The bride in the maze

The work explores the psychogeography of the West Bank, challenging dominant narratives and offering a fragmented yet intimate portrayal of Palestinian life. Through evocative imagery, it reframes perceptions of apartheid and resilience.

This work is born from walking through the streets of the West Bank, from watching the children play between rubble and checkpoints, from listening to the stories of those who have known nothing but the walls that enclose them. It is an attempt to trace the psychogeography of Palestinian life under occupation, to understand what it means to grow up in a land that is both home and a maze of barriers, watchtowers, and ever-present tension.

Through a series of images and narratives, the work reveals the power structures that define life in this space. The children kicking a deflated football in the shadow of a 700-kilometer wall. A young girl practicing Jiu Jitsu, her fist raised in quiet defiance against the occupation. A demolished school, a bulldozed Mosque. Settlers armed as they claim more land. These fragments form an intricate and shattered mosaic, one that Western media often chooses to ignore. And yet, what emerges from this maze is not just loss and oppression but resilience, dignity, and an unbreakable bond between the people and their land.

The title refers to the phrase “The bride is beautiful, but she is married to another man”, allegedly spoken by British Zionists in the 19th century as they surveyed Palestine. They saw the land, rich in history and culture, and understood that it already belonged to a people with deep roots. This phrase becomes a starting point for questioning the Western narrative surrounding the creation of the State of Israel—a narrative that has often been framed through a lens of propaganda, obscuring the colonial nature of the project.

The maze in this work is both literal and metaphorical. It is the architecture of apartheid—checkpoints, segregated roads, walls, and fences that confine Palestinians to ever-shrinking enclaves. But it is also the cyclical nature of history, where the roles of persecutors and persecuted shift, yet the machinery of segregation, ethnic cleansing, and displacement remains unchanged. To walk through this maze is to understand the weight of history repeating itself, the feeling of moving in circles while the world looks away. And yet, through it all, life persists. Children still laugh. A young girl still trains. A people still resist, not just with protest but with the simple, radical act of continuing to exist.

© Fabrizio Bilello - Image from the The bride in the maze photography project
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Three sisters from Tubas, South Hebron Hills, on their way back home from school, escorted by Israeli military.At-Tuwani, May 2023.

© Fabrizio Bilello - Image from the The bride in the maze photography project
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A settler escorted by an Israeli soldier through a hill of ancient olive trees in H2, the side of Al-Khalil (Hebron) under Israeli authority.Hebron, May 2023

© Fabrizio Bilello - Two kids pose for a portrait in Balata refuge camp.Nablus, December 2024.
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Two kids pose for a portrait in Balata refuge camp.Nablus, December 2024.

© Fabrizio Bilello - Two Palestinian youths with masks, who confront IOF at the entrance of the checkpoint, pose for a portrait. Hebron, May 2023
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Two Palestinian youths with masks, who confront IOF at the entrance of the checkpoint, pose for a portrait. Hebron, May 2023

© Fabrizio Bilello - Books written by Palestinian prisoners. Nablus public library, December 2024.
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Books written by Palestinian prisoners. Nablus public library, December 2024.

© Fabrizio Bilello - The remains of a demolished school. Masafer Yatta, January 2025.
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The remains of a demolished school. Masafer Yatta, January 2025.

© Fabrizio Bilello - Settlers pose for a group portrait. Hebron, May 2023.
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Settlers pose for a group portrait. Hebron, May 2023.

© Fabrizio Bilello - S. practicing Ju Jitsu. Hebron, December 2024.
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S. practicing Ju Jitsu. Hebron, December 2024.

© Fabrizio Bilello - A house bombed by IOF in Balata refuge camp. Nablus, December 2024.
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A house bombed by IOF in Balata refuge camp. Nablus, December 2024.

© Fabrizio Bilello - Three kids from Balata camp pose for a portrait. Nablus, December 2024
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Three kids from Balata camp pose for a portrait. Nablus, December 2024

© Fabrizio Bilello - An orange tree cut down by IOF. Masafer Yatta, May 2023.
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An orange tree cut down by IOF. Masafer Yatta, May 2023.

© Fabrizio Bilello - A Jewish man and a Muslim man sit near the Al-Aqsa Mosque. Jerusalem, December 2024.
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A Jewish man and a Muslim man sit near the Al-Aqsa Mosque. Jerusalem, December 2024.

© Fabrizio Bilello - A Palestinian woman praying by the Al-Aqsa mosque, while armed soldiers roam the area. Jerusalem, December 2024.
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A Palestinian woman praying by the Al-Aqsa mosque, while armed soldiers roam the area. Jerusalem, December 2024.

© Fabrizio Bilello - The remains of a demolished Mosque in a village in the firing zone in Masafer Yatta.South-Hebron Hills, January 2025.
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The remains of a demolished Mosque in a village in the firing zone in Masafer Yatta.South-Hebron Hills, January 2025.

© Fabrizio Bilello - Some kids playing under the separation wall in Ayda refuge camp. Bethlehem, May 2023.
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Some kids playing under the separation wall in Ayda refuge camp. Bethlehem, May 2023.

© Fabrizio Bilello - Image from the The bride in the maze photography project
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Two young women sit on a bench near the old city of Hebron, behind them the part of the city occupied by Israel. Hebron, May 2023.

© Fabrizio Bilello - Image from the The bride in the maze photography project
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One of the checkpoints dividing the city of Hebron, divided after the 1994 terrorist attack by an American Israeli Zionist who killed 29 Palestinians inside the Ibrahim Mosque. Such checkpoint is indeed highly attended by Palestinians who wish to go praying at the Ibrahim Mosque, located in H2.Hebron, January 2025.

© Fabrizio Bilello - Image from the The bride in the maze photography project
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An Israeli Soldier and two Palestinian kids in Hebron old city, as IOF escort a group of Israeli settlers through the old city forcing Palestinian shop owners to shut their activities. Hebron, January 2025.

© Fabrizio Bilello - Image from the The bride in the maze photography project
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A group of kids from Tuba is escorted by Israeli soldiers to school in At-Tuwani, as their short path passes near the settler of Ma'on thus risking assaults and attacks by settlers. Since 7th October the IOF has stopped doing such service forcing the kids to attend a smaller and further school in the firing zone but easier to access. At-Tuwani, May 2023.

© Fabrizio Bilello - Image from the The bride in the maze photography project
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A house, in the village of Khalet Al Dabea, recently demolished by IOF along with 7 other residences, agriculture structure and electricity grid, forcibly displacing 7 families. Khalet Al Dabea, Masafer Yatta, May 2023.

The bride in the maze by Fabrizio Bilello

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