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Palestinian photography
Photography has been used as an important medium to document the lives and culture of the Palestinian people.

In the early history of photography, Palestine was one of the first places outside Europe to be photographed extensively.

Around 1860, a school for teaching photography was established in Jerusalem, in the Armenian Quarter of the Old City. The founder was an Armenian amateur photographer named Yessai Garabedian, a priest who had moved to the city from Anatolia to become the archivist at St. James Armenian Church.

Karimeh Abbud, thought to be the first Arab woman photographer working in the region and the first woman professional photographer to offer services to the public. Her advertisement published in a al-Karmel newspaper sometime in 1932 clearly states that she is the "only national female photographer".

Early twentieth century Palestinian life is richly documented by photographers in this period. A key figure is Wasif Jawhariyyeh (1904–1972), who collated nine hundred images to create the seven volume work, The Illustrated History of Palestine.

As time went on, the availability of photography led to a vibrant market for photographic portraits.

Edward Said writes of the process of collating photographs for what became the book After the Last Sky ,

'And I felt that I was actually doing it in a kind of abstract way. That's to say, I was really working according to principles that are much easier for me to deal with within the

nonrepresentational art of the Islamic world. You know, where there were

certain kinds of patterns that you could see that were not representational

in the sense, you know, that they had a subject, but they had some motif

and rather a musical motif. ' (https://doi.org/10.2307/303612)

Said selected photographs from the huge archive created by Jean Mohr.

Photography has continued to play an important role in preserving documentation of Palestinian life and thought.

Younger photographers have used the medium of photography to communicate with the world. Notable exponents include:

- Yousef Dawas, killed by Israeli air strikes on Gaza in 2023

- Mohammed Zaanoun, who received the award for Cultures of Resistance in 2017. Zaanoun worked for Le Monde to document the impact of Israeli bombing of Gaza in 2023.

- Motaz Azaiza, a photojournalist from Gaza was included in the Time magazine list of the 100 most influential people of 2024.

- Samar Abu Elouf, a freelance photographer based in Gaza City. She has worked for the New York Times since 2021.