Amidst Israel’s brutal genocidal war on Palestinians in Gaza, a frontline no less fierce has emerged: the narrative war. Cultural, cognitive, and ethical clashes erupt on this battleground.
Aided by algorithms and artificial intelligence, the weapons of misinformation and distortion of facts come into play as part of a digital colonisation policy. Here, manipulating human emotions informs stances and attitudes in a world where morality is rapidly eroding at an alarming pace.
As this disheartening scene unfolds in a world where decision-makers show little concern for the opinions of their constituents about events beyond their borders, practising policies of censorship and restricting freedoms, turning a blind eye to explicit hate speech and genocide under flimsy pretexts, a glaring need to recall the life and legacy of the late Edward Said, the esteemed Palestinian-American intellectual and critic, arises.
Even posthumously, Said remains a reverberating voice that has etched the Palestinian people's rightful place onto the global cultural and intellectual discourse map. His legacy, rich in knowledgeable, courageous, and profound humanitarian perspectives, is a testament to one of the most just causes of contemporary times—and one profoundly marred by injustice.
Said, who died at 67, would have been 88 this year.
But his birthday on 1 November would have been impossible to celebrate amid the profound misery of Palestinians in Gaza who have been the victims of Israel's unbridled military assault backed by Western complicity.
Read more: Western governments and Gaza's graveyard of children