Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Bella Hadid makes statement with keffiyehin­spired dress at Cannes Film Festival

- - CNN

Bella Hadid stepped out in a red keffiyeh- inspired dress at the Cannes Film Festival on Thursday, in a nod to her Palestinia­n heritage.

The supermodel, whose father is Palestinia­n- American realestate developer Mohamed Hadid, drew praise from some on social media after she was pictured walking on the promenade in a dress by design duo Michael and Hushi.

“Our Palestinia­n princess,” wrote one user on X. “Loving this homage to her Palestinia­n roots,” praised a separate user on Instagram, while another comment read, “This is fashion with purpose.”

The supermodel later reposted a picture of the dress with the caption “Free Palestine forever” in her stories on Instagram, where she is frequently vocal about violence against Palestinia­ns and the ongoing war in Gaza.

In October last year, she wrote in a statement posted to Instagram: “My heart is bleeding with pain from the trauma I am seeing unfold, as well as the generation­al trauma of my Palestinia­n blood,” referencin­g those killed by Israeli airstrikes in Gaza.

And on May 15, Hadid marked Nakba Day (commemorat­ing the time in 1948 when an estimated 700,000 Palestinia­ns fled or were expelled from their homes) with a post sharing her family’s history as Nakba survivors and pleading for an end to the war in Gaza.

“Please look into the eyes of the Palestinia­ns suffering,” she wrote.

The keffiyeh scarf, on which Hadid’s dress is based, is worn across the Middle East. But in recent decades, it has come to be identified as a symbol of Palestinia­n identity and resistance.

Hadid’s dress is from the archives of Michael and Hushi, a New York-based brand founded by Michael Sears and Hushidar Mortezaie.

Some on social media were quick to point out that Hadid’s dress was not technicall­y a Palestinia­n keffiyeh, with the colors more closely resembling those used in Jordan and Saudi Arabia.

Mortezaie, one of the original designers, explained the intentions behind the dress.

“This dress was made 23 years ago and everyone from the region was grouped as one big Other. There was no Google. Only what could be put together with little resources. Hopefully we can all learn to stand in unity and love against genocide,” he wrote on Instagram.

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