Ladraa was born in Umeå On graduating from high school, Ladraa undertook 4 years of coursework in music before shifting to majoring in Global Studies. He spent a year in Japan learning Japanese. His interest in the plight of Palestinians arose from a friendship he developed with a Palestinian immigrant family. He failed to complete his university degree when his last course on Human Rights coincided with a hunger strike he participated in. In 2016, after a gig in Paris, he went to Nablus for three weeks, playing as drummer in a music project named "Ethno." During his stay he also visited Hebron, which he toured with Issa Amro's Youth Against Settlements movement and was struck particularly by the street segregation practiced by Israeli settlers there.
Activism
Ladraa was an employee of the Red Cross before his walk. Stirred by the living conditions he witnessed during a three-week trip in April 2017 to the occupied West Bank, he organized a hunger strike in solidarity with one held by 1,600 Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli jails. He recalled: "I was shocked by what I saw there, seeing all the walls, soldiers walking along the streets carrying M-60 machine guns. I heard stories about 300 children in prisons, raides in homes". In 2017, Ladraa began mapping his trek from Gothenburg to Jerusalem to raise awareness to human rights violations in the West Bank; he sold all of his belongings to fund the journey, which was promoted on social media under the hashtag #WalkToPalestine.
Trek
Ladraa began the walk, setting himself to trek on an average 8–10 miles a day, by setting out from Gothenburg, on 5 August 2017 to coincide with the centenary of the Balfour Declaration. Traveling lightly, he anticipated reaching his destination by June or July 2018. During the trip, which took him through 13 countries, he managed to get more than 18,000 followers on Instagram and more than 20,000 on Facebook. His journey, much of which involved making a reverse trip down the pathways used by refugees during the recent European migrant crisis, met generally with goodwill and curiosity from Europeans, with only two incidents marring the trek: he was punched up when he accidentally got mixed up in a demonstration in Germany, and was detained in the Czech Republic and subject to a personal search by Israeli security guards near their embassy in Prague for carrying a Palestinian flag. People noting him often phoned their local police. One woman in Austria, sighting the Palestinian flag he carries, called police who, pointing several pistols, confronted him aggressively. At journey's end Ladraa stated that he had met "everything from the military police and secret services to normal police, civilian police, anti-terror police, Swat teams" as a result. Palestinian embassies in Europe provided support by informing Ladraa of Palestinians along his route who would be sympathetic to his project. Along the way, Ladraa engaged in discussions hoping to promote awareness of developments in the West Bank, and, as he came to prominence, was called upon to chair lectures on injustices. He entered Lebanon via the port of El Mina where intelligence police questioned him for six hours. He then travelled through the country and collected testimonies from Palestinians about their plight while visiting the Beddawi, Nahr al-Bared, and Mar EliasPalestinian refugee camps. Unable to enter Israel from Lebanon, he went north to Beirut and flew to Amman, from where he walked to the Jordanian border. On 6 July 2018, after reaching the Allenby crossing, linking Jordan to the West Bank, and just a few hundred yards from his destination, Ladraa was detained and interrogated for 6 hours and denied entry by Israeli officials. The formal grounds on which his application to enter Palestine was rejected were that he was considered mendacious, and that his real purpose was to "orchestrate protests in Nabi Saleh," an accusation he strongly denied. For his efforts, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas granted Ladraa citizenship and awarded him the Medal of Merit.