Scan barcode
You can start and finish this challenge whenever you like!
The Queer Palestine Readathon is about uplifting & celebrating books by & about queer PαlesᎿᎥnᎥαns while raising awareness & funds for families who are trying to temporarily evacuate Gαzα.
The 6-page comic NO OLIVE BRANCH FOR ME by Nadia Shammas & Natasha Alterici is the only must-read in order to complete this prompt & it is available to read online for free.
The 6-page comic NO OLIVE BRANCH FOR ME by Nadia Shammas & Natasha Alterici is the only must-read in order to complete this prompt & it is available to read online for free.
The energy for this readathon is “Read what you can. Give what you can. Do what you can.” No amount of donations, shares, engagement & books or pages read is too small as every action matters!
Please check out the families listed on support resources such as:
@fundsforgaza (managed by @letstalkpalestine)
Challenge Books
1
No Olive Branch For Me
Natasha Alterici, Nadia Shammas
This comic is the only must-read in order to complete this prompt & it is available to read online for free.
"NO OLIVE BRANCH FOR ME originally started out as a short story drawn by Natasha Alterici (HEATHEN) for charity anthology THE GOOD FIGHT. After some time, I kept returning to the idea of legacy, primarily, what is the legacy of resistance and revolution for Palestine when you’re part of the North American Palestinian disapora? I then interviewed Palestinian-American creators to ask about their family history, their relationship to Palestinian identity, and how that intersects with their work." — Nadia Shammas
"NO OLIVE BRANCH FOR ME originally started out as a short story drawn by Natasha Alterici (HEATHEN) for charity anthology THE GOOD FIGHT. After some time, I kept returning to the idea of legacy, primarily, what is the legacy of resistance and revolution for Palestine when you’re part of the North American Palestinian disapora? I then interviewed Palestinian-American creators to ask about their family history, their relationship to Palestinian identity, and how that intersects with their work." — Nadia Shammas
(bonus)