The symbolism behind Bella Hadid’s Palestinian key necklace at the Cannes Film Festival 2026

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Bella Hadid wore a gold Palestinian key pendant to the 2026 Cannes Film Festival on May 19. GC Images

A small necklace with a weighty message.

Bella Hadid always turns heads on the red carpet at the Cannes Film Festival, but on Tuesday, it was a subtle piece of jewelry that drew the most attention.

The supermodel wore a gold key pendant with teeth cut in the shape of historic Palestine, strung on a simple black leather cord.

The necklace features teeth shaped like the map of historic Palestine, strung on a black leather cord. GC Images
Known as the “key of return,” the symbol is tied to the displacement of Palestinians during the 1948 Nakba. GC Images

The key is one of the most enduring symbols of Palestinian identity. When more than 700,000 Palestinians were displaced during the 1948 Nakba — Arabic for “catastrophe” — many fled carrying little more than the keys to their homes, believing they would return within days.

Those keys became family heirlooms, carried across generations as symbols of what Palestinians call the “right of return.”

Hadid wore the necklace four days after Nakba Day, observed annually on May 15. She let the piece shine against an all-black outfit: a backless Tom Ford turtleneck and matching low-slung trousers, accented with a skinny leather belt slung across her bare waist.

The model’s father, Mohamed Hadid, was born to a Palestinian family, and she often uses fashion to pay tribute to her heritage. GC Images
At Cannes in 2024, Hadid wore a vintage keffiyeh-fabric dress by Michael and Hushi. GC Images

The model’s father, Mohamed Hadid, was born to a Palestinian family, and she often uses fashion to highlight her heritage.

At the 2024 Cannes Film Festival, she walked the Croisette in a vintage Michael and Hushi dress made from keffiyeh fabric, the traditional checkered cloth that’s become a global marker of Palestinian solidarity.

Between videos of gala premieres and sun-kissed photo shoots, the Ôrebella founder also shared an Instagram Story condemning Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir’s treatment of detained activists from the Gaza-bound Sumud Flotilla.

On her Instagram profile, Hadid still has a 2021 post pinned showing a poster that reads “It’s Free Palestine ‘Til Palestine Is Free,” captioned in part: “A Palestinian girl on the cover of Vogue. The joy it brings me to say that … I won’t stop talking about the systematic oppression, pain and humility that Palestinians face on a regular basis.”

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