Raja Shehadeh (born 1951) is a Palestinian lawyer, writer, and human rights advocate based in Ramallah.[1]
In 1979, he co-founded Al-Haq, the inaugural Palestinian human rights organization dedicated to monitoring and reporting alleged violations of international law in the occupied territories.[2][3]
Shehadeh's literary output, encompassing memoirs and essays, examines the transformation of Palestinian landscapes and the constraints imposed by military occupation, with Palestinian Walks: Notes on a Vanishing Landscape earning the 2008 Orwell Prize for political writing.[4][5]
Through Al-Haq and his writings, he has emphasized legal documentation over armed resistance, though the organization has faced accusations of selective focus on Israeli actions amid broader regional conflicts.[6]
Early Life and Family
Upbringing in Ramallah
Raja Shehadeh was born on 6 July 1951 in Ramallah, a town in the West Bank then administered by Jordan following its annexation after the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.[1] His parents, Aziz and Wedad Shehadeh, had fled their home in Jaffa during the 1948 conflict, which Palestinians term the Nakba, resettling in Ramallah amid the displacement of approximately 700,000 Arabs from areas that became part of Israel.[7] The family arrived in Ramallah because its cooler hill climate contrasted with Jaffa's summer heat, though they faced significant economic hardship in the war's immediate aftermath.[8]Shehadeh grew up in a household shaped by his father's legal profession, which had been established in Jaffa before the displacement, and by intergenerational stories of loss that instilled an early sense of Palestinian dispossession.[9]Ramallah, a predominantly Christian town with a history of relative prosperity under Ottoman and British rule, had swelled with refugees by the early 1950s, comprising about two-thirds of its population of around 13,500 and altering its social fabric.[10] This environment, under Jordanian governance that integrated West Bank Palestinians into its citizenship while suppressing pan-Arab nationalism, exposed young Shehadeh to communal narratives of exile and unresolved grievances from 1948.[1]The lingering effects of the Nakba on his family— including the abandonment of property and livelihoods in Jaffa—fostered Shehadeh's foundational awareness of identity tied to place and conflict, amid broader Arab-Israeli hostilities that included border skirmishes and fedoras of Palestinian fedayeen activity from Jordanian territory in the 1950s and early 1960s.[11][12]
Influence of Father Aziz Shehadeh
Aziz Shehadeh (1912–1985), a prominent Palestinian lawyer, challenged authorities under the British Mandate, Jordanian rule, and early Israeli administration through legal advocacy and political activism. Born in Bethlehem to a family with judicial ties—his father served as a judge in Jaffa—Aziz obtained a law degree in 1936 and established practices in Jerusalem and Jaffa, where he defended Palestinian interests amid colonial restrictions and land disputes.[13][14] His efforts included authoring The ABC of the Arab Case in Palestine in 1935 to articulate Arab claims against British policies, and later securing acquittals in high-profile cases, such as the 1951 trial related to King Abdullah's assassination.[15][16]Aziz advocated for Palestinian self-determination by proposing a sovereign state limited to the West Bank and Gaza Strip, drawing on the 1947 UN partition plan as a framework for resolution rather than irredentist claims over all historic Palestine.[17][14] This moderate stance positioned him as an early proponent of pragmatic territorial compromise, evidenced by his successful 1950 lawsuit against Barclays Bank for discriminatory practices under Jordanian oversight, which highlighted legal avenues for economic justice.[18] Such positions, rooted in legal realism over armed struggle, influenced Raja Shehadeh's early exposure to law as a mechanism for asserting Palestinian agency amid successive occupations.[9]Raja's relationship with his father was marked by ideological tensions, as detailed in Raja's 2022 memoir We Could Have Been Friends, My Father and I, which draws on family archives to explore their divergent paths to statehood—Aziz favoring negotiated legal frameworks, while Raja critiqued paternal conservatism.[1][19] These differences did not erase the foundational impact of Aziz's example, instilling in Raja a view of jurisprudence as non-violent resistance, though tempered by personal estrangement. Aziz's assassination on December 2, 1985, by stabbing outside his Ramallah home—claimed by the radical Abu Nidal Organization, which targeted him as a perceived collaborator with moderation—intensified this legacy, prompting Raja to confront unresolved grief and reinforce his commitment to documenting injustices through inherited legal traditions rather than factional violence.[20][21][22]
Education
Legal Studies in London
Raja Shehadeh undertook his legal education in London after earning a degree in English literature and philosophy from the American University of Beirut in 1973.[23] His studies, completed by 1978, immersed him in British common law traditions, which prioritize precedent, adversarial proceedings, and the supremacy of impartial judicial review over executive discretion.[24] This curriculum contrasted with the Ottoman-era codes and Jordanian statutes familiar from his Palestinian background, introducing systematic approaches to rightsenforcement that underscored the rule of law as a bulwark against arbitrary power.[25]The exposure to these principles equipped Shehadeh with analytical tools for dissecting legal systems under stress, including early familiarity with international humanitarian norms applicable to occupied territories, though his primary focus remained practical barrister training.[26] Returning to Ramallah in 1978 amid escalating settlement expansion and administrative detentions in the West Bank—events that highlighted the gap between theoretical legality and on-ground enforcement—Shehadeh arrived "brimming with ideas about the importance of the rule of law and the need to challenge Israeli military orders through the Israeli courts."[26][25]This London interlude thus forged a foundational commitment to evidentiary legal critique, enabling Shehadeh to later frame Palestinian grievances not merely as political disputes but as verifiable breaches of established norms, distinct from the ideological fervor of contemporaneous militant movements.[27] His education reinforced a causal understanding that sustained institutional checks, rather than transient unrest, could address systemic imbalances, influencing his preference for documentation over confrontation in analyzing occupation dynamics.[26]
Return to Palestine
Shehadeh returned to Ramallah in the West Bank in the late 1970s following his legal studies in London, re-entering a Palestinian territory occupied by Israel since the 1967 Six-Day War, during which Jordanian legal frameworks were largely supplanted by Israeli military orders.[28][29] These orders, enacted under the Israeli Area Commander's authority, prioritized security and settlement interests, creating a dual legal system that rendered traditional Palestinian property and civil rights precarious and often unenforceable through local courts.[29] Shehadeh's initial professional efforts involved navigating this asymmetry, where petitions to Israeli military courts or the High Court of Justice in Jerusalem offered limited recourse against administrative measures like land requisitions justified as "temporary" for military needs but frequently repurposed for civilian settlements.[30]In his early practice, Shehadeh focused on cases involving land expropriations and administrative detentions, documenting instances where Israeli authorities seized Palestinian-owned plots—such as those in the Ramallah area—for expanding settlements like Psagot, established in 1981 but preceded by earlier confiscations in the late 1970s.[31] He represented clients facing indefinite detention without charge under military regulations, which bypassed due process and relied on secret evidence, highlighting the occupation's deviation from Fourth Geneva Convention standards on protected persons.[32] These experiences underscored the practical inefficacy of international humanitarian law in constraining occupier actions, as Israeli interpretations emphasized belligerent rights over obligations to maintain the status quo ante.[29]Shehadeh's London training in common law and international principles prompted a deliberate shift from potential private commercial work—lucrative amid economic disruptions—to public-interest litigation exposing occupation-induced dispossession, driven by the evident causal disconnect between legal theory and on-ground enforcement that perpetuated Palestinian subordination.[28] This orientation stemmed from firsthand observation that routine practices, such as military order 418 amending land laws to facilitate absentee property claims, systematically eroded communal holdings without adequate compensation or appeal, compelling a focus on evidentiary documentation over isolated defenses.[29] By 1980, as detailed in his contemporaneous accounts, these challenges had crystallized his resolve to systematize critiques of the legal regime's structural biases.[28]
Legal and Human Rights Career
Founding and Role at Al-Haq
Raja Shehadeh co-founded Al-Haq in 1979, initially named Law in the Service of Man, as the first independent Palestinian human rights organization dedicated to monitoring violations of international humanitarian law during the Israeli occupation of the West Bank.[32] Established in Ramallah as an affiliate of the International Commission of Jurists, the organization sought to apply legal frameworks to challenge military governance through systematic documentation and analysis.[32] Shehadeh collaborated with co-founders Jonathan Kuttab and Charles Shammas, leveraging their training as lawyers to address the post-1967 legal landscape in the occupied territories.[33]Serving as co-director from 1979 until 1991, Shehadeh oversaw Al-Haq's early publications, including the 1980 report The West Bank and the Rule of Law, which cataloged over 1,000 unpublished Israeli military orders regulating Palestinian land, water, and movement.[32] His leadership guided the production of key legal analyses, such as the 1981 review of Military Order 947 instituting the Civil Administration system, and the 1985 book Occupier's Law: Israel and the West Bank, detailing administrative changes under occupation.[32] These efforts emphasized empirical evidence gathering from primary legal sources to highlight discrepancies between occupation practices and international standards.[32]During the First Intifada beginning in 1987, Shehadeh directed the expansion of Al-Haq's field monitoring, training local researchers in legal documentation techniques to record incidents of administrative detention, home demolitions, and other measures.[32] This built a network of affiliates for on-the-ground verification, producing reports that informed international bodies on occupation-related issues.[34] Shehadeh stepped down as co-director in 1991 to pursue literary work, leaving Al-Haq as a established affiliate of the International Commission of Jurists with a foundation in rigorous legal advocacy.[32]
Documentation of Occupation Practices
Under Raja Shehadeh's direction, Al-Haq employed a methodical process of field investigations, affidavits from affected individuals, and legal scrutiny to document Israeli occupation practices in the West Bank, emphasizing discrepancies between military orders and their implementation relative to pre-1967 Jordanian law and international humanitarian standards such as the Fourth Geneva Convention. This approach prioritized verifiable incidents over narrative advocacy, compiling data on administrative measures that altered land use, resource allocation, and punitive actions. By 1980, Shehadeh's analysis in The West Bank and the Rule of Law cataloged over 850 military orders issued since 1967, illustrating how they systematically modified existing statutes on property, water, and movement without equivalent civilian oversight.[35][36]Al-Haq's reports highlighted patterns in house demolitions and sealings, often justified under military orders as security measures but effecting collective penalties prohibited by Article 33 of the Fourth Geneva Convention. Between January 1981 and December 1991, Al-Haq recorded 1,001 such actions targeting Palestinian homes, displacing thousands and frequently linked to alleged offenses by residents or relatives. These findings drew on on-site verifications and official demolition orders, revealing inconsistent application where permit denials for unauthorized construction intersected with punitive intent, though Al-Haq's reliance on local testimonies introduced potential for selective reporting amid contested security contexts.[37][38]Documentation extended to water access restrictions, where military orders amended prior laws to prioritize Israeli needs, limiting Palestinian drilling and allocation from shared aquifers. Shehadeh's early work detailed how these orders contravened Geneva Convention requirements for equitable resource management in occupied territories, with empirical cases from the 1980s showing reduced Palestinian access in areas adjacent to settlements. Al-Haq's archival patterns indicated broader resource asymmetries, influencing engagements with bodies like the International Committee of the Red Cross through 1980s consultations on humanitarian compliance.[35][39]
Literary Career
Major Publications
Raja Shehadeh's earliest significant work, The West Bank and the Rule of Law: A Study, was published in 1980 by the International Commission of Jurists, with assistance from Jonathan Kuttab; the 128-page report analyzes the Israeli military's legal administration in the occupied West Bank.[35][40]This was followed in 1984 by Samed: Journal of a West Bank Palestinian, a 143-page account issued by Adama Books (ISBN 0915361027), detailing personal observations from the region during the early occupation period.[41][42]Shehadeh's Palestinian Walks: Notes on a Vanishing Landscape, first published in 2007 by Profile Books, received the 2008 Orwell Prize for political writing, recognizing its documentation of six hikes in the Palestinian hills spanning 1978 to 2006.[4][43]In 2012, Occupation Diaries appeared from Profile Books (ISBN 1781250162), comprising entries from December 2009 to December 2011 that chronicle events preceding the Palestinian Authority's UN statehood bid in September 2011.[44][45]Shehadeh's most recent book, What Does Israel Fear from Palestine?, was released on June 11, 2024, by Other Press (ISBN 9781635425352), offering reflections on historical peace efforts and the Gaza conflict's implications.[46][47]
Recurring Themes in Writings
Shehadeh's writings consistently utilize the Palestinian landscape as a central metaphor for territorial and cultural loss, with recurring walks through West Bank hills serving as a narrative device to document physical alterations imposed by occupation policies. In Palestinian Walks: Notes on a Vanishing Landscape (2007), these perambulations reveal the incremental fragmentation of terrain via settlements, walls, and roads, transforming once-open spaces into confined zones that mirror broader dispossession.[48] This motif persists in later works like Going Home: A Walk Through Fifty Years of Occupation (2019), where Ramallah's evolving urban fabric evokes a sense of estrangement from ancestral environs, grounding political displacement in observable environmental decay.[49]Personal memoir forms another staple, interwoven with historical events to illuminate intergenerational tensions and individual agency amid constraint. Shehadeh frequently examines father-son dynamics, as in Strangers in the House: Coming of Age in Occupied Palestine (2002), where autobiographical reflections on his upbringing under his father Aziz's influence intersect with the onset of Israelimilitary administration post-1967, highlighting contrasts in legal optimism versus pragmatic adaptation.[50] This approach recurs in We Could Have Been Friends, My Father and I (2022), which probes their divergent responses to assassination threats and occupation through intimate familial lens, eschewing broad historiography for empirically derived personal causality.[22]His oeuvre emphasizes the occupation's causal effects on quotidian existence, employing first-person observation to trace policy-induced erosions rather than ideological polemic. Diaries and essays, such as those in Occupation Diaries (2012), catalog routine incursions—like arbitrary detentions and resource restrictions—from 2000 to 2010, illustrating how military orders propagate sustained attrition on mobility and livelihood.[51] This stylistic evolution from early legal analyses, exemplified by The West Bank and the Rule of Law (1980)'s dissection of over 1,000 military orders via case documentation, to later reflective prose maintains an empirical core, prioritizing verifiable daily mechanisms over abstract advocacy.[32][52]
Views on the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
Critique of Israeli Policies
Shehadeh has argued that Israeli settlements in the West Bank constitute a violation of international law, citing the International Court of Justice's advisory opinion on July 19, 2024, which declared the occupation unlawful and required Israel to dismantle settlements and evacuate settlers.[53] In his 1988 book Occupier's Law: Israel and the Palestinians, he detailed legal mechanisms used by Israel post-1967 to requisition and confiscate Palestinian land for settlements, including military orders that bypassed property rights under the Fourth Geneva Convention.[29]Shehadeh described settlement expansion as "creeping annexation," depriving Palestinians of land and national resources without formal sovereignty claims, a process he traced from the 1970s onward through fragmented land seizures that rendered contiguous Palestinian territory impossible.[54] In a 2019 New York Times opinion piece, he contended that Israel's policies prioritize acquiring West Bank land while excluding its Palestinian inhabitants, exacerbating demographic separation.[55]Through Al-Haq, which Shehadeh co-founded in 1979, he oversaw documentation of Israeli military practices, including frequent night raids on Palestinian homes and villages, often resulting in arrests without charge and property damage, as recorded in affidavits and fieldwork reports from the 1980s onward.[56] His writings, such as in Language of War, Language of Peace (2015), reference personal observations and Al-Haq data on checkpoints restricting movement, which he portrayed as tools fragmenting Palestinian space and economy, with over 500 permanent barriers by the early 2000s hindering access to work and services.[57]Shehadeh attributed the failure of the Oslo Accords, signed in 1993, to inherent power imbalances, where Israel retained control over borders, security, and settlement growth while Palestinians gained limited autonomy, allowing the occupation to persist as a "war against Palestinian society."[58] He argued that these accords institutionalized inequality, enabling continued land expropriation without reciprocal concessions on core issues like sovereignty.[58]
Advocacy for Palestinian Rights and Peace
Shehadeh has consistently advocated for Palestinian rights through non-violent legal mechanisms and international human rights law, founding Al-Haq in 1979 to monitor and challenge occupation practices while upholding universal standards applicable to all parties.[59] In his writings and public statements, he emphasizes applying legal accountability equally, critiquing not only Israeli actions but also Palestinian leadership failures that hinder self-determination.[60] This approach reflects a commitment to human rights universalism, where violations by any actor—state or non-state—undermine prospects for equitable resolution.[61]While endorsing negotiations as essential for conflict resolution, Shehadeh has critiqued the Palestinian Authority's corruption and ineffectiveness, arguing that internal divisions and graft have weakened Palestinian bargaining power and perpetuated dependency on external actors.[60] He has rarely but notably acknowledged excesses in Palestinian violence, such as the shift to suicide bombings during the Second Intifada (2000–2005), which he described as "senseless" and a departure from the largely non-violent First Intifada (1987–1993), contributing to lost momentum for peace.[62] These admissions underscore his view that extremism on both sides, including rejectionist Palestinian factions, obstructs pragmatic diplomacy.Post-October 7, 2023, Shehadeh's advocacy intensified calls for Israeli recognition of Palestinian statehood as a prerequisite for de-escalation, framing it as the sole viable path amid escalating cycles of retaliation. In a July 2024 book, What Does Israel Fear from Palestine?, he recounts historical missed opportunities for mutual recognition and two-state arrangements, attributing stagnation to Israel's settlement policies and Palestinian disunity rather than inherent irreconcilability.[63] By October 7, 2025—marking two years since the Hamas attacks—he wrote in The Guardian that the ensuing "war of revenge" demanded immediate Israeli acknowledgment of Palestine to avert permanent territorial fragmentation and foster negotiations, even under challenging leadership like a potential Trump administration.[64] These positions balance empirical analysis of peace process failures, such as Oslo Accords breakdowns due to bilateral distrust, with optimism for legalistic reforms over unilateral extremism.[60]
Controversies and Criticisms
Israeli Accusations Against Al-Haq
In October 2021, Israel's Ministry of Defense designated Al-Haq a terrorist organization under the 2016 Counter-Terrorism Law, alleging it functions as an organizational branch of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), a group classified as terrorist by Israel, the United States, the European Union, and Canada.[65] The designation cited evidence from intelligence and raids on PFLP-linked entities, including financial records showing transfers of funds from Al-Haq to PFLP operatives for non-humanitarian purposes, such as supporting militant activities rather than the aid purported in grant applications.[66]Israeli authorities pointed to specific staff ties as proof of operational integration with the PFLP, including Al-Haq's general director Shawan Jabarin, whom Israel has barred from entry since 2007 due to documented involvement in PFLP logistics and security roles during the Second Intifada.[6] Additional examples include accounting manager Jamil Sarat, convicted in 2005 for PFLP membership and sentenced to prison, and other employees holding simultaneous PFLP leadership positions, such as in its France branch, while producing Al-Haq reports.[66] These affiliations were said to enable the diversion of European Union and governmental donor funds—totaling millions annually—to PFLP networks, bypassing oversight through opaque accounting practices uncovered in prior investigations.[65]The designation triggered enforcement actions, including a raid on Al-Haq's Ramallah offices on August 18, 2022, by Israeli forces, who seized computers, documents, and equipment, sealed the premises, and froze associated bank accounts as part of broader asset seizures under anti-terrorism measures.[67]Israel maintained these steps were necessary to disrupt PFLP financing channels masquerading as civil society work, with the Ministry of Defense asserting that Al-Haq's advocacy, including legal campaigns against Israeli officials, aligned with PFLP's de-legitimization strategy rather than genuine human rights monitoring.[66]
Allegations of Bias and Omission of Palestinian Responsibilities
Critics, particularly from organizations like NGO Monitor, have argued that Al-Haq, founded and long led by Shehadeh, exhibits a systemic bias by prioritizing documentation of alleged Israelihuman rights violations while systematically omitting or erasing the context of Palestinian terrorism and governance failures. For instance, Al-Haq's reports and advocacy materials routinely frame Israelisecurity measures, such as checkpoints or military operations, in isolation from preceding Palestinian attacks, including the over 20,000 rockets fired from Gaza since Hamas's 2007 takeover, which necessitated responses like the blockade.[68] This selective emphasis extends to intra-Palestinian abuses, with Al-Haq providing negligible coverage of Palestinian Authority torture, arbitrary detentions, or Hamas's execution of suspected collaborators—issues documented by sources like the U.S. State Department's annual human rights reports, which recorded hundreds of such cases annually in the West Bank and Gaza.[6][69]In Shehadeh's literary works, such as Samed: Journal of a West Bank Palestinian (1984) and The Sealed Room (1992), narratives center on the personal impacts of Israeli occupation policies during the First Intifada but offer minimal analysis of Palestinian incitement or violence as contributing factors, including the role of PLO-affiliated groups in organizing attacks that killed over 100 Israelis in 1987-1988 alone. Similarly, his writings downplay historical Arab rejectionism, such as the 1947 UN partition plan's rejection by Palestinian leadership and Arab states' subsequent invasion, which initiated the 1948 war and resulted in mutual displacements; instead, accounts like those in Forgotten (2025) emphasize Israeli actions post-Nakba without addressing these causal antecedents. During the Second Intifada (2000-2005), Shehadeh's When the Bulbul Stops Singing (2003) critiques settlement expansion and military incursions but largely omits the over 1,000 suicide bombings and stabbings that targeted Israeli civilians, framing the violence as predominantly reactive rather than incorporating data on premeditated Palestinian assaults.[68]NGO Monitor's analyses highlight empirical disparities, noting that Al-Haq's output—spanning thousands of reports since 1979—devotes less than 1% to Palestinian-on-Palestinian violence or terror against Israelis, compared to comprehensive coverage of Israeli policies, potentially fostering a narrative that absolves Palestinian leadership of responsibility for conflict perpetuation, including Hamas's charter-endorsed rejection of Israel's existence and diversion of aid to military tunnels post-2007.[69] Such omissions, critics contend, undermine the organization's claimed neutrality and contribute to "lawfare" efforts that equate self-defense with aggression, as seen in Al-Haq's campaigns before international bodies like the ICC, where terror contexts are minimized. These critiques, drawn from Israeli and pro-Israel watchdogs, contrast with Al-Haq's self-presentation as a human rights advocate, raising questions about selective advocacy in a conflict involving bidirectional violations.
Recent Activities and Developments
Responses to Post-October 2023 Events
In the aftermath of the Hamas attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, which killed approximately 1,200 Israelis and took over 240 hostages, Shehadeh acknowledged the event in his writings and interviews, framing it as prompting a potential reappraisal of Israeli strategy toward Palestinians, though he expressed despair over the ensuing "war of revenge."[70][64] He noted the "immense suffering" of Israeli hostages and families, while critiquing the Israeli response in Gaza, which he described as rendering the territory uninhabitable through bombardment that destroyed 92% of residential buildings by October 2025 and killed over 65,000 Palestinians according to local health authorities.[71][64]In 2024 interviews, Shehadeh warned of escalations in the West Bank amounting to an attempted "another Nakba," with Israeli government policies and settler violence aimed at displacing Palestinians through land declarations as firing zones or public areas for exclusive Jewish use, though he observed that Palestinians' lack of alternative destinations would prevent full success.[71] He reported empirical restrictions on movement, including inability to travel to cities like Nablus or Bethlehem for months due to intensified checkpoints, roadblocks, and army-backed settler attacks, which he linked directly to post-October dynamics.[71] These tactics, he argued, mirrored methods in Gaza, treating Palestinians as expendable and denying them self-determination in violation of international norms.[70]Shehadeh called for a resolution beyond mere ceasefire, advocating a comprehensive end to the conflict through Israeli recognition of Palestinian statehood and removal of illegal settlements to enable viability.[71][64] He expressed cautious optimism from global protests, particularly among youth, but frustration that such solidarity had not altered Israeli actions like ongoing demolitions or the August 2025 felling of 3,000 olive trees in Al-Mughayyir by settlers.[72][64]Residing in Ramallah, Shehadeh described personal constraints as a "grim sort of house arrest," limited to a 16 km radius due to indiscriminate settler dangers and closures, with lost contact to Gaza associates fleeing devastation and heightened militarization evoking fears of West Bank-wide escalation akin to Gaza.[72][64]
Ongoing Publications and Public Commentary
In 2025, Shehadeh co-authored Forgotten: Searching for Palestine's Hidden Places and Lost Memorials with Penny Johnson, documenting overlooked Palestinian historical sites and memorials threatened by Israeli settlement expansion and annexation policies in the West Bank.[73][74] The book emphasizes acts of cultural preservation as resistance, mapping locations like ancient villages and shrines that persist despite demolitions and land seizures, reflecting Shehadeh's evolving focus on archiving vanishing landscapes amid accelerating Israeli control over Area C territories.[73]Shehadeh contributed multiple opinion pieces to The Guardian in 2025, critiquing the stagnation in Israeli-Palestinian peace efforts. In an October 7 article, he argued that Israel's ongoing military operations in Gaza, entering their second year, necessitate Palestinian state recognition as the sole path to de-escalation, warning that continued "revenge" tactics entrench mutual destruction without addressing root territorial disputes.[64] Earlier, in July, he described Israel's Rafah incursion plans as violations of international law, asserting that Gaza's repeated subjugation reveals the ineffectiveness of legal frameworks in curbing territorial ambitions.[75] A February piece linked U.S. policy shifts under Donald Trump to risks of erasing Gaza's cultural heritage, urging preservation of mosques and churches to counter real estate-driven displacement.[76]Public engagements in 2024–2025 highlighted Shehadeh's advocacy for cross-cultural dialogue amid eroding prospects for coexistence. In February 2025, he participated in a Harvard Divinity School discussion on friendship's role in pursuing justice, drawing from his writings on personal Israeli-Palestinian interactions over five decades of occupation to explore empathy as a counter to entrenched animosities.[77] In September 2024, a Rutgers University talk, recorded on YouTube, revisited themes from Palestinian Walks, analyzing legal maneuvers enabling land appropriation and the resultant "vanishing" of traditional Palestinian terrains through settlement infrastructure.[78] These appearances underscore a pivot in Shehadeh's commentary toward documenting irreversible losses, driven by fears of de facto annexation solidifying fragmented Palestinian enclaves.[79]
Awards and Recognition
Literary and Activism Honors
Raja Shehadeh was awarded the Orwell Prize for political writing in 2008 for Palestinian Walks: Notes on a Vanishing Landscape, recognizing its documentation of environmental and territorial changes in the West Bank through personal narratives of hiking.[43] The book, published in 2007, drew acclaim for blending memoir with critique of settlement expansion, leading to its selection by the prize jury as the year's outstanding work in British political writing.[4]In 2023, Shehadeh's memoirWe Could Have Been Friends, My Father and I: A Palestinian Memoir achieved finalist status for the National Book Award in Nonfiction, following an initial longlisting, for its exploration of familial tensions amid 20th-century Palestinian history.[80] The same work was named a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize in the current interest category, highlighting its psychological depth on inheritance and displacement.[81] These recognitions underscore Shehadeh's literary influence, though some observers question the impartiality of such awards in contexts where juries may favor perspectives aligned with prevailing international human rights advocacy over balanced causal analysis of regional conflicts.Through Al-Haq, the human rights organization Shehadeh co-founded in 1979, he contributed to efforts recognized via its affiliation with the International Commission of Jurists, granting consultative status with bodies like the United Nations Economic and Social Council.[80] This status facilitated Al-Haq's reporting on alleged violations under occupation, yet Israeli authorities have contested the organization's neutrality, designating it in 2021 as linked to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a move that critics of Al-Haq argue exposes biases in affiliations that overlook internal Palestinian governance issues.[6]
Bibliography
Key Books
Samed: Journal of a West Bank Palestinian (1984, Adama Books), a personal diary chronicling daily life and resistance in the occupied West Bank during the early 1980s.[42][82]The Sealed Room: Selections from the Diary of a Palestinian Living Under Israeli Occupation, September 1990–August 1991 (1992, Quartet Books), excerpts from Shehadeh's journal detailing the impact of the Gulf War and intifada on Ramallah residents.[83][84]Strangers in the House: Coming of Age in Occupied Palestine (2002, Steerforth Press), a memoir exploring Shehadeh's family dynamics, legal career beginnings, and evolving views on Palestinian identity amid occupation.[3]Language of War, Language of Peace (2002, Palgrave Macmillan), an analysis of how rhetoric shapes conflict perceptions, drawing on Shehadeh's experiences during the second intifada and siege of Ramallah.[85]When the Bulbul Stopped Singing: Life in Ramallah Under Siege (2003, Bitter Lemon Press), co-authored with Penny Johnson, documents the 2002 Israeli military incursion through eyewitness accounts and essays on cultural and human costs.[86]Palestinian Walks: Notes on a Vanishing Landscape (2007, Profile Books), reflections on six hikes in the West Bank hills, highlighting environmental degradation and settlement expansion's effects on traditional paths.[3][87]Occupation Diaries (2011, Profile Books), journal entries from 2009–2011 examining stalled peace processes, settlement growth, and personal disillusionment with political leadership.[88]Going Home: A Walk Through Fifty Years of Occupation (2020, The New Press), a retrospective blending memoir and reportage on changes in Ramallah and the West Bank over decades of Israeli control.[89][90]
Selected Articles and Reviews
Shehadeh has published numerous op-eds and essays in major outlets, often critiquing Israeli policies and advocating for Palestinian rights. In "What Does Israel Fear from This 'Terrorist'?", published in The New York Review of Books on December 2, 2021, he defended Al-Haq against Israeli government designations as a terrorist organization, arguing that such smears aim to discredit documentation of occupation violations rather than address them.[26] Another essay, "The Nakba, Father's Papers, and Jaffa Revisited" in the same publication on October 1, 2021, reflected on personal family archives and the enduring impact of the 1948 displacement on Palestinian identity.[91]More recent contributions include "This war of revenge has lasted two nightmare years. There's only one hope for peace: Israel recognising Palestine," an October 7, 2025, Guardianop-ed urging Israeli acknowledgment of Palestinian statehood as essential to ending the conflict, amid ongoing West Bank fragmentation.[64] In "When will this horror end? When Israel realises that the cost of destroying Palestinians outweighs the gains," published in The Guardian on October 5, 2024, Shehadeh contended that sustained military actions erode Israel's moral and strategic position without achieving security.[92] These pieces appear in anthologies and collections of Palestinian writings, underscoring their role in international discourse.[59]Reviews of Shehadeh's essays and shorter works highlight a divide in reception: Western critics often praise their literary nuance and humanistic insight, while some Israeli-aligned analyses dismiss them as one-sided advocacy. For instance, a Guardian review of his essay collections noted their "clear and pared-back" style for illuminating Palestinian psyche amid occupation, without overt polemics.[93] Conversely, critiques from outlets like NGO Monitor portray his writings on legal and human rights issues as extensions of biased NGO campaigns against Israel.[6] A 2024 Political Quarterly assessment of his peace-oriented essays acknowledged their pursuit of dialogue but critiqued underlying optimism amid stalled negotiations.[94]