This paper explores a possible third narrative in the Israel-Palestine context, focusing on spatial perspective and temporal axis. Drawing on the Joint Memorial Ceremony organized by Combatants for Peace and the Parents Circle–Families Forum, as well as on the personal journey of Sulaiman Khatib, the paper sees a third narrative as a tension space that goes beyond binary oppositions and reorients memory toward a shared future. Particular attention is given to power asymmetry as an ethical challenge shaping the very possibility of articulating this third narrative. The Ceremony disrupts the victimhood paradigm and the weaponization of memory. The third narrative reveals itself in its unfolding, calling for political imagination and courage.