Maxxe Albert-Deitch is Americans for Peace Now's Strategic Communications Coordinator. Prior to joining APN,
she worked as a historian, focusing on research and projects engaging in ethnohistory, archaeology, and conflict
transformation in Israel and Palestine. She earned a Master’s degree in History from the College of William and
Mary, as well as Bachelor’s degrees in Art History, History, and Anthropology from Drew University.
Many of us have heard the phrase “history is written by the victors” so many times that we assume it to be
true. But that sentence, no matter how easily it rolls off the tongue, doesn’t quite explain the reality of
how certain stories become cemented into a collective consciousness and eventually
written down in a book as though they have always been the unimpeachably correct, most incontrovertible versions of
themselves.
The actual events of history matter, but the facts often aren’t as determinative as how a given story frames
them. Once a specific framework is established and generally agreed upon, it becomes remarkably difficult to
separate that framework from those facts. I find myself thinking about that lesson daily, as I look at how
we—American consumers of national and international news—are learning about and processing the events of the war
between Israel and Hamas.