With no formal political entity, independent territory, or unified communal identity, the challenges confronting the Palestinian national movement today are many.
Home was once 'from the river to the sea’, words sung by supporters for decades about historical Palestine, from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea.
But within that land, which is now under Israeli sovereignty, Palestinians now face diverse political and legal regimes that define their lives and set their agendas.
This fragmentation extends to Palestinians within the 1948 borders, as well as those in the West Bank, Jerusalem, and Gaza.
Beyond, Palestinians are dispersed across several countries in which they have different political and legal frameworks.
It even covers refugees in host nations like Jordan, where some have acquired citizenship, and Lebanon, Syria, or Egypt, with unique challenges in each.
Before the Oslo Accords of 1993 established a ‘Palestinian Authority’ in the West Bank and Gaza, Palestinians had no prior experience of self-governance.
The Palestinian Authority was meant to administer the affairs of Palestinians within the West Bank and Gaza, not in the diaspora.
The Palestinian Liberation Organisation (PLO), a political body, lacked any sovereign territory over which to govern or any institutions with which to administer Palestinian communities, either at home or abroad in the diaspora.
Yet the Palestinian Authority has not developed into a fully sovereign state as many an optimist had hoped. It remains under the influence of the occupying power.
This situation has led to increasing ambiguity regarding the definition of Palestinian national identity, its implications, and its boundaries. It is a far cry from the early days.