Episode 4

From Nakba to Nasser

Laying out the politics surrounding the Zionist settler colonial destruction of Palestine, and the ground-shifting event that followed in its wake: Nasser’s 1952 Egyptian Free Officers Movement coup, which would set the tone for two decades of revolutionary nationalism across the region.

From Nakba to Nasser
Discussion Questions
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Transcript
  • The Nakba was a terrible tragedy for the Palestinian people, though it also had dramatic regional implications. How did the defeat of Arab armies by Zionist forces, and the subsequent displacement this entailed, reshape the politics of the region?
  • What is Abed’s account of the defeat of 1948: who bears the prime responsibility?
  • Nasser came to power in a junior officer coup in 1952. What were the crises within Egypt, and the region as a whole, that the coup was responding to. What answers did it provide or propose for these crises?
  • What were the mechanisms that tied local governments to British imperial interests in this period, in Iraq, Jordan and the other monarchies?
  • Nasser’s influence is not just domestic but regional, even global: what mistakes did other anti-systemic and revolutionary forces, such as the Communists, make that afforded Nasser so much room for maneuver? And why was there such a strong divide between anti-colonial nationalisms and communism?