Zochrot

The feminine form was chosen to signal Zochrot's approach toward the Nakba, which the group says challenges what it sees as the masculine historical narrative by focusing on compassion and inclusion.

"Omrin Yeshna Eretz" is a popular song and Israeli folk dance[9] based on a poem by Shaul Tchernichovsky first published in a 1929 collection.

[12] In its 2006 annual report, the group declared a total income of 280,000 euros and listed the Mennonite Central Committee, Kerkinactie, ICCO, Cimade, CCFD, EPER/HEKS, Broederlijk Delen, Oxfam Solidarity Belgium, Misereor, Medico International, and Zivik as contributors.

[15] In 2014, Zochrot launched iNakba, a mobile app that uses GPS technology to allow users to locate and learn about Palestinian villages that were destroyed during and after the Nakba.

[16][17][18] The app is now called iReturn, and aims to "use technology to re-tell a suppressed history and to reveal Israel’s hidden landscape of ethnic cleansing and forced expulsions.

Eitan Bronstein, co-founder of Zochrot, posts a sign in Hebrew and Arabic on the former Arab "ghetto" in Lod (Lydda), 2003.