“…These included the military occupation of Palestinian cities (Lydda, for instance), ethnic cleansing (by violently pushing the local population out and/or threatening retaliation, ghettoization of the remaining inhabitants and enforcement of military rule in those areas), confiscation of Palestinian properties, demolition of cultural, political and religious centres, populating of now‐emptied houses with Jewish settlers, and re‐inscription of Palestinian urban landscapes as Jewish‐Israeli (see e.g. Yiftachel and Yacobi, 2003; LeVine, 2005; Yacobi, 2009; Mansour, 2013; Monterescu, 2015; Ben‐Arie, 2016; Hawari, 2019; Zoabi, 2019). In the aftermath of the Nakba, most displaced Palestinians were not allowed to return to their cities and became refugees either in the (then) unoccupied parts of Palestine (West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem) or in Arab countries (Massalha, 2003).…”