

Wafa Hourani - Photolife - 2006

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