
Afro-Palestinians in Gaza: A Forgotten Community in the Struggle for Liberation
It’s easy, watching the news, to see Gaza as a single, battered whole—flattened by tragedy, defined by resistance. Yet beneath those headlines lives a wealth of untold stories, and among the most overlooked is that of the Afro-Palestinians in Gaza. Their roots run deep, their legacy is tangled in that of the broader Palestinian liberation struggle, and their present is shaped by a double weight of occupation and of being a minority within a minority.
The Untold Roots: How African Heritage Found Its Place in Palestine
To understand the Afro-Palestinian journey is to appreciate how the threads of African descent in Palestine have been woven over centuries. Many black Palestinians trace their origins back to pilgrims, traders, or fighters from Sudan, Chad, Nigeria, Senegal, and Egypt, some arriving as far back as the twelfth century or during the eras of Islamic expansion and Ottoman rule. Oral histories speak of ancestors arriving for pilgrimage, some enslaved, others as soldiers or workers. The community’s current heart in Gaza is Al Abeed Gaza—a neighborhood historically named with the Arabic word for “slave,” a raw reminder of past hierarchies.
Despite these complex beginnings, Afro-Palestinian history is inseparable from that of the broader land. Their traditions, faith, and daily struggles mirror those of their Palestinian neighbors—yet always with their own distinct note, an awareness of being both black and Palestinian.
Life in Al Abeed: Identity and Belonging in Modern Gaza
Take a short stroll through Al Jalla’a district, and you’ll discover Al Abeed Gaza. Here, around 11,000 Black Palestinians persist as one of Gaza’s minority communities, packed into a district whose name still stings with echoes of servitude. Neighbors recall stories of grandparents displaced from cities like Beersheba during the Nakba—that world-altering Catastrophe of 1948 that shattered Palestinian families and futures. Their flight to Gaza, like so many others, was supposed to be temporary. It’s now multi-generational.
Afro-Palestinians in Gaza often find themselves in the margins—struggling for recognition, equal opportunity, and, at times, for simple dignity. Interviews and reports have highlighted how children frequently leave school early to support their families, partly due to deeper poverty and the compounded barriers that minority communities face under siege or amidst occupation. Their voices add a crucial note to any conversation about Gaza minority communities or Afro-Palestinian history.
Between Two Worlds: Tales of Double Discrimination
What does it mean to live at the intersection of identities? For many black Palestinians, there’s a double bind at play. As Palestinians, they confront the suffocating restrictions—and often violence—imposed by the Israeli occupation. As Black Palestinians, they must also navigate anti-Black racism in Palestine itself, whether subtle or overt. The name of their neighborhood, al abeed, is itself both a badge of pride in survival and a painful signal of persistent stereotyping.
Personal accounts, like those offered by local leaders and folklore dancer Mohammad Obaid, reveal the extra work necessary to be “accepted” or prove oneself within Palestinian society, sometimes feeling the need to be the “best” to overcome unspoken prejudices. This sentiment, of having to strive twice as hard, echoes stories from Black minority communities worldwide.
Even so, many residents reject the idea that the discrimination they face in Gaza or the West Bank is on par with the more systemic racism found elsewhere. Some describe it as a product of ignorance rather than malice, or the result of wider social hardship—yet it is real all the same.
The Nakba and Afro-Palestinians: A Generational Displacement
No story about Afro-Palestinian history is complete without discussing the Nakba and Afro-Palestinians. In 1948, during the mass expulsion and flight of Palestinians, Black Palestinians lost their homes and livelihoods alongside their neighbors. Families that had built stable lives in places like Beersheba saw their communities scattered, with some settling in Gaza and others losing touch entirely.
These experiences remain deeply felt. Older generations recall open discrimination—land and opportunity lost, sometimes for both being black and being Palestinian. Recently, the trauma has only deepened as the ongoing conflict in Gaza has seen Afro-Palestinian families displaced multiple times, homes destroyed, and jobs lost, leaving them among the most economically and socially marginalized in the Strip.
The Struggle for Equal Recognition
Despite hardships, Afro-Palestinians in Gaza are not just silent sufferers. Community organizations—often connected with similar societies in Jerusalem and the West Bank—work to support local families through mutual aid, education, and social events. Though facing limited resources, these networks form a vital backbone for neighborhood resilience.
There are also public figures who have left an indelible mark. Fatima Bernawi, a daughter of a Nigerian father and Palestinian mother, remains a towering example. She was the first Palestinian woman to organize and execute a political operation during the occupation era, and her story is celebrated in both the annals of Black Palestinian and Palestinian liberation struggles. Her legacy is a stark testament to how intertwined personal and collective fights for dignity can be.
Two Perspectives: Integration and Ongoing Barriers
It’s important to recognize that the Afro-Palestinian experience is not monolithic. Within Gaza, two natural perspectives stand out:
1. The Optimist’s View:
Some argue that Afro-Palestinians, over decades, have become deeply integrated: Muslim faith, intermarriage, shared suffering, and grassroots activism have drawn the community ever closer to the broader Palestinian cause. From volunteering in the resistance to participating in neighborhood organizations, they are “fully” Palestinian—committed to the land and its future.
2. The Perspective of Persistent Difference:
Others, often younger activists, refuse to romanticize this integration. They highlight the unique labels, lack of educational and economic opportunity, and the stubborn stereotypes that still mar daily life for many Black Palestinians. The need for specific advocacy against anti-Black racism in Palestine, and for visibility in policy and humanitarian aid, remains acute.
Both viewpoints are valid and often exist within the same families, sometimes even within the same person.
Racism and Resistance: The Fight Against Marginalization
What does anti-Black racism in Palestine look like? For some, it’s in the nicknames that linger, or the fact that even in desperate wartime circumstances, Black Palestinians must sometimes fight not just for survival but also for inclusion in aid distributions or political discussions. For others, it’s the subtle shuffling to the back of the line for jobs, the lack of representation in leadership structures, or the feeling of being “doubly invisible.”
Yet, Afro-Palestinians still push forward—from leading youth dance groups to advocating for broader coalitions across other minority groups. Their experience enriches the diversity of the larger Palestinian liberation struggle and adds important insights into how broader society can become more just and inclusive.
The Broader Picture: Afro-Palestinians and Liberation
You can’t separate the story of Afro-Palestinians in Gaza from the broader fight for justice in Palestine. Every new displacement, every destroyed home, every young scholar who forgoes university to work demonstrates both the burdens and the perseverance of this community. In the landscape of black Palestine, their narrative is one of both suffering and stubborn hope.
It’s also a reminder that the struggle for Palestinian liberation is not just about land, politics, or sovereignty—it’s also about making space for every voice, every historical thread, regardless of how overlooked it may have been.
How We Move Forward: Reflections and Actions
If you take one lesson from the story of Afro-Palestinians in Gaza, let it be the urgency of visibility. Every liberation struggle risks flattening itself, focusing only on a single enemy or pain. But for genuine freedom, every community—especially those that have known both solidarity and exclusion—must be heard and seen.
Here are a few ways readers, advocates, and policymakers can help:
- Amplify Afro-Palestinian Voices: Listen to and share the stories coming from leaders, artists, and everyday residents of Al Abeed.
- Support Local Initiatives: Where possible, donate or collaborate with groups working to support minority communities and educational programs within Gaza.
- Challenge Stereotypes: Recognize the dangers of both subtle and overt racism within all communities. Conversations around black Palestine need to be part of broader liberation discourses.
- Encourage Representation: Advocate for Black Palestinians to be included in local leadership, NGOS, and civil society initiatives.
Conclusion: Why Their Story Must Be Told—And Heard
Afro-Palestinians in Gaza have endured centuries of movement, upheaval, and layered exclusion. Yet, in every crowded alleyway, every classroom, and every makeshift home, they continue to build, dream, and fight for justice. Their contribution to the ongoing Palestinian liberation struggle is not simply in what they have endured, but in how they persist: offering lessons in resilience and a demand for a liberation that is complete and inclusive of every identity.
In the end, recognizing the history and present of Afro-Palestinians is not only about righting a past erasure. It is an act of solidarity—a reminder that no liberation is complete until every story finds its place at the center of the narrative.