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Bodies that don't matter

Historical Exoduses

Displacement as origin. Many peoples are born of an exodus, but the starting point is not the promise: it is oppression. An experience — that of exile — that profoundly marks the life of the displaced.

Foundational exoduses (conquered territories)

The foundational stories of many cultures recount migrations that preceded the formation of the people to whom the tales pertain. Exodus, i.e. the Jewish people escaping Egypt, is considered the foundational event of the Israeli people. Yet we have to take into account that the starting point for exodus is oppression. Thus, understanding the element of migration as a foundational pillar of a people, even if it is in fact the case, does not seem as real as the mythical imagination would have us believe. The Jewish people were not Egyptians oppressed by Egyptians, but rather foreigners who laboured under the Egyptian empire. Although several generations had already settled down there, they continued to be foreigners. The laws that prohibit the mistreatment of foreigners arose due to their unfortunately widespread and evident mistreatment. The lingering memory of their identity as foreigners and their experience mark the barriers that a foreigner will have in order to exercise their rights and to reach the social and political decision-making spaces.

Furthermore, the experience of exile profoundly marks the lives of the displaced, and their bonds with the place transforms into an ongoing personal and social conflict, both in terms of identity and survival.