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Watermelon Wedge / Falling Seeds | Distressed Print Tee

Watermelon Wedge / Falling Seeds | Distressed Print Tee

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The fruit that survived the ban.

Before it was forbidden, the watermelon was already the flag. Red flesh, green rind, black seeds, white pith. The colors of Palestine, painted into a fruit centuries before anyone tried to outlaw the flag those colors belonged to.

THE SYMBOL

A wedge, inverted. Seeds falling. The print is distressed — the texture of a poster that has lived through weather, of a wall that has been painted over and painted again, of a symbol that has refused to be removed.

THE HISTORY

In 1967, after the occupation began, the Israeli military made it illegal to display the Palestinian flag in the occupied territories. The watermelon — same four colors as the flag, no special arrangement required, just a fruit — became the substitute. Painters were arrested for the colors alone. The ban could not stop the produce. The produce became the flag.

The ban lifted on paper in 1993 and returned in practice. In 2023 the Israeli national security minister ordered the confiscation of Palestinian flags at checkpoints. The watermelon was already back in every storefront window, on every shirt, on every protest sign — the symbol the state cannot ban without banning lunch.

WHY IT ENDURES

The falling seeds are the displaced. The colors are the flag the state tried to make disappear. The distress in the print is every poster that has weathered every wall since 1967. The shirt is what a flag looks like when a state spent half a century trying to make it stop being one.

WEAR IT

The march. The grocery store. Anywhere the four colors land where they belong.

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