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Shrines Under Siege: (De)Colonizing Sacred Spaces and Temporalities in Occupied Palestine

Hall of Languages, 500

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Shrines Under Siege: (De)Colonizing Sacred Spaces and Temporalities in Occupied Palestine

Dr. Sandy Marshall, Elon University

Throughout historic Palestine, hundreds of shrines once served as vibrant spaces of multi-religious devotion, centers of women's everyday spiritual practice, and nodes within wider networks of mobility and pilgrimage. Today, access to these sites has largely been cut off by the Israeli occupation, and many of these shrines have been destroyed or otherwise transformed into sites of settler colonial conquest, occupation, and resistance. This talk explores the shifting significance of such sites in the northern West Bank near Nablus, including the maqamat (shrines) of Sheikh Bilal, Salman al-Farsi, and Nabi Uzair. Through multi-generational oral history interviews, this research documents the ongoing fracturing and desacralization of the cultural landscape in Palestine. At the same time, these narratives, deeply rooted in the physical terrain of sacred springs and holy trees, in the deep time of religious folk memory, and in the cyclical temporalities of seasonal change, also provide vantage points from which to imagine the land of Palestine outside of lineal chronologies of conflict and linear boundaries of territorial demarcation.


Category

Social Science and Public Policy

Type

Talks

Region

New York Campus

Open to

Faculty

Students, Graduate and Professional

Students, Undergraduate

Organizers

MAX-Geography and the Environment, MAX-Middle Eastern Studies Program

Contact

Deborah Toole
315.443.2606

datoole@syr.edu

Accessibility

Contact Deborah Toole to request accommodations

Exterior of Maxwell in black and white when there was no Eggers building

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To mark our centennial in the fall of 2024, the Maxwell School will hold special events and engagement opportunities to celebrate the many ways—across disciplines and borders—our community ever strives to, as the Oath says, “transmit this city not only not less, but greater, better and more beautiful than it was transmitted to us.”

Throughout the year leading up to the centennial, engagement opportunities will be held for our diverse, highly accomplished community that now boasts more than 38,500 alumni across the globe.